Eduardo Núñez Autograph
Eduardo Núñez Bio
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Eduardo Michelle Núñez Méndez was born on June 15, 1987 in the Dominican Republic.
The New York Yankees signed him as an international free agent in 2004. He made his Major League debut for them in 2010. Núñez played four seasons for the Yankees as a utility player, batting .267 with ten home runs and 76 RBI over 270 games. He was designated for assignment at the end of spring training in 2014. The Minnesota Twins acquired him via trade, sending pitching prospect Miguel Sulbaran to the Yankees.
Núñez slashed .250/.271/.382 in 72 games during his first season with Minnesota. He hit four home runs with 24 RBI, and stole nine bases. Núñez logged double digit starts at shortstop, third base and left field.
He played in exactly 72 games again during the 2015 campaign, but it came with improved offensive production. Núñez slashed .282/.327/.431. This gave him an OPS+ above 100 for the first time in his career. His time at shortstop increased after Opening Day starter Danny Santana struggled, allowing Núñez to split time there with fellow utility man Eduardo Escobar.
Escobar won the shortstop job in camp the following spring, and Núñez struggled to find playing time early on in 2016. He started just one of the Twins first ten games, but soon found regular at-bats after third baseman Trevor Plouffe was placed on the disabled list in mid-April. Núñez quickly became a bright spot in what was becoming one of the worst seasons in franchise history. He hit .339 between April 15th and May 3rd with Plouffe sidelined, taking over as the everyday shortstop after Plouffe returned to the lineup.
Núñez was the Twins lone representative at the 2016 All-Star Game. He entered the break batting .321 with 12 home runs and 40 RBI across 78 games. His 22 stolen bases were also third in the American League in the first half of play. Núñez was a ninth inning defensive replacement at second base during the mid-summer classic, helping turn a game ending double play to lock down a 4-2 win for the American League.
He continued to serve as the Twins regular shortstop until the trade deadline, when interim general manager sent him to the San Francisco Giants for pitching prospect Adalberto Mejía. Núñez became their starting third baseman, but wasn't able to repeat his first half success down the stretch. San Francisco wound up starting Conor Gillaspie over Núñez in the postseason. Núñez was 0-for-3 as a pinch hitter that October.
The Giants traded Núñez to the Boston Red Sox at the deadline in 2017. He stayed in Boston through 2019, slashing .268/.293/.401 over parts of three seasons for the Red Sox. They won the World Series in 2018. Núñez hit a pinch hit three run homer against Los Angeles Dodgers reliever Alex Wood in game one of that World Series, helping Boston win the game 8-4.
He played for the New York Mets in 2020, and finished his career by spending 2021 in the Chinese league.
Notable Events & Trivia
- 2018 World Series champion
- 2016 All-Star
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The Minnesota Twins' Top 9 Cult Heroes Since 2000
Ed.
The Twins have a new Ed. We celebrate him, the Eds that came before, and the Eds yet to come.
The Difficult Dozier Decision
Brian Dozier has been part of some bad Minnesota Twins teams. However, Dozier has also been part of a rebuild that seems to be headed into a new era of Twins baseball. At season’s end, Dozier seems destined to hit the free agent market. Minnesota hasn’t approached him about a contract extension and Dozier is excited to see what free agency could bring for him and his family.
After this year’s free agent period, should Dozier be looking forward to the process? Are the Twins already prepared to move on from the Dozier era?
Can The Twins Better Their Bench?
With just a handful of days left until pitchers and catchers officially report to Fort Myers for spring training, Minnesota is nearing the end of its offseason. The main focus when it comes to additions is starting pitching, and due to the market, that remains the one area left unattended at this point. Whether before or after spring training officially kicks off I expect that to be dealt with. What remains to be seen is whether or not Derek Falvey and Thad Levine have interest in adding a bat to supplement their bench.
Twins Daily Awards 2016: Most Improved Player
The Twins season is over, mercifully. However, that also means that it is time to hand out some Major League Awards. Last month, we gave out five Minor League awards. Over the next four days, we’ll hand out four Major League Awards.
Our first 2016 Twins Daily award of the offseason is the Most Improved Player. The Twins Daily writers, including minor league writers, voted for their top 3 most improved. There were a handful of decent candidates, but at the end of the day/season, Brian Dozier was the overwhelming choice for the Twins Most Improved Player.
Early Returns: Polanco's Play At Shortstop
Days before the July trade deadline, the Minnesota Twins traded their All-Star Game representative Eduardo Nunez to the San Francisco Giants for lefty Adalberto Mejia. Also that day, the Twins announced that infielder Jorge Polanco was being recalled.
At the time, I wrote an article asking Where Should Jorge Polanco Play?
With Brian Dozier at shortstop, and Miguel Sano and Trevor Plouffe at third base, shortstop made the most sense, at least until you looked at his playing time at shortstop at that time in 2016::
In Rochester, he had played:
- 2B - 64 games, 559.1 innings
- 3B - 2 games, 17 innings
- SS - 0 games, 0 innings
In his brief time with the Twins, he played:
- 2B - 4 games, 34 innings
- 3B - 1 game, 7 innings
- SS - 1 game, 8 innings
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