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  • Scott Leius

    Birth Date: 09/24/1965

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    Scott Thomas Leius was born September 24, 1965, in Yonkers, New York. He attended and graduated high school from nearby Mamaroneck, New York, before attending and playing baseball at Concordia College in Bronxville, New York.

    The Minnesota Twins drafted the right-handed hitting infielder in the 13th round of the 1986 Major League Baseball June Amateur Draft. He played five minor league seasons, with a single season played at each level. He was almost exclusively a shortstop.

    The 6-foot-3, 180-pound Leius received his call to the big leagues after September roster expansion in the Twins last place season of 1990. During that first taste of the major league baseball, he received 28 plate appearances and hit .240 with one home run and four RBI.

    When Leius was invited to Spring Training in 1991, Greg Gagne was entrenched as the starting shortstop and the Twins had signed free agent Mike Pagliarulo over the winter to play third base. I’m not sure anyone expected there to be room for Leius to make the team out of spring training. Well, Pagliarulo was coming off a couple subpar seasons for him and struggled to hit during the spring, and Leius made an impression with his hitting and fielding. He surprised everyone and made the team as an extra infielder out of spring training and ended up platooning all season with Pags at the hot corner.

    In 1991, Leius’ batting numbers were .286/.378/.416 with five home runs and an OPS+ of 116. 161 of his 235 plate appearances were against left-handed pitchers and 42 of his 52 starts were against lefthanders.

    In the post season, Leius played in three of the five games of the American League Championship Series against Toronto, totaling five plate appearances.

    Left-hander Charlie Leibrandt started Game One of the World Series for Atlanta, so Leius got the start at third base for the Twins. In the fifth inning Leius singled then scored on a three-run homer by Greg Gagne which put the Twins up 4-0 on their way to a 5-2 victory. But Game Two was Leius’ time to shine. It was another lefthander starter for the Braves, Tom Glavine this time. The score remained tied until the bottom of the eighth inning, when Leius had the biggest hit of his life. Leading off the inning, Leius launched the first pitch into the left-field stands and it proved to be the winning run in Game Two. The Twins had a two games to none lead. The Series moved to Atlanta for Games three through Five where the Braves won three straight. Leius went one for six in Atlanta. He had an RBI walk in the 14-5 Game Five blowout by the Braves. Leius had two hits in Game Six – the Kirby Puckett game – but no runs or RBI. In Game Seven, Leius saw Pagliarulo start at third base against righty John Smoltz. Leius was put into the game at shortstop in the tenth inning after Gagne and Al Newman had been replaced by pinch hitters during the two most recent plate appearances for the shortstop position. For the Series, Leius appeared in all seven games getting 14 at bats. He had five hits, a walk, two RBI, and that pivotal home run in Game Two.

    1992 saw Leius and Pagliarulo again split time at third base. All of Leius’ offensive numbers dipped from his rookie season. After the 1992 season, the underappreciated Greg Gagne left the Twins and signed a free agent contract with Kansas City. The Twins’ answer to replacing Gagne was to award the 1993 opening-day shortstop assignment to Leius. Unfortunately, the 1991 World Series hero tore his rotator cuff and was done after only ten games. While he was out, Pat Meares was called up and played well enough to solidify himself as the starting shortstop going into 1994. In 1994 and 1995, Leius was back at third base and posting similar, underwhelming, offensive numbers as in 1992. He had become a fairly replaceable player. After the 1995 season, he became a free agent and was signed by Cleveland. He had one bad season with Cleveland in 1996, missed 1997, and played 1998 and 1999 with the Royals. Each of those last three seasons, he played fewer than 40 games and had fewer than 90 plate appearances. Injuries to his hamstring and shoulders contributed to the lack of playing time.

    Throughout his career, Leius’ role never changed. He was a slick-fielding third baseman who hit left-handed pitching well enough to remain in the majors. Unfortunately, that promising first season was his best and he never improved on it. His final career statistics were .244/.316/.353 for an OPS of .669. He hit 28 home runs and had 172 RBI in nine seasons. His career OPS+ settled at a below average mark of 78, which includes the last three abysmal seasons with Cleveland and Kansas City. For his Twins career, his OPS+ was 85.

    Notable Events & Trivia

    • Leius’ Win Probability Added during the 1991 World Series was fourth among Twins batters behind only Puckett, Gene Larkin, and Chuck Knoblauch.

    Scott Leius Statistics

    Standard Batting Table
    Season Age Team Lg WAR G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS OPS+ rOBA Rbat+ TB GIDP HBP SH SF IBB Pos Awards
    1990 24 MIN AL 0.4 14 28 25 4 6 1 0 1 4 0 0 2 2 .240 .296 .400 .696 89 .316 80 10 2 0 1 0 0 6/H5  
    1991 25 MIN AL 1.8 109 235 199 35 57 7 2 5 20 5 5 30 35 .286 .378 .417 .795 116 .368 123 83 4 0 5 1 1 5H6/8  
    1992 26 MIN AL 1.6 129 449 409 50 102 18 2 2 35 6 5 34 61 .249 .309 .318 .626 75 .307 80 130 10 1 5 0 0 *56/H  
    1993 27 MIN AL -0.2 10 22 18 4 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 4 .167 .227 .167 .394 8 .191 -5 3 1 0 0 2 0 /6H  
    1994 28 MIN AL 0.8 97 391 350 57 86 16 1 14 49 2 4 37 58 .246 .318 .417 .735 88 .329 88 146 9 1 1 2 0 *5/H6  
    1995 29 MIN AL 0.4 117 427 372 51 92 16 5 4 45 2 1 49 54 .247 .335 .349 .684 78 .322 80 130 14 2 0 4 3 *5/H6D  
    1996 30 CLE AL -0.6 27 46 43 3 6 4 0 1 3 0 0 2 8 .140 .178 .302 .480 19 .205 -4 13 1 0 1 0 0 /5H34D  
                                                                     
    1998 32 KCR AL -0.8 17 47 46 2 8 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 6 .174 .191 .174 .365 -4 .169 -25 8 2 0 0 0 0 5/H6D  
    1999 33 KCR AL -0.8 37 82 74 8 15 1 0 1 10 1 0 4 8 .203 .244 .257 .501 28 .242 20 19 1 1 0 3 0 3H5/D64  
    9 Yrs 2.7 557 1727 1536 214 375 63 10 28 172 16 15 161 236 .244 .316 .353 .669 78 .313 78 542 44 5 13 12 4 5H63D/48  
    162 Game Avg 0.8 162 502 447 62 109 18 3 8 50 5 4 47 69 .244 .316 .353 .669 78 .313 78 158 13 1 4 3 1    
                                                               
    MIN (6 Yrs) 4.8 476 1552 1373 201 346 58 10 26 155 15 15 154 214 .252 .327 .366 .693 85 .324 87 502 40 4 12 9 4 5H6/D8  
    KCR (2 Yrs) -1.5 54 129 120 10 23 1 0 1 14 1 0 5 14 .192 .225 .225 .450 16 .215 4 27 3 1 0 3 0 5H3/D64  
    CLE (1 Yr) -0.6 27 46 43 3 6 4 0 1 3 0 0 2 8 .140 .178 .302 .480 19 .205 -4 13 1 0 1 0 0 /5H34D  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 2/19/2025.

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    Scott Leius Was A Platoon Player Who Delivered On Baseball’s Biggest Stage

    Scott Leius was never a full-time player. The most games he ever played was 129. The most plate appearances he ever notched was 449. Both those marks came in his rookie season of 1991. He picked the perfect time to be his best, as his contributions helped the Twins win the 1991 World Series Championship.

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