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Mack came to Minnesota from San Diego, where he was a former number 11 overall pick, in the Rule-5 Draft and played his first season for Minnesota as a 26-year-old in 1990. He played five seasons in Minnesota and his numbers stack up well against some of his contemporaries (courtesy of Baseball Reference):
Injuries prevented Mack from playing quite as many games as Kirby Puckett, but Mack had the highest OPS of the group. Mack also leads the group in WAR with 19.6 (5.2 per 650 PA) compared to 19.2 (4.0 per 650 PA) for Puckett and 8.2 (2.2 per 650 PA) for Hrbek. This isn’t to say Mack was a better player than Puckett or Hrbek as the comparison isn’t apples to apples. Mack was aged 26-30 during those years while Puckett and Hrbek were both 30-34. But even if we take Puckett and Hrbek’s 26-30 aged seasons, Mack is in the same ballpark, as Puckett’s OPS+ was 136 while Hrbek’s was 137 (Mack’s was 130). Mack was a really good player.
And Terry Ryan realized this. Mack tore it up in the strike shortened ’94 season, slashing .333/.402/.564 in 81 games and Ryan offered Mack a two-year, $6.7 million extension with a club option. Over at Twinkie Town, Devereaux wrote a great fan post a few years back detailing how the Twins lost Shane Mack. Long story short, the Twins were the only team really interested in Mack and he chose to go to Japan on a better offer, signing a two-year, $8.1 million deal with the Tokyo Yomiuri Giants.
With the peripherals out of the way, let’s actually tackle the question posed in the headline. We’ll start with Mack’s time in Japan. I couldn’t find much out there in the innerweb related to the mysterious period we’ll refer to as the “Japan years,” but thanks to Baseball Reference we at least have the numbers. In his first season he hit .275/.357/.438 in 120 games. He didn’t exactly set Japan on fire but he did hit 20 home runs (a 21-year-old Ichiro Suzuki would slash .342/.432/.544 with 25 home runs in 130 games). After getting settled, Mack showed some improvement in his second season, hitting .293/.354/.488 with 22 dingers in 127 games (a 22-year-old Ichiro Suzuki would slash .356/.422/.504 with 16 home runs in 130 games).
And with that the “Japan years” came to an end. Other than comparing Mack to Ichiro, I’ve given you no context to how Mack’s numbers stack up to the rest of Japan. It’s not because I didn’t want to, there’s just not much out there. I will, however, go out on the limb and suggest that Ichiro’s numbers might be better than the average NPB hitter.
But our story doesn’t end yet. Mack would return to the MLB and play pretty well in a part-time role with the Boston Red Sox in 1997, hitting .315/.368/.438 in 60 games at 33-years of age. 1998 would be his final season and it got a bit weird. Mack signed with the Oakland Athletics, but after all of two plate appearances Oakland had apparently seen enough and shipped Mack off to the Kansas City Royals on April 8th. Mack continued to hit pretty well (280/.345/.449), again as a part timer (66 games), but must have decided he had had enough baseball and he retired following the ’98 season.
The last news we have of Shane Mack comes from his Wikipedia page. On March 6, 2006 Mack learned of Kirby Puckett’s massive stroke and flew out to Arizona to join his former teammates and to be with Puckett in his last moments. And those unfortunate circumstances are where our story ends.
What are your favorite Shane Mack memories? Better yet, do you happen to be Shane Mack? If so, please let us know what you’re up to in the comments section!
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