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  • Mark Loretta

    Mark Loretta Autograph

    Mark Loretta's Autograph

    Mark Loretta Bio

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    Mark David Loretta was born in 1971 in Santa Monica, California. Loretta attended Northwestern University and as a senior was named to the All-American first team at shortstop. He was drafted in the seventh round of the 1993 MLB Amateur Draft by the Brewers.

    Loretta had said that his goal was to make it to the majors in ‘three or four years,’ and he did just that. After batting .299 in his first three minor league seasons, he made his major league debut in September 1995 and finished the year with a slash line of .260/.327/.380 with three doubles and a homer in 50 at-bats.

    Initially a shortstop, Loretta would play all four infield spots during his career. In 1996, the right-swinging Loretta started the season with the Brewers but was sent down in mid-May despite hitting .357 (10-for-28) to make room for OF Chuckie Carr. Loretta was called up three weeks later and finished the year in Milwaukee, slashing .279/.339/.318 across 154 at-bats.

    Over the next three years, Loretta was a ‘full-time’ utility player, averaging 142 games played over that span. His three-year slash line was .297/.363/.400 with an average of 27 doubles, three triples, and five home runs per year.

    Loretta was batting .305 and playing solid defense at shortstop in early June 2000 when he fouled a ball off his left foot and suffered a broken bone, requiring surgery. He missed 11 weeks and finished the year with a batting mark of .281/.350/.406 across 352 at-bats with 21 doubles and seven homers.

    The injury bug struck once again in 2001 when Loretta suffered torn ligaments in his left thumb during spring training and missed the first six weeks of the season. He finished with another solid season with a batting line of .289/.346/.352 across 384 at-bats. His power numbers dropped with only 14 doubles and two home runs.

    Loretta started off slow in 2002 and had only started 16 games through June 11 while batting only .174 but then had a hot streak in his next 12 games, hitting .500 (18-for-36) with seven two-baggers to raise his average to .286. He got more starts over the next six weeks, but his average dropped to .267 on August 31, when he was traded to the Houston Astros. Some saw the trade as part of a ‘fire sale’ with then-CEO Wendy Selig-Prieb jettisoning salary during another dismal season at Miller Park. In the first four years at the new stadium, the Brewers won 68, 56, 68, and 67 games respectively.

    While in Houston, Loretta played in just 21 games and filed for free agency. He signed with the San Diego Padres and played there three seasons, with his first two being the best of his career. In 2003, he batted .314/.372/.441 across 589 at-bats with 13 home runs and 72 RBIs. The following season was even better, with a slash line of .335/.391/.495 with career highs in doubles (47), homers (16), OPS+ (138), and RBIs (76). He was named to the NL All-Star team for the first time and won a Silver Slugger Award. His batting average was third-best in the NL behind Barry Bonds and Todd Helton. After an injury-riddle season in 2005, he was traded to the Boston Red Sox.

    Loretta earned his second All-Star game nod with the Red Sox in 2006 with a slash line of .285/.345/.361 across a career-high 635 at-bats but managed only five home runs. After the season he signed with Houston as a free agent.

    Loretta played in 133 games with the Astros in 2007, mostly as a utility player. In 460 at-bats, he had a slash line of .287/.352/.372. The following season, Loretta saw his playing time dwindle as he appeared in only 101 games. He signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers as a free agent.

    At age 37, Loretta’s final season saw him slash .232/.309/.276 across 181 at-bats in 107 games. He retired after the season.

    Loretta’s final career numbers showed a slash line of .295/.360/.395 with 1,713 hits, including 309 doubles, 22 triples, and 67 home runs. He knocked in 629 runs and stole 47 bags. Loretta worked in the San Diego organization an s as a coach for the Chicago Cubs after retiring as a player.

    Notable Events & Trivia

    • Loretta was a Cape Cod collegiate league All-Star in 1992
    • He coached the Israeli team in a qualifier for the 2013 World Baseball Classic
    • Loretta was the starting second baseman for the AL in the 2006 All-Star Game

    Mark Loretta 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
    1995 23 MIL AL 0.3 19 56 50 13 13 3 0 1 3 1 1 4 7 .260 .327 .380 .707 80 .348 98 19 1 1 1 0 0 6/4HD  
    1996 24 MIL AL -0.3 73 170 154 20 43 3 0 1 13 2 1 14 15 .279 .339 .318 .657 66 .310 66 49 7 0 2 0 0 456/H  
    1997 25 MIL AL 0.8 132 482 418 56 120 17 5 5 47 5 5 47 60 .287 .354 .388 .742 94 .337 95 162 15 2 5 10 2 4635H/D  
    1998 26 MIL NL 2.6 140 491 434 55 137 29 0 6 54 9 6 42 47 .316 .382 .424 .806 112 .372 121 184 14 7 4 4 1 36H54/7  
    1999 27 MIL NL 0.0 153 664 587 93 170 34 5 5 67 4 1 52 59 .290 .354 .390 .744 90 .338 88 229 14 10 9 6 1 6345/H  
    2000 28 MIL NL 2.0 91 399 352 49 99 21 1 7 40 0 3 37 38 .281 .350 .406 .757 93 .346 98 143 9 1 8 1 2 6/H4  
    2001 29 MIL NL 0.4 102 429 384 40 111 14 2 2 29 1 2 28 46 .289 .346 .352 .698 84 .322 88 135 6 7 7 3 0 45/6DH1  
    2002 30 2TM NL 0.7 107 329 283 33 86 18 0 4 27 1 1 32 37 .304 .381 .410 .791 109 .359 112 116 7 5 6 3 1 5H6/43D  
    2002 30 MIL NL 0.0 86 252 217 23 58 14 0 2 19 0 0 23 32 .267 .350 .359 .709 89 .325 89 78 6 5 6 1 1 5H6/34D  
    2002 30 HOU NL 0.7 21 77 66 10 28 4 0 2 8 1 1 9 5 .424 .481 .576 1.056 171 .466 186 38 1 0 0 2 0 5/64H  
    2003 31 SDP NL 4.9 154 653 589 74 185 28 4 13 72 5 4 54 62 .314 .372 .441 .814 120 .368 127 260 17 3 3 4 2 *4/H6  
    2004 32 SDP NL 6.0 154 707 620 108 208 47 2 16 76 5 3 58 45 .335 .391 .495 .886 138 .395 149 307 10 9 4 16 3 *4 AS,MVP-9,SS
    2005 33 SDP NL 0.4 105 463 404 54 113 16 1 3 38 8 4 45 34 .280 .360 .347 .707 95 .327 98 140 11 8 2 4 4 4/5  
    2006 34 BOS AL 0.5 155 703 635 75 181 33 0 5 59 4 1 49 63 .285 .345 .361 .706 80 .323 79 229 16 12 2 5 1 *43/HD AS
    2007 35 HOU NL 0.7 133 511 460 52 132 23 2 4 41 1 2 44 41 .287 .352 .372 .724 88 .328 89 171 15 3 3 1 0 6435H/D  
    2008 36 HOU NL 0.6 101 297 261 27 73 15 0 4 38 0 0 29 30 .280 .350 .383 .733 96 .331 95 100 9 2 0 5 1 4H5/63  
    2009 37 LAD NL -0.4 107 204 181 19 42 8 0 0 25 1 1 20 21 .232 .309 .276 .585 60 .272 56 50 6 1 0 2 2 H53/D41  
    15 Yrs 19.3 1726 6558 5812 768 1713 309 22 76 629 47 35 555 605 .295 .360 .395 .754 98 .344 101 2294 157 71 56 64 20 465H3D/17  
    162 Game Avg 1.8 162 616 546 72 161 29 2 7 59 4 3 52 57 .295 .360 .395 .754 98 .344 101 215 15 7 5 6 2    
                                                               
    MIL (8 Yrs) 5.9 796 2943 2596 349 751 135 13 29 272 22 19 247 304 .289 .355 .385 .740 92 .340 94 999 72 33 42 25 7 6435H/D17  
    SDP (3 Yrs) 11.3 413 1823 1613 236 506 91 7 32 186 18 11 157 141 .314 .377 .438 .815 121 .368 128 707 38 20 9 24 9 *4/H65  
    HOU (3 Yrs) 2.0 255 885 787 89 233 42 2 10 87 2 3 82 76 .296 .363 .393 .755 98 .341 99 309 25 5 3 8 1 46H53/D  
    BOS (1 Yr) 0.5 155 703 635 75 181 33 0 5 59 4 1 49 63 .285 .345 .361 .706 80 .323 79 229 16 12 2 5 1 *43/HD  
    LAD (1 Yr) -0.4 107 204 181 19 42 8 0 0 25 1 1 20 21 .232 .309 .276 .585 60 .272 56 50 6 1 0 2 2 H53/D41  
                                                               
    NL (11 Yrs) 18.0 1347 5147 4555 604 1356 253 17 64 507 35 27 441 460 .298 .363 .403 .766 103 .348 107 1835 118 56 46 49 17 465H3D/17  
    AL (4 Yrs) 1.4 379 1411 1257 164 357 56 5 12 122 12 8 114 145 .284 .347 .365 .712 83 .327 83 459 39 15 10 15 3 4653H/D  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 11/30/2024.

    See all » Mark Loretta Articles

    Utility Man Mark Loretta Could Do It All

    Mark Loretta was signed as an All-American shortstop out of Northwestern University in the seventh round of the 1993 MLB Amateur Draft by the Brewers. Whether it was their plan or not, Loretta made over 100 career starts at all four infield posts for Milwaukee in an eight-year career in Brew City. Loretta also handled the bat well with a slash line of .289/.355/.385 in nearly 2,600 ABs for the Crew.

    The Five Best Utility Players in Brewers History

    The bench or utility players are often not thought of much. Sometimes, it's bad news for the team if they are a factor. Over a 162-game season, depth always plays a factor, and here are the five best "tenth men" in Brewers' history.

    Brewer Drafts From the Past: Rounds 6-10

    Top 10! This time we’ve got quite a few major leaguers, though not too many stars. In fact, we have to go to the Seattle Pilots to get to the best unsigned player, but there are still quite a few good players for those signed.

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    Mark Loretta Baseball Cards


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