Griffey Jr. is 50, let's remember his greatness
Hall of Famer's swing, athleticism made him a transcendent talent
From a childhood spent around the clubhouse of the Big Red Machine to being blessed with one of the sweetest left-handed swings the game has seen, Ken Griffey Jr. seemed destined for stardom. Now, the player nicknamed "The Kid" is 50 years old. The 30th anniversary of his Major League debut was this past April.
Griffey's incredible combination of power, speed and athleticism -- and the way he made it all look so easy -- made him perhaps the preeminent baseball star of the 1990s. It also led him to the sport's highest honor: induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown in 2016.
On the day of his 50th birthday, here are 10 things you should know about the Hall of Fame career of Griffey:
• Griffey was born in Donora, Pa. (population: approximately 4,980), the same hometown as Hall of Famer Stan Musial. Remarkably, Musial and Griffey also share the same birthday. Musial was born on Nov. 21, 1920, and Griffey was born on the same day 49 years later.
• The MLB Draft began in 1965, and Griffey was the first No. 1 overall pick to earn enshrinement in the Hall of Fame. Chipper Jones and Harold Baines have since joined Griffey in that group as well.
• Griffey and his father, Ken Sr., became the first father-son tandem to play for the same team in the same game when they both suited up for the Mariners on Aug. 31, 1990. Since then, only one other father-son duo (Tim Raines and Tim Raines Jr. in 2001) has played in the same Major League contest.
On Sept. 14, just two weeks later, Ken Griffey Sr. hit a two-run home run off the Angels' Kirk McCaskill in the first inning of a game in Anaheim. In the next at-bat, Griffey Jr. followed with a homer of his own, making the Griffeys the first (and still the only) father and son to homer in the same game.
• While playing 14 seasons in the American League and nine more in the National League, Griffey homered in 44 ballparks. Only six other players in history have hit a home run in at least 40 stadiums, and Griffey's total of 44 ranks second behind only Sammy Sosa's 45.
• Griffey became the first member of the Hall of Fame to record seasons with at least 40 home runs for a team in both leagues. He reached the 40-homer plateau six times with the Mariners (1993-94, '96-99) and once with the Reds (2000).
• Griffey is one of six winners of the Home Run Derby to be enshrined to the Hall of Fame, joining Derby winners Andre Dawson (1985), Ryne Sandberg ('90), Cal Ripken Jr. ('91), Frank Thomas ('95) and Vladimir Guerrero ('07). Griffey, who won the Derby three times (1994, '98 and '99), is the only multiple time winner of the event to be inducted in Cooperstown.
• Griffey, along with fellow Class of 2016 inductee Mike Piazza, is one of 36 position players in the Hall of Fame who were named to the All-Star Game in at least 12 seasons. Griffey was voted to the All-Star starting lineup 13 times, trailing only Ripken (17) and Rod Carew (15) among members of the Hall of Fame fraternity.
• In 1997, Griffey won his lone AL MVP Award in a season in which he led the league with 393 total bases. That wound up being the third-highest number recorded by a center fielder in a season, trailing only Hall of Famers Hack Wilson's 423 in 1930 and Joe DiMaggio's 418 in '37.
• Griffey was just as electric in the field as he was at the plate. His 10 Gold Glove Awards are tied with Andruw Jones for the second-most Gold Gloves won by a center fielder -- behind only the great Willie Mays, who won 12.
• Though he played for three franchises, Griffey's 417 home runs and countless memories in Seattle made the Mariners a natural choice to be represented on the cap on his Hall of Fame plaque. Griffey was the first player to don a Mariners cap on his plaque. Edgar Martínez joined that list when he was inducted in 2019, also with a Mariners cap.