Corey Drew Seager…wife’s name is Mady…his oldest brother, Kyle, was a third-round pick of SEA in 2009 and retired following the 2021 campaign after batting .251 with 242 homers and 807 RBI in 1480 games as primarily a 3B in 10 seasons with the Mariners…in 2016, Kyle (30) and Corey (26) became the first set of brothers with 25+ homers each in the same season… Corey’s middle brother, Justin, was also drafted by the Mariners, while his father, Jeff, played at Farleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey.
2023
The 29-year-old turned in one of the most prolific offensive seasons by a shortstop in Major League history in his second year with the Rangers, slashing .327/.390/.623/1.013 (156-477) with 33 HR, 42 2B and 96 RBIs across 119 games…Despite missing 43 of Texas’ 162 contests, Seager still ranked among A.L. qualifiers in 2B (1st), BA (2nd), OPS (2nd), SLG (2nd), XBH (T2nd, 75), OBP (3rd), fWAR (3rd, 6.1), bWAR (4th, 6.9), HR (T5th) and RBI (T10th)…He endured a pair of stints on the 10-day injured list from 4/12-5/16 (left hamstring strain) and 7/22-8/1 (right thumb sprain), the first IL stints of his Rangers career (2022-23)...Finished second in A.L. MVP voting behind LAA’s Shohei Ohtani, who was a unanimous winner…recorded 264 points in the balloting, receiving 24 2nd-place votes and six third-place votes…it was the best finish in MVP voting in his career, as his only prior top 5 placement came with LAD in 2016 (3rd place)…it was the highest finish for any Ranger since Josh Hamilton won the award in 2010…teammate Marcus Semien finished third in 2023 MVP balloting, first time Texas has ever had multiple players land in the top three...Seager was tabbed for the A.L. Silver Slugger Award at shortstop, 3rd such honor of his career (also 2016-17 w/ LAD)…was named 2023 Rangers Player of the Year and Rangers Hall of Famer Michael Young presented him with the award at the club’s Awards Dinner on 1/26/24 at Globe Life Field…also tabbed All-MLB First Team...Seager entered the final day of the regular season in position to capture the A.L. batting title, but finished second to TB’s Yandy Díaz (.330) following an 0-for-4 showing in game No. 162 on 10/1 at SEA…his .327 BA was still the 11th-highest qualifying single-season mark in Washington/Texas franchise history, and the highest by any Ranger since Michael Young in 2011 (.338)…Seager’s career-high 1.013 OPS figure (prev. .877 in 2016 w/ LAD) ranked 2nd in MLB to only LAA’s Shohei Ohtani (1.066), and was the fifth-highest in franchise history: 1.050-Rafael Palmeiro in 1999, 1.044-Josh Hamilton in 2010, 1.021-Álex Rodríguez in 2001, 1.015-Rodríguez in 2002…he also finished 2nd in MLB to Ohtani (.654) with a .623 slugging pct., seventh-best in franchise history and highest since Hamilton in 2010…according to Stathead, Seager was the first qualified MLB batter to post a .325+ BA and .620+ SLG in a full season...Although he missed roughly a quarter of the campaign due to a pair of Injured List stints, Seager still finished with a career-high 75 extra-base hits (33 HR, 42 2B) which ranked T2nd in the A.L. to only Ohtani (78 XBH)… according to Stathead, Seager was just the 3rd player in A.L./N.L. history to record 75+ XBH in a season of 120-or-fewer games played, joining STL’s Chick Hafey in 1930 (77 XBH in 120 G) and PHI’s Sam Thompson in 1895 (84 XBH in 119 G)…combined to record 20 HR and 31 2B in his first 74 G of the season, becoming the second player in the Modern Era (beg. 1900) to do so alongside Hall-of-Famer Joe Medwick in 1937 (Elias)…his A.L.-high 42 doubles were 2nd-most in MLB (59-LAD’s Freddie Freeman) and the most by a Ranger since Elvis Andrus in 2017 (44)…he was just 6th player (7th instance) in Washington/Texas franchise history with 30+ HR and 40+ 2B in a season (last 40 2B/32 HR by Josh Hamilton in 2010)… the only other MLB batter to reach those totals in 2023 was LAD’s Mookie Betts (40 2B/39 HR)...Made team-leading 112 starts at shortstop in 2023, compiling a career-best .981 (8 E/424 TC) fielding percentage which ranked second among qualified A.L. shortstops to MIN’s Carlos Correa (.987)…was one of three finalists for the A.L. Gold Glove Award at SS (also Correa and winner NYY’s Anthony Volpe)…had a career-best 50-game errorless streak from 6/23-9/3, and committed just two errors over his last 76 G (beg. 6/23) to close the season…his eight errors for the year matched fewest ever by a TEX SS in a season of 100+ G at the position (also Álex Rodriguez in 2003…registered his highest Ultimate Zone Rating (5.7) and Defensive Runs Saved (5) marks since 2017 (9.0 UZR/7 DRS), ranking first and fourth, respectively, in those categories among qualified A.L. shortstops.
POSTSEASON: Slashed .318/.451/.682/1.133 (21-66) with 6 HR and 12 RBI across 17 games/starts (all at SS) for Texas last postseason, reaching base safely via H/BB/HBP in 15 of 17 games…combined for 12 XBH (6 HR, 6 2B) in the playoffs, matching his own record set in 2020 with LAD for the most XBH as a shortstop in a single postseason…tallied more BB (15) than SO (12), and 15 BB were T7th-most ever in one postseason…set all-time record with five BB in ALDS G2 at BAL, and his DS-record 9 BB (no K’s) made him second player in MLB history with 9+ BB/no SO in a postseason series (also NYY’s Willie Randolph in 1981 WS vs. LAD)…MLB-high 37 times on base, T4th-most ever for a player in a single playoff run, trailing only SF’s Barry Bonds in 2002 (43), TB’s Randy Arozarena in 2020 (38), and STL’s Albert Pujols in 2011 (38)…reached base 3+ times in each of 1st 5 G, tying longest postseason-opening streak in MLB history (also SEA’s Edgar Martinez in 1995)...With his selection as 2023 World Series Most Valuable Player, Seager (who also won in 2020 w/ LAD) became just the 4th player ever with multiple World Series MVP awards (beginning 1955)…joins Reggie Jackson (OAK/NYY) as only players to capture the honor with different teams, while Seager is the only player ever to win World Series MVP with a National League and American League club.
2022
In his first season with the Rangers, hit career-high 33 home runs while being selected as an All-Star for the third time in his career…recorded second-most games (151), RBI (83), runs (91), walks (58) and total bases (270) for any season in his career and was not on the Injured List the entire year…ranked among A.L. leaders in HR (T5th, 33) and runs (T6th, 91). HOME RUNS: His 33 HR set a MLB record for HR by a left-handed hitting shortstop (min. 50% of games at SS)…the previous record was 30 HR by TB’s Brad Miller in 2016…his 31 HR while playing SS tied MIL’s Willy Adames for most in MLB in 2022… became just 2nd primary SS in TEX history with a 30-HR season (Alex Rodriguez, 3x: 2001-02-03)…became just the 14th player in Washington/Texas franchise history (13th w/ TEX) with at least 33 HR in a season, joining Alex Rodriguez (52 HR in 2001) as the only players to ever do it in their first season with the franchise…his 33 HR were most by a Ranger since 2018 (40- Joey Gallo)…his 22 HR at Globe Life Field (see separate note)... hit HR in five straight from 7/8-12, tied for longest HR streak by SS since 1901: Alex Rodriguez in 1999 w/ SEA and 2003 w/ TEX, also Boston Braves’ Eddie Miller in 1940...posted 2-HR games on 5/10 vs. KC and 8/28 vs. DET, giving him 12 career multi-HR games...hit 14 HR vs. LHP in 2022, tied for MLB lead (also NYY’s Aaron Judge), and 3rd-most ever in a season by a Texas LH batter against LH pitching (15-Rafael Palmeiro in 2003 and Joey Gallo in 2018). RBI: His 83 RBI ranked T15th in A.L., second-highest total in a season in his career (87 w/ LAD in 2019)…had RBI in career-high eight straight from 7/8-15, the longest span for any Texas batter since Hank Blalock had RBI in eight straight 9/19-27/08…the eight-game RBI streak was T2nd-longest in MLB in 2022 (10-Francisco Lindor, 5/22-61; 8-Pete Alonso, 9/13-20) and T7th-longest in Texas history...SUMMARY: Hit .310 (13-42) over his first 10 G with TEX thru 4/20, and owned .270 BA (24-89) thru 22 G on 5/3…hit .186 (26-140) next 35 G from 5/4-6/12, dropping BA to season-low .218…had .254 BA (15-59) from 6/13-7/1, but hit .299 (60-201) over span of two-plus months from 7/2-9/2 to put season BA at .256…named Rangers July Player of the Month (.318/.394/.647/1.041, 8 HR, 19 RBI in 23 G) and was A.L. Player of the Week for 7/4-10 (.500, 11-22, 4 HR, 9 RBI)…batted .192 (20-104) in final 26 G to finish at .245. ALL-STAR: Selected to All-Star Game for a third time in his career (also 2016-17 w/ LAD), and went 0-for-1 with a groundout while playing three innings at SS in A.L.’s 3-2 victory on 7/19 at Dodger Stadium, ninth straight triumph for the junior circuit… also participated in 7/18 HR Derby, knocked out in first round by SEA’s Julio Rodríguez (32-to-24) despite having 2nd-highest HR total of any player in the opening round...NOTES: Career-high seven IBB, 7th-most in A.L., including a bases-loaded IBB in 4th inning on 4/15 vs. LAA…it was the seventh known instance in Major League history of a player being intentionally walked with the bases loaded…played in 151 of Rangers’ 162 games (93.2%), all starts, as he has not appeared in a game as a reserve since 9/9/21 at STL while w/ LAD…missed consecutive games just three times all year: 7/29-30-31 at LAA (lower right leg contusion after foul ball off leg on 7/28 at LAA), 9/28-29 at SEA (left forearm contusion after HBP 9/27 at SEA), and 10/4-G2 and 10/5 vs. NYY.
2021
Started 90 games at shortstop…was on IL from 5/16- 7/29 after suffering a fractured right hand when he was hit by a pitch from MIA’s Ross Detwiler on 5/15…injury did not require surgery…was transferred to 60-day IL on 6/30 and activated on 7/30…despite the missed time, ranked among the N.L. leaders in on-base percentage (4th, .394), batting average (5th, .306), and OPS (7th, .915) among players with at least 400 plate appearances…set a Dodgers single-season record for OPS by a shortstop (min. 400 PA)…led all Dodgers who appeared in a game in OPS and was 2nd in batting (.318—Trea Turner.
2020
Hit .307 (65-for212) with 12 doubles, a triple, 15 home runs and 41 RBI in his sixth season with the Dodgers… led the team in hits, doubles and RBI...Finished the season with 22 multi-hit games, tied with Trea Turner for most in the Major Leagues...Ranked among NL leaders in batting average (10th), doubles (T-20th, 12), home runs (T-9th), RBI (T-7th), hits (T-7th, 65), extra base hits (T-8th, 28), slugging percentage (7th, .585) and OPS (11th, .943)...Went 13-for-29 (.4 48) with two doubles and two homers when batting with runners in scoring position and two outs...Took off in the postseason, hitting .328/.425/.746 in 18 games…had the second-most home runs (eight), second-most runs scored (20), and second-most RBI (20) of any postseason in MLB history...Won both NCLS and World Series MVP, becoming the second player in franchise history to accomplish the feat (Hershiser, 1988) Had a two home-run game in the fifth installment of the NLCS against Atlanta…drove in three runs in the 7-3 win...was extremely productive in a Game 4 World Series loss…went 4-for-5 with a home run and two RBI...his .328 postseason batting average is 11th-best in LA Dodgers history…his .746 slugging percentage ranks fourth-best in franchise history in the LA era.
2019
After being limited to 26 games during the 2018 season due to injury, played in 134 contests as the starting shortstop…slashed .272/.335/.483 with 82 runs, 44 doubles, a triple, 19 homers and 87 RBI ... Tied for the NL lead with a career-high 44 doubles alongside Anthony Rendon…the mark tied for fifth in franchise history and was the second time he finished in the top 10 in the category…previously placed seventh in the NL with 40 two-baggers in 2016 ... Recorded six consecutive multi-hit games from Sept. 15 to 22 and seven total multi-hit efforts during the 11-game span…led the Majors in RBI for the month of September after driving in 26 with seven homers and a .291 average over 23 games ... Collected 15 of his 44 doubles during August to lead the Majors in the category for the month ... Wrapped up his 2019 campaign with a season-high, 11-game hit streak…went 18-for-41 (.439) with eight runs, four doubles, a triple, three homers and 10 RBI...thirty-six of his 44 doubles came off right-handed pitching…led the NL for most doubles by a left-handed bat off right-handed pitching and ranked second in the Majors behind Rafael Devers' 39 two-baggers...marked his third season posting 30 or more doubles and 15 or more home runs…since 2016, ranks among NL shortstops in doubles (122, 2nd) and homers (69, 4th) despite only playing in 26 games during the 2018 season...spent a majority of the season batting fifth in the order, where he went 50-for-165 for a .303 clip with 18 doubles, seven homers and 29 RBI over 43 games...blasted a grand slam on May 12 in the eighth inning…it was his second career grand slam with the last coming on June 11, 2017 vs. Cincinnati...recorded his second Opening Day homer, as he made his first appearance in a game since April 29, 2018 at San Francisco.
2018
Appeared in 26 games, slashing .267/.348/.396 with five doubles, one triple, two home runs and 13 RBI prior to missing the remainder of the season due to injury ... Had season-ending Tommy John surgery on his right elbow on May 5, performed by Dr. Neal ElAttrache in Los Angeles ... Also underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left hip on Aug. 7, performed by Dr. Bryan Kelly in New York.
2017
Posted a .295/.375/.479 slash line with 85 runs, 33 doubles and 22 home runs, while also recording career-highs in RBI (77) and walks (67) in 145 games...Ranked among the top 20 in the National League in hits (159, T-14th), multi-hit games (42, T-16th), OBP (16th), batting average (18th) and doubles (T-19th)...according to Fangraphs.com, his 5.7 WAR ranked seventh best in the NL, which was also best on the team...Recognized with his second consecutive Silver Slugger Award after leading National League shortstops in runs (4th ML), hits (T-4th ML), doubles (T-5th ML) and walks (1st ML), while ranking second in batting average, OBP and SLG and is third in RBI and home runs...His .361 (39-for-108) batting average with runners in scoring position ranked eighth in the NL, while his .329 (7 1- for-216) average with runners on base ranked 14th in the senior circuit...His .325 batting average (55-for-169) against left-handers ranked 11th best in the National League...Selected to the National League All-Star team for the second consecutive season...also finished 17th in the NL MVP voting...Posted a .301/.382/.507 slashline with 20 doubles, 12 homers and 41 RBI in 73 games at Dodger Stadium...ranked top 20 in the NL in doubles (20, T-9th), hits (82, 12th), runs (50, T-13th), SLG (19th), batting average (20th) and OPB (20th) at home...On June 20 vs. New York-NL, ripped his second-career three home run game and established a new career- best with six RBI...on June 11 vs. Cincinnati, he stroked his first career grand slam homer off of Raisel Iglesias...Went 9-for-38 (.237) with one double, one triple, one home run and six RBI in 10 Postseason games...missed the NLCS vs. Chicago due to a low back sprain.
2016
Unanimously awarded the National League's Rookie of the Year and selected as an All-Star in his first big-league season...was the Dodgers' 17th Rookie of the Year and the 21st player overall to win the award by unanimous vote...Was also a finalist and finished third in the MVP voting...recognized with a Silver Slugger Award, the Players Choice Award for Outstanding NL Rookie and by both The Sporting News (NL) and Baseball America (MLB) as the publications' Rookie of the Year...Finished the season ranked among the NL leaders in hits (193, 2nd), runs (105, 5th), doubles (40, 7th), multi-hit games (57, T-2nd), extra-base hits (71, 7th), total bases (321, 4th), batting average (.308, 7th) and slugging percentage (.512, 10th)...according to Stats, LLC, is just the fourth rookie in the divisional era (since 1969) to rank in the NL's Top 10 in batting average and slugging percentage, joining Dusty Baker (1972, ATL), Mike Piazza (1993, LA) and Albert Pujols (2001, STL).... His 26 homers established a Dodger record for a shortstop, breaking the previous record of 22, held by Glenn Wright (1930)...joined with his brother Kyle (30 HR) to become the first set of brothers with 25+ homers each in the same season...His 193 hits were the most by a big-league rookie since 2001, when Albert Pujols had 194 hits and Ichiro Suzuki knocked 242...Established Los Angeles rookie records in hits, runs and doubles, while ranking among the club rookie single-season leaders in homers (T-2nd), RBI (6th), average (2nd), on-base percentage (2nd) and slugging percentage (3rd)...Topped Major League rookies in games played, hits, runs, doubles, RBI (T-1st), multi-hit games (57) and walks (54), while ranking second with 26 homers... Batted .295 with RISP (33-for-112) and hit .333 with runners on base (85-for-255, 7th NL)...Posted a .334/.391/.557 slashline vs. right-handers, going 144-for-431 with 21 of his 26 home runs…his average vs. RHP was the fourth-best in MLB... Named to the National League All-Star team and participated in the HR Derby, becoming the youngest position player to be honored as an All-Star in franchise history at 22 years, 69 days old (previous: Pete Reiser: 22 years, 113 days) and the third-youngest Dodger All-Star overall (at the time of their first selection), behind only Fernando Valenzuela and Ralph Branca...Posted the second-longest hitting streak by a rookie in Los Angeles history with a 19-game run from June 16-July 6, behind only Tommy Davis' 20-game run from July 30-Aug. 20, 1960...batted .392 (31-for-79) with 10 doubles, two triples, two homers and five RBI...Named NL's June Rookie of the Month... On June 3 vs. Atlanta, launched three solo home runs for his first career three-homer game, becoming the first Dodger rookie to do so…he also was the first rookie shortstop in MLB history to have a three-homer game and the sixth youngest player overall to accomplish the feat...Blasted first-inning homers in Games 1 and 2 of the NLDS at Washington and went 9-for-44 (.205) with a double, two homers and four RBI in 11 postseason games.
2015
Had his contract selected by the Dodgers on Sept. 3 and batted .337 with a .425 on-base percentage, eight doubles, a triple, four homers and 17 RBI in 27 September games. ... Ranked eighth in the NL (min. 50 AB) in Sept./Oct. OPS with a .986 mark. ... Reached base safely in 24 of 25 starts…reached base safely in the first 21 starts of his career, becoming the first Los Angeles Dodger to do so…the last Dodger in franchise history to accomplish the feat was Jim Gilliam, who reached base in his first 24 starts in 1953 in Brooklyn. ... Made his Major League debut on Sept. 3 as the starting shortstop at San Diego, going 2-for-4 with a double and two RBI…picked up his first hit in his second at-bat with a double off Colin Rea. ... Hit his first big league home run on Sept. 12 at Arizona with a solo shot off Josh Collmenter…went 4-for-4 with three runs and three RBI in the contest. ... Reached base safely in nine consecutive plate appearances Sept. 10-11 at Arizona, becoming the first Los Angeles rookie ever to accomplish the feat (Source - Elias Sports Bureau). ... Made 21 starts at shortstop in the Majors and appeared in six games (four starts) at third base…posted a .949 fielding percentage at shortstop (five errors) and did not commit an error at third base. ... Appeared in all five of the Dodgers' NLDS games against the Mets, starting four games at shortstop, and went 3-for-16 with a double (.188). ... Combined to hit .293 with 37 doubles, 18 home runs and 76 RBI in 125 minor league games with Double-A Tulsa and Triple-A Oklahoma City, earning a selection to Baseball America's 2015 Minor League All-Star Team and as the publication's Triple-A Player of the Year…combined to appear in 104 games at shortstop and 19 games at third base in the minors Opened the season at Double-A Tulsa, where he batted .375 with seven doubles, five home runs and 15 RBI in 20 games to earn a May 1 promotion to Oklahoma City…was named a midseason Pacific Coast League All-Star, batting .278 with 30 doubles, 13 home runs and 61 RBI in 105 games with OKC. ... Appeared at his first big league Spring Training as a non-roster invitee…entered the season rated as the Dodgers' No. 1 prospect and as the seventh-best overall prospect by MLB.com.
2014
Named the Dodgers' Branch Rickey Minor League Co-Player of the Year, played for the U.S. team at the XM All-Star Futures Game, and named to Baseball America's Minor League All-Star Team, combining to hit .349 with 20 homers and 97 RBI in 118 games with Single-A Rancho Cucamonga and Double-A Chattanooga...named Baseball America's Single-A Classification Player of the Year... posted a .402 combined on-base percentage and a .602 slugging percentage. ... Selected 2014 California League's Most Valuable Player after leading the league in doubles (34), total bases (207), extra-base hits (54), slugging percentage (.633) and OPS (1.044) at the time of his promotion (July 17)..also selected as a California League mid-season and post-season All-Star. ... Also ranked among California league leaders in hits (115, T-3rd), batting average (.352, 2nd), home runs (18, T-5th) and RBI (70, T-6th) at the time of his promotion. ... Was promoted to Double-A Chattanooga on July 17, where he helped lead the Lookouts to a postseason berth by hitting .345 (51-for- 148) with 16 doubles, three triples, two home runs and 27 RBI in 38 games. ... Earned California League Player of the Week honors, May 19-25. ... Entered 2014 rated by Baseball America as the Dodgers' No. 2 prospect. ... Played in the Arizona Fall League for the Glendale Desert Dogs, earning a selection to the league's All-Prospect Team and starting at shortstop in the league's Rising Stars Game.
2013
Combined to hit .269 with 16 home runs and 72 RBI in 101 games with Single-A Great Lakes and Rancho Cucamonga in his first full professional season. ... Opened the season with Great Lakes, where he posted a .309/.389/.529 slashline, going 84-for-272 with 12 homers and 57 RBI in 74 RBI. ... Promoted on Rancho Cucamonga on Aug. 3 and hit .160 with four home runs and 15 RBI in 27 games as one of the youngest players in the California League. ... Following the season, played for the Glendale Desert Dogs of the Arizona Fall League, batting .181 with three doubles, two homers and 10 RBI in 19 games…selected to the league's Rising Starts Game.
2012
Appeared in 46 games with Rookie-level Ogden in his first professional season after signing with Los Angeles on June 30…hit .309 with a .383 on-base percentage, nine doubles, eight homers and 33 RBI.