Sal Fasano
Sal Fasano | |
---|---|
Syracuse Chiefs – No. 12 | |
Catcher | |
Bats: Right Throws: Right | |
debut | |
April 3, 1996, for the Kansas City Royals | |
Career statistics (through 2006) | |
Batting average | .221 |
Home runs | 46 |
RBI's | 130 |
Stats at Baseball Reference | |
Teams | |
Salvatore Frank Fasano (born August 10 1971 in Chicago, Illinois) is a Major League Baseball catcher, mostly recently with the Toronto Blue Jays organization. Fasano stands at 6'2" tall and weighs 245 pounds. He bats and throws right handed. He is known to many for his famous mustache, including the fans from Philadelphia.
Jeff Pearlman of ESPN.com said of Fasano: "When I think of Sal Fasano, however, I think of greatness. Not of Willie Mays or Ted Williams greatness, but of a uniquely excellent human being who, were class and decency the most valued standards of a career, would be the easiest Hall of Fame inductee of all time." [1]
Minor league tenure
Fasano was recruited heavily by the University of Hawaii but ended up playing for the University of Evansville and was drafted by the Kansas City Royals in the 37th round of the 1993 Amateur Draft. During his tenure in the minor leagues, he became a highly regarded catcher. Fasano made the Midwest League All-Star team in 1994, and the Pacific Coast League All-Star team in 1999, the same year he set a league record for being hit by the pitch 26 times. Also in 1994, he was named the Midwest League's Most Valuable Player.
Kansas City Royals
After three seasons in the minor leagues, the catcher made his major league debut on April 3, 1996 for the Royals. He spent the next three seasons splitting catching duties with starters Mike Macfarlane and rising prospect Mike Sweeney. In 1998 he established career highs in at-bats (216) and RBIs (31). He also ranked second in American League in HBPs with 16.
Oakland Athletics
The Oakland Athletics purchased Fasano's contract from the Royals in March of 2000 and handed the portly catcher the team's back up duties behind starter Ramon Hernandez. Fasano helped the A's capture the A.L. West division crown that season, and made his, to date, only post season appearance as a defensive replacement. The Royals repurchased his contract the following off-season.
Colorado Rockies
Fasano's hitting woes continued back in Kansas City, and the Royals and swapped back-up catchers with the Colorado Rockies in June 2001, with Brent Mayne heading to Royals. After an uneventful half season in another reserve role, Fasano and the Rockies cut ties later that autumn.
Baltimore Orioles
After one at-bat with the Anaheim Angels in 2002, Fasano in his first season back in the majors achieved career highs in home runs (11) and runs scored (25) as a member of the Baltimore Orioles.
Philadelphia Phillies
Fasano began 2006 for the Philadelphia Phillies as a backup to Mike Lieberthal. His distinctive Fu Manchu mustache earned him the cult admiration of Phillies fans, who began a Phan Phavorites fan club called Sal's Pals. Fasano showed his gratitude by buying the group tickets and pizza. Fasano began to see more playing time as Lieberthal got injured, eventually taking over the starting role. His light hitting though cost him his job as rookie backstop Chris Coste emerged in Lieberthal's absence. When Lieberthal returned, there was no spot for Fasano. He was designated for assignment and acquired by the New York Yankees in exchange for minor league infielder Hector Made.
New York Yankees
One of Fasano's first acts as a Yankee was to trim his facial hair, a requirement set forth by owner George Steinbrenner. He spent the late summer and September as a back-up to Jorge Posada and did not appear in the Yankees four game loss to the Detroit Tigers in the Division Series. On August 19 2006, Fasano made his first career pinch-running appearance, taking the place of fellow catcher Jorge Posada during a 13-5 win over the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. [2]
Toronto Blue Jays
Fasano agreed to a minor league contract with the Blue Jays in January 2007, and was invited to major league spring training. On April 26, the Blue Jays purchased Fasano's contract from Syracuse of the International League (AAA) in order to fill a void left by an injury to Gregg Zaun.[1] His first at bat as a Blue Jay came against the Texas Rangers on April 28, 2007. The Blue Jays designated him for assignment on June 13, after batting .178 with a home run and four RBIs in 14 games.
Career statistics
- Career statistics from MLB · ESPN · Baseball Reference · Fangraphs · Baseball Reference (Minors) · Retrosheet
Personal
Fasano is the son of Vincent and Nella Fasano, Italian immigrants who settled in the Chicago area. He is married to the former Kerri Kubinski, who was a volleyball player at Evansville. [2] In the off-season, Fasano helps out at his father-in-law's excavating company. Fasano is a born-again Christian; he was introduced to spirituality by Kansas City teammate Keith Lockhart and credits religion with curttailing his desire to drink.
References
External links
- Player Statistics at Baseball-Reference.com
- ESPN Player Profile
- Minor League Splits and Situational Stats
- Phillies fan site The 700 Level's Sal Fasano archives
- Sal's Big Fat Blog
- Sal Fasano more than a human spare part
- Throwback Backstop: The story of how Sal Fasano became Philly's latest fan favorite
- Major league players from Illinois
- Toronto Blue Jays players
- New York Yankees players
- Philadelphia Phillies players
- Kansas City Royals players
- Oakland Athletics players
- Colorado Rockies players
- Anaheim Angels players
- Baltimore Orioles players
- Major league catchers
- Italian-American sportspeople
- 1971 births
- Living people