BALLPLAYERS | TEAMS | CHRONOLOGY | TODAY | BOOKS | NEWSLETTER | ERRATA | FAQ
Jump to:
Recent jumps
» John Clarkson
» whitey ford
» gary carter
» 1897
» 1965 Los Angeles Dodgers

What's New?
Current Totals
Free Newsletter

Report An Error
Fixed Bugs

Browser Button
Jump from anywhere!
Link Your Site

Get Published!
Reader Submissions

Team Pages
All Teams
Greatest Teams

The Ballplayers
Historical Matchups
Negro Leaguers
Hall of Famers
MVPs

Bookshelf
New Excerpts
Photo Collections

The Chronology
Flashbacks
Baseball Eras
Today in BB History
Anyday in BB History
Rules: 1845-1899
Rules: 1900-present

FAQ
Authors

BaseballLibrary.com
Copyright © 2002
by The Idea Logical
Company, Inc.

All rights reserved.

Matt Nokes
Born: 1963

C, DH 1985-95 Giants, Tigers, Yankees, Orioles, Rockies

Matt Nokes's Teammates

  • All-Star in 1987

GamesAverageHRRBI
Career 902.254136422
League CS 5.14312

Books and articles about Matt Nokes

Nokes, who had come to the Tigers from the Giants, was asked in 1987 to fill the hole left when slugging catcher Lance Parrish opted for free agency. A lefthanded-hitting rookie who never had more than 14 home runs in a minor league season, Nokes blasted 32, drove in 87 runs, and batted .289 to help spark Detroit to the AL Eastern Division title. He also broke up a Tom Candiotti no-hitter in the eighth inning. His performance gained him selection to the AL All-Star and Silver Slugger teams.
RELATED LINKS
Submissions
» Batting Practice With Matt Nokes by Graham Burgess
» Nothing to Blame but the Ball: Remembering the Home Run Surge of 1987 by Tommy Szarka

Around the Web
» Matt Nokes from baseball-reference.com
» Matt Nokes from jerkoftheweek.com

Jump directly to Library content from any website!

Though manager Sparky Anderson liked his work habits, few could deny Nokes's shortcomings as a catcher - his inexperience calling games, his erratic arm, and his often too-slow reactions. Mike Heath caught 75 of the Tigers' games in 1988. AL pitchers got the book on Nokes - throw him breaking stuff - and, without the rabbit ball of 1987, Nokes hit just .251 with 16 HR in 1988. Injuries further slowed him in 1989.

Nokes was traded to the Yankees in the summer of 1990 for Clay Parker and Lance McCullers, and although he never again put up numbers similar to those from his rookie year, he was their everyday catcher for two seasons (1991-92). Then, the injury bug struck again, as each of Nokes’ final three seasons included trips to the DL. (JCA/AF)


Contribute your recollections of Matt Nokes by clicking here.
FROM THE BASEBALL CHRONOLOGY
» October 7, 1985: The Giants trade pitcher Dave LaPoint, catcher Matt Nokes, and minor league pitcher Eric King to the Tigers for pitcher Juan Berenguer, catcher Bob Melvin, and a player to be named later.

» September 2, 1987: Tom Candiotti pitches his 2nd one-hitter of the season, but also walks seven batters and makes an error as the Indians lose to Detroit 2–1. Matt Nokes' single with two out in the 8th is the Tigers' only hit. Feller, in 1954, is the last Tribe hurler to lose a one-hitter.

» August 15, 1991: Yankees 1B Don Mattingly is benched and fined $250 for refusing to cut his shoulder-length hair, but the Yankees still beat Kansas City, 5–1. He will get one two days later, and the hair will eventually be auctioned off for $3,000 to benefit a children's charity. Mattingly is not alone; Steve Farr, Matt Nokes, and Pascual Perez have all been told their hair length violates club policy. Mel Hall, who wears his hair in a small ponytail before and after games, is warned his appearance is "borderline."

» December 9, 1994: The Orioles sign free agent C Matt Nokes.