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Brian Jeffery Horwitz, nicknamed "The Rabbi,"[1][2] (born November 7, 1982, in Santa Monica, California) is a Jewish American baseball outfielder who plays for the San Francisco Giants.
[edit] Jewish heritageAccording to Baseball Almanac, Horwitz was the 159th Jewish player to make the majors.[3] Horwitz is the first Jewish player on the Giants since the 1995-1996 tenure of pitcher Jose Bautista, and the eighth since they moved to San Francisco.[4][5] In 1923, the New York Giants tried to trump up publicity by advertising Mose Solomon as "The Rabbi of Swat," playing across town from Babe Ruth, "The Sultan of Swat."[6] He joined, among other Jewish major leaguers, Brad Ausmus, Kevin Youkilis, Ian Kinsler, Ryan Braun, Gabe Kapler, Jason Marquis, Jason Hirsh, John Grabow, Craig Breslow, and Scott Schoeneweis. He credited one set of grandparents for “instilling a lot of Jewish traits in our family.” “I still love my religion,” said Horwitz. He played in the JCC Maccabi Games when he was 15 and 16, leading his LA-area team to national titles in 1996 and 1997.[7] [edit] Baseball career[edit] High schoolAt Crespi High School in Encino, California, Horwitz was Mission League MVP, All-Valley, and first team All-CIF Division I as a senior, batting .415. He helped lead his team to three straight league titles. [edit] Summer leaguesIn the summer of 2001, he played for the Peninsula Oilers in the Alaska Baseball League, and in the summer of 2002 he played for the Hyannis Mets in the Cape Cod League. [edit] College (2001-04)As a freshman right fielder for the University of California at Berkeley Bears, where he majored in American History, in 2001 he batted .310, and had a team-best 11 stolen bases. He had a school record 23-game hitting streak. He had 6 outfield assists on the season. He was an honorable mention Freshman All-American in Collegiate Baseball. As a sophomore in 2002, he hit .266. In 2003 as a junior, he hit .347 with a team-leading 47 RBI and a .405 OBP and a .535 slugging percentage. He batted .400 with runners in scoring position, and was Pac-10 honorable mention and honorable mention Pac-10 All-Academic. He was drafted in the 26th round by the Oakland Athletics in the June 2003 draft, but did not sign. As a senior he dropped down to .288 and though he kept his OBP at .400, he wasn't drafted. "The two days of the draft were probably the worst two days of my life," he said. "I've kind of been doubted my whole career, and that's fine with me. It fuels the fire."[8] He had all the forms ready for chiropractic school, but he wanted the experience of playing pro ball for a half-summer, so he took the San Francisco Giants' offer of a uniform and $1,000 and signed as a non-drafted free agent in June of 2004. "I used it to pay my phone bill," he said.[9] [edit] Minor leagues (2004-08)Horwitz won two titles in two years in the minor leagues.[10] In 2004, Horwitz won the Northwest League batting title with a .347 average, the second-best in team history, playing for the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes in the Northwest League, and had a .407 OBP. He also earned a spot on the league All-Star team, led the league in hits (93), and set a franchise mark with 24 doubles. In 2005, he hit .349 (the 2nd-highest batting average of all minor leaguers with 400 or more at bats)[11] for the Augusta GreenJackets in the South Atlantic League, and won his second consecutive batting title, while sporting a .415 OBP. He had 50 walks, while striking out only 39 times in 470 at-bats, and also led the league with 38 doubles. In addition, he had 8 outfield assists. He was also MVP of the 2005 California League Championship Series. Baseball America dubbed him the player with the best strike-zone discipline in the Giants' organization.[12] In 2006, he spent nearly half the season at San Jose of the California League, where he hit .324 with a .414 OBP. He spent most of the rest of the season with the Double-A Connecticut Defenders, where he hit .286 with a .365 OBP, and ended the season with a handful of at-bats with the Triple-A Fresno Grizzlies. In 2007, he was a non-roster invitee to the Giants' spring training,[13] but the Giants ultimately assigned him to the Connecticut Defenders.[14] In 35 games for the team, he hit .309 with a .371 on base percentage.[15] In late May, he was promoted to the Triple-A Fresno Grizzlies.[16] He hit .326 for the Grizzlies with a .383 on base percentage in 84 games.[17] Horwitz started 2008 with Fresno, and was hitting .294 with a .351 OBP in 44 games when he was called up to the major leagues. In his minor league career through 2008, Horwitz had a .319 batting average, .389 OBP, and in 1,894 at bats had 120 doubles, 253 RBIs, 199 walks, and 207 strikeouts. [edit] Major leagues (2008)Horwitz was a non-roster invitee to 2008 Giants spring training.[18] In March, the Giants re-assigned him to their minor league camp.[19] On May 30, 2008, the Giants purchased his contract from Triple-A when Dan Ortmeier went on the DL with a broken finger.[20] Horwitz hit his first major league home run on June 2, 2008, off New York Mets starting pitcher Óliver Pérez. He was mobbed in the dugout afterward. "There was a lot of love in that dugout," Horwitz said. "It adds to the experience. That's a great group of guys here and I just love being a part of this team."[21] "Unbelievable," Horwitz said of his Major League experience. "It’s extraordinary, surreal. It’s an out-of-body experience. I’m really enjoying being here. How could you complain?"[22] After hitting .304 in his first 21 at-bats, Horwitz went 1-for-15 and was sent down to Fresno for more playing time on July 6, 2008. [edit] ToolsHorwitz is a pure hitter with excellent hand eye coordination, the ability to hit well for average, and doubles power. In 2007, Baseball America voted him as having the best strike zone discipline in the Giants minor league organization.[23] He has solid defensive tools, good instincts, a quick first step, and a strong and accurate arm. [edit] Awards
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Categories: 1982 births | Living people | Jewish American sportspeople | Jewish baseball players | University of California, Berkeley alumni | San Francisco Giants players | Major League Baseball players from California | Major League Baseball outfielders | People from Santa Monica, California | Salem-Keizer Volcanoes players | Augusta GreenJackets players | San Jose Giants players | Fresno Grizzlies players | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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