April 7, 1978

Ozzie Smith


Ozzie Smith is the greatest fielding shortstop of all time, and his superlative play began in his four seasons with the San Diego Padres.

San Diego is where Smith made his greatest play — on a ground ball up the middle by Atlanta’s Jeff Burroughs, just 10 games into his rookie season. “He hit a ball back up the middle that everybody thought was going into center field,” Smith said. “I instinctively broke to my left and dove behind second. As I was in the air, the ball took a bad hop and caromed behind me, but I was able to catch it with my bare hand. I hit the ground, bounced back up and threw Burroughs out at first.”



San Diego is where Smith first performed his famous back flip, on the last day of the season in 1978, at the urging of Padres promotion director Andy Strasberg.

San Diego is where Smith should have beat out Bob Horner (who played just 89 games) for the Rookie of the Year award and Larry Bowa for the Gold Glove award.

San Diego is where Smith won the first two of his 13 Gold Glove awards, where he led the National League in defensive WAR in 1980 and set the single-season record for most assists by a shortstop (621).

San Diego is where Smith was first called “The Wizard of Oz,” by the Yuma (Ariz.) Daily Sun in a March 1981 feature story.

San Diego is where it all began for Ozzie Smith.
— Kevin Brewer



Player most similar to | Luis Aparicio
Career statistics | 28 HRs, 793 RBIs, .262/.337/.328, 580 SBs
Career year (1987) 0 HRs, 75 RBIs, .303/.392/.383, 104 runs, 40 doubles, 43 SBs

Teams | Padres (1978-81), Cardinals (82-96)
How he was acquired | Drafted by the Padres in the fourth round of the 1977 amateur draft.
How he was lost | Traded by the Padres with Steve Mura to the Cardinals for Garry Templeton and Sixto Lezcano on Dec. 10, 1981 — the worst trade in franchise history.

Resume
• Inducted into Baseball Hall of Fame (2002)
• 15-time All-Star (1981-92, 94-96)
• 13 Gold Glove awards (1980-92)
• Top 10 in MVP voting (1987)
• 1985 NLCS MVP

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