Yastrzemski spent the 2015 season with Bowie, where he batted .246 with six home runs and 59 RBIs. He was a 2015 Eastern League All Star.[16] He spent 2016 with both Bowie and the Norfolk Tides of the Class AAAInternational League,[19] where he posted combined statistics of a .234 batting average, with 13 home runs, and 59 RBIs.[20]
Yastrzemski underwent surgery after the 2016 season and was not healthy for the beginning of the 2017 season.[21] During the 2017 season, he was with the Tides for 81 games between May and September, except for several weeks in June and July when he played 20 games with the Baysox.[22] He returned to Norfolk in 2018.[23] He was an MiLB Orioles organization All Star.[16]
The Orioles invited Yastrzemski to spring training as a non-roster player in 2019.[24]
On March 22, 2019, the Orioles traded Yastrzemski to the San Francisco Giants in exchange for minor league pitcher Tyler Herb.[25] He was assigned to the Sacramento River Cats of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League to start the 2019 season, for whom he batted .316/.414/.676 with 38 runs, 12 home runs and 25 RBIs in 136 at bats.[26][27]
San Francisco Giants (2019–present)
2019
The Giants promoted Yastrzemski to the Major Leagues on May 25, 2019, and he made his debut the same day, going 0-for-3 with a run scored in a 10–4 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks.[28] He collected his first career hit, a single, the following day but was thrown out returning to first base and went 3-for-4 with a run scored in the Giants' 6–2 loss.[29] Yastrzemski hit his first career home run against his former organization, the Baltimore Orioles, off Andrew Cashner on May 31.[30] On August 16, he hit three home runs against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field, including the game-winning home run in the top of the 11th inning.[31] On September 17, he hit his 20th home run, a solo shot to the center field bleachers, in his first game at Fenway Park, where his grandfather played his entire 23-year MLB career. The Giants won 7–6 in 15 innings.[32] The next game, in front of a Boston Red Sox crowd, Yastrzemski caught the ceremonial first pitch from his grandfather.[33]
For the 2019 season, Yastrzemski played in 107 games while batting .272/.334/.518 with 21 home runs, 55 RBIs, and 64 runs scored in 371 at bats. His 21 home runs tied Kevin Pillar for the most on the team.[1] He was the first rookie since Dave Kingman in 1972 to hit more than 20 home runs for the Giants.[34]
2020–2021
On September 9, 2020, he hit his 30th home run in his 151st game. Yastrzemski joined Bobby Thomson and Dave Kingman as the only other Giants to hit 30 home runs so quickly in their careers.[35] Yastrzemski finished the pandemic-shortened 2020 season batting .297/.400/.568 with 10 home runs and leading the team in RBIs with 35. He led the NL in triples (4) and range factor/9 IP as a right fielder (2.38), and was 8th in OPS (.968), 9th in doubles (14), and 10th in OBP (.400).[1]
Yastrzemski received All-MLB second team honors for his performance during the season. He was 8th in voting for NL MVP and won the Willie Mac Award for being the Giants' most inspirational player.[1][36]
On June 15, 2021, at Oracle Park, in a 9–8 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks, with the Giants trailing 8–5 in the eighth inning with two outs and having earlier trailed 7–0, Yastrzemski hit his first career grand slam, a go-ahead home run off of Humberto Castellanos into McCovey Cove for a "Splash Hit".[37]
In the 2021 regular season, Yastrzemski batted .224/.311/.457 with 28 doubles, 25 home runs, and 71 RBIs in 468 at bats.[38] He had a 2.26 range factor per 9 innings as a right fielder, leading the National League for the second season in a row.[1] He was one of three nominees for a National League Gold Glove Award in right field,[39] losing to Adam Duvall.[40]
2022–present
Eligible for salary arbitration for the first time, Yastrzemski and the Giants agreed to a $3.7 million salary for the 2022 season.[41] In 2022, Yastrzemski batted .214/.305/.392 in 485 at bats, with 73 runs, 31 doubles (a career high), 17 home runs, and 57 RBIs, stealing five bases in six attempts.[42] He played 104 games in right field, 93 games in center field, and one game at DH.[43] In November, Yastrzemski and the Giants agreed on a one-year, $6.1 million contract for the 2023 season.[44]
Yastrzemski and the Giants agreed to a $7.9 million salary for the 2024 season.[45]
On September 1 at Oracle Park, against the Miami Marlins, Yastrzemski hit his 100th career home run, making his grandfather and himself the fourth grandfather-grandson duo in Major League history to each hit at least 100 career home runs.[46]
Personal life
Yastrzemski grew up in Andover, Massachusetts.[2] His father, Carl Jr. (who went by Mike),[6] played college baseball for the Florida State Seminoles baseball team and played professionally in the minor leagues from 1984 to 1988.[9] His father and mother, Anne-Marie, divorced when he was six years old.[6] Carl Jr. died in 2004 at the age of 43 from a blood clot after having hip surgery.[47][48] Mike's grandfather, Carl Yastrzemski, is a member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and began teaching young Mike hitting during his grandson's freshman year in high school.[2][3][5]
Yastrzemski met Paige (née Cahill) at Vanderbilt. They married in November 2018[49] and have two children, a daughter and a son.[50]