Diamondbacks All-Time Top 10. #7. Matt Williams

Matt Williams
Acquired: 12/1/97. Traded by the Cleveland Indians to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Travis Fryman, Tom Martin, and cash.
Career with AZ: .278/.327/.471 - 99 HR, 381 RBI
Best year 1999: .303/.344/.536 - 35 HR, 142 RBI
Records: Single-season RBIs (142 in 1999).
Other facts: 5th in games played (595) and runs (317), 4th in hits (629), 3rd in HR (99), doubles (127) and RBI (381).
Biggest moment: 3rd in the 1999 NL MVP balloting, scoring the most points of any D'back ever. To this day, he is the only one to receive any first-place votes.
Departed: 6/29/2003. Released by the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Williams was perhaps the franchise's first star, whose arrival in a trade with Cleveland was an early statement by Colangelo that he wasn't hanging around waiting for talent to develop. A four-time Gold Glover and All-Star before he arrived here (he tacked on a fifth All-Star jersey in 1999), Williams was a cornerstone in the opening year of the Diamondbacks.
It was the following year when Matt really took off, driving home 142 RBIs with 35 HR and an .880 OPS that was almost a career-high for a full season. He did post highs for hits and doubles, and his fielding at the hot corner was outstanding, making only ten errors all year. Basically, imagine the power of Troy Glaus (2005 OPS: .885) combined with actual defensive capabilities, and a fondness for delivering in clutch situations.
Unfortunately, that was his last full season. He broke a bone in his foot the next spring training, though he did appear in 106 games during the 2001 season, and hit a 3-run homer in game 2 of the World Series. But the following years saw a marked decline in output and playing time. In November 2002, Williams vetoed a trade which would have brought Larry Walker to Arizona, citing his family as reason.
That move soured some fans against Williams, but he was never really all that popular: he was even booed at BOB during the 2001 NLDS against the Cardinals. The hefty contract he signed, combined with his sharply-dropping production, didn't help matters, and by the end he was seen as a liability, far short of the $10m he was being paid for 2003.
A graceful departure goes a long way, but in the end Williams had to be pushed: he was designated for assignment in June, after we acquired Shea Hillenbrand, and announced his retirement. Williams was, however, the last of the "original" D'backs to stay with the club, and his contribution during the building of the team, culminating in the World Series, is monumental.
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Matty Pop-up
Anyway, I loved to hate this guy... all the way back to his days with the Giants. It was only because he was good and played for the Giants. He was one of the reasons that the DBacks got so good so fast, it was too bad he declined just as quickly.
by nihil67 on
Jan 17, 2006 9:44 AM EST
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Thinking about it...
by Jim McLennan on
Jan 17, 2006 1:13 PM EST
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Records...
For me, the question of Matty's place in the top 10 really comes down to how much you take into account salary with these things. If you do, I'd think guys like Bautista, Spivey, and Batista have to bump Bell and Williams. If not, #7 is fair enough.
by johngordonma on
Jan 17, 2006 2:29 PM EST
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Matty is...
For comparison, Clayton was 30.2 last year. Worst ever is perhaps Carlos Baerga: 13 in only 325 AB's [25.0] - if you've seen him run, you'll know why. :-) The bad news: Conor Jackson is already =#35 on the franchise all-time list...
This listing is independent of salary, but it would certainly be an interesting exercise to put together a top 10 of the best "value for money" D'backs! Hmmm...
by Jim McLennan on
Jan 17, 2006 2:56 PM EST
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Bit of a Mouth, Matty
I'm not sure I'm interested in a Diamondbacks Top Ten list that has to include Danny Bautista.
by andrewinnewyork on
Jan 17, 2006 5:18 PM EST
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"Original" or "true original"
Opening Day, 1998 is pretty much my yardstick in those things - if you were here then, you're an original. Though there are some others, still with the team, who were with the organization on that day. Luis Terrero and Jose Valverde, for example. AFAIK, Greg Aquino is the most original Diamondback, having been signed as a free agent to a minor league contract on November 8th, 1995.
by Jim McLennan on
Jan 18, 2006 8:00 PM EST
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