JONES, ANDRUW  
 
Image of    Nickname:   N/A Position:   Asst-Player Dev
Home: Duluth, Georgia Team:   BRAVES ORG.
Height: 6' 1" Bats:   R
Weight: 210 Throws:   R
DOB: 4/23/1977 Agent: Scott Boras
Birth City: Curacao, Netherland Antilles Draft: 1993 - Braves - Free agent (at age 16)
Uniform #: N/A  
 
YR LEA TEAM SAL(K) G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO OBP SLG AVG
1994 GCL Braves   27 95 22 21 5 1 2 10 5   16 19     .221
1994 APP DANVILLE   36 143 20 48 9 2 1 16 16   9 25     .336
1995 SAL MACON     537 104 149 41 5 25 100 56   70 122     .277
1996 CAR DURHAM   66 243 65 76 14 3 17 43 16   42 54     .313
1996 SL GREENVILLE   38 157 39 58 10 1 12 37 12   17 34     .369
1996 IL RICHMOND   12 45 11 17 3 1 5 12 2   1 9     .378
1996 NL BRAVES $109.00 31 106 11 23 7 1 5 13 3 0 7 29 .265 .443 .217
1997 NL BRAVES $153.00 153 399 60 92 18 1 18 70 20 11 56 107 .329 .416 .231
1998 NL BRAVES $215.00 159 582 89 158 33 8 31 90 27 4 40 129 .321 .515 .271
1999 NL BRAVES $320.00 162 592 97 163 35 5 26 84 24 12 76 103 .365 .483 .275
2000 NL BRAVES $3,700.00 161 656 122 199 36 6 36 104 21 6 59 100 .366 .541 .303
2001 NL BRAVES $8,200.00 161 625 104 157 25 2 34 104 11 4 56 142 .312 .461 .251
2002 NL BRAVES $10,000.00 154 560 91 148 34 0 35 94 8 3 83 135 .366 .513 .264
2003 NL BRAVES $12,000.00 156 595 101 165 28 2 36 116 4 3 53 125 .338 .513 .277
2004 NL BRAVES $12,500.00 154 570 85 149 34 4 29 91 6 6 71 147 .345 .488 .261
2005 NL BRAVES $12,500.00 160 586 95 154 24 3 51 128 5 3 64 112 .347 .575 .263
2006 NL BRAVES   156 565 107 148 29 0 41 129 4 1 82 127 .363 .531 .262
2007 NL BRAVES $14,000.00 154 572 83 127 27 2 26 94 5 2 70 138 .311 .413 .222
2008 PCL LAS VEGAS   11 31 7 10 0 0 4 11 2 0 3 5   .710 .323
2008 NL DODGERS $14,727.00 75 209 21 33 8 1 3 14 0 1 27 76 .256 .249 .158
2009 TL FRISCO   3 9 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 .417 .222 .222
2009 AL RANGERS $500.00 82 281 43 60 18 0 17 43 5 1 45 72 .323 .459 .214
2010 AL WHITE SOX $500.00 107 278 41 64 12 1 19 48 9 2 45 73 .341 .486 .230
2011 AL YANKEES $1,500.00 77 190 27 47 8 0 13 33 0 0 29 62 .356 .495 .247
2012 AL YANKEES $2,000.00 94 233 27 46 7 0 14 34 0 0 28 71 .294 .408 .197
2013 JAP Rakuten Eagles $3,500.00             26 94             .243
2014 JAP Rakuten Eagles $3,800.00             24               .226

  • Andruw is pronounced "AHN-drew."
  • Braves' scout Givanni Viceisza discovered Andruw in October 1992, when Jones was just 15 years old. He ended up signing with the Braves for $46,000 at age 16.

  • Andruw speaks Dutch, Spanish, English, and a mixture of the three called Papiamento. He doesn't have any problem communicating. But at times he doesn't understand colloquialisms or when to use what words.

    CLOSE TO DAD

  • Andruw's father, Henry, is the most important figure in his life. "When I was young I always tell my father I just wanted to play professional baseball," he says. "I just wanted to make professionall baseball, just wanted to be a professional baseball player. That's the thing. I think I was just born for baseball."

  • His father kept Andruw on a short leash, so to speak. He was pretty strict and disciplined. But Andruw also says of his Dad: "He was always a smooth guy. He acts like he's not running, but he's running. He told me to play hard, but you don't have to do everything hard. Don't tire yourself out."

  • His father, Henry Jones, is plant manager for a tissue company in Curacao.

  • Andruw answered this question decidedly. "If I could be like anyone in the world—living or dead—I would choose to be like my father."

  • Jones is the first Big Leaguer to be born during the Jimmy Carter Presidential administration. Andruw was born April 23, 1977.

  • In February 1998, a former lover took him to court, making it known publicly that she, Jacquelyn Barnett, and Andruw had a three-month-old daughter named Madison. She sued for paternity and lost her case, but Andruw was forced to take financial responsibility as a father.

  • Andruw says his best friend in baseball is Pascual Matos, a minor league teammate in the Braves' organization.

    FAVORITES

  • Andruw's favorite movie stars: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Eddie Murphy and Demi Moore; favorite food: seafood, or his Mom's Creole cooking; favorite dessert: vanilla ice cream; and favorite team growing up: the Oakland A's.

  • Andruw's favorite music is Reggae, and his favorite group is Bob Marley.

  • Jones uses a Rawlings bat, Wilson glove and Adidas spikes.

  • Braves manager Bobby Cox ordered Jones off the field during the eighth inning of a game with the Cubs, July 21, 1998, after Jones loafed after a soft liner, allowing it to drop for a hit.

    Cox felt Andruw didn't give his best effort on the ball off the bat of the Mets' Lance Johnson. So Cox stopped the game and sent in Gerald Williams to replace Jones on the spot. It was a very uncharacteristic move by Cox, but it got the attention of Andruw, who had a strong second half.

    And it made Andruw a better player; neither man ever held a grudge over the incident.

  • Braves manager Bobby Cox said he fined Jones so often in 1998 that "he's about to go broke already. I've taken so much money from hit it's a joke. Nobody is better than the game." Most of the fines were for not playing all-out, being lazy.

  • Andruw sported a new tattoo when he showed up for 1999 spring training. It is the Chinese symbol for the Taurus, Jones' sign of the zodiac. It can be seen peaking from under his collar on the nape of his neck.

    "I wanted to put something that people don't know what it is. I think it's cool," Andruw said. he also has his initials, "AJ" tattooed in a band around his right biceps, and another intricately designed band around his left biceps. And he has tattoos on his right ankle and left calf.

  • Andruw has been using a Wilson glove since his minor league days. "I asked them for a two-tone glove, just to look different from the other gloves," he recalled.

  • His favorite restaurant in Atlanta is probably "Prime." He stopped there for lunch before most every Braves home game for a couple of years and usually ordered two plates of sushi.

  • Andruw and Nicole Derick, from Atlanta, set a marriage date for November 23, 2002 at the Biltmore Hotel in downtown Atlanta. They moved into a large house in suburban Atlanta (Duluth) where they have a pool and live on a golf course. They started dating in 1998. A friend introduced them at Town Center Mall in Atlanta. They went out for dinner on Valentine's Day in 1999 on their first official date.

    She was an only child from Marietta, who "didn't know Andruw from Spandruw." In December 2001, he invited Nicole to go out for sushi at Prime, their favorite spot, but insisted she come upstairs to his Buckhead condo first to open her Christmas presents. Inside a tiny box hand-painted with "I love you" was a 7 1/2-carat yellow diamond ring. Nicole cried. She asked if it meant what she thought it meant. Andruw said yes and asked her to marry him. She said "Of course," climbed into his lap and hugged him. When they pulled apart, Andruw said, "I need a beer."

    HOBBIES

  • Nicole and Andruw's home in a gated Duluth, Georgia subdivision is five doors down from Kevin Millwood's. It is a six-bedroom home. His room is in the basement. I has a billiard room, a fitness center, a sauna, a theater and a wine cellar. Andruw also designated a place in the garage for a shelf for his remote control cars.

  • In his spare time, Andruw really enjoys racing his gas-powered, remote-control model cars around the parking lots and sidewalks of his neighborhood, or at a local track. He has shelled out over $6,000 for his model cars that he assembles himself. They can motor at nearly 65 mph!

    "I love doing this," Jones said. "I do this, and video games, and I'm set. What else is there to do when I'm not playing baseball? I get bored."

  • Before he was the Braves' centerfielder, Jones was getting vertical on his BMX (bicycle motocross) bike on a touring team in his native Curacao. Now, Andruw has a collection of three bikes: a mountain bike, a BMX, and a Cruiser, which he described as a BMX hybrid. Andrum and fellow outfielder Goerge Lombard will often hop on their mountain bikes and cruise around midtown Atlanta, zipping through Piedmont Park or various neighborhoods.

  • Jones spent the winter before 2000 spring training in Atlanta, except for a couple of visits to his island homeland of Curacao. He worked out intently, getting more serious about his hitting. He took batting practice five times a week with teammate George Lombard. Andruw missed the beautiful beaches of Curacao, the fellowship with his father and the cooking of his mom, but recognized the need for more dedication to improving his game.

  • Andruw and Nicole celebrated the birth of son, Druw Jones, on November 28, 2003, just five days after their first wedding anniverary.

  • In 2004, Andruw cruised to the ballpark in a silver Mercedes Benz SL500 roadster. That car just looks like what the best defensive center-fielder in baseball should drive—all sleek and smooth.

  • Andruw has a tattoo on his back that is the Chinese character for "Taurus." He was born on April 23, so Taurus is his astrological sign.

    And he has the Chinese characters for "Bull" tattooed on the back of his neck.

  • Jones's spacious Atlanta-area home also houses a top-notch batting cage, often used by he and many of his Braves teammates during the off-season. It even has a video camera.

    And Andruw and Nicole's home also has a partial basketball court and three rooms housing baseball memorabilia—all topped with a 4-bedroom house. All that is attached to their original home, which by itself, can only be described as spectacular. (Patty Rasmussen-Chop Talk-May, 2005)

  • Andruw arrived at 2006 spring training in a sleek new Maserati.

  • Andruw and his 1968 Buick Electra 225 were featured in the May 17, 2006 episode of SpeedTV's hit show Unique Whips. The long, lowered and sleek silver classic was treated to a total interior and audio makeover.

    The work done at Will Castro's Long Island shop included an all new dash, gauges, carpet, door panels, headliner and a complete reconstruction of the trunk's interior for the upgraded sound system.

    And in keeping with the baseball theme, Andruw's number "25" and one of a kind crossed bat graphics embossed in the grey fabric round out the trunk's customization.

  • Early in Andruw's career, many grew weary of his half-hearted smirks when he struck out or failed to come through in the clutch. But the truth is, Jones always cared, even hurt. That is just the way he handled—even shook off disappointment so that he could return to his more-excellent way. He has always cared about what he does on the field.

  • To celebrate the 60th anniversary of Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier in baseball, Andruw wore jersey No. 42. Major League Baseball designates April 15 as Jackie Robinson Day.

    "It's just an honor for me," Jones said. "I'm happy to be the one that represents my team by wearing it."

  • In 2008, Andruw showed up at Dodger spring camp at about 245 pounds—10 or 15 more than he weighed during his best seasons with the Braves, when he was at 235 or so.

    But he had his worst season in 2007, when he weighed 220 pounds. Balls that used to go over the fence were caught on the warning track.

  • December 26, 2012: Jones was free on bond after being arrested in suburban Atlanta early Tuesday on a battery charge, according to jail records. Around 1:30 a.m, police responded to a call for a domestic dispute between Jones and his wife in Duluth. Gwinnett County Detention Center records say Jones was booked into the jail around 3:45 a.m. and was released on $2,400 bond by 11 a.m.

    Andruw's wife accused him of dragging her down a staircase, grabbing her neck and saying he wanted to kill her, according to police records.

    A police report obtained by The Associated Press said the fight happened around 1:30 a.m. on Christmas Day, after Nicole Jones asked her husband to help her prepare their suburban Atlanta home for Christmas morning.

  • On January 2, 2013: Just over a week after she accused him of grabbing her neck and saying he wanted to kill her, Nicole Jones filed for divorce.

    TRANSACTIONS

  • 1993: At age 16, Andrew signed with the Braves as a free agent.

  • November 2001: Andruw signed a six-year, $75 million contract with the Braves. Though Scott Boras is his agent, he relied heavily on his father, Henry, for counseling about his contract. "I don't want to have more money than everybody," Jones said. "I just want to live comfortable. In the future, I don't want to do something else to raise my family."

  • December 6, 2007: Jones signed a two-year, $36.2 million contract with the Dodgers. At the time, that pact gave him the 5th-highest average salary in the Major Leagues.

  • January 3, 2009: Andruw and the Dodgers agreed that much of the $22 million on  his contract would be deferred, so that the team could trade him or even release Jones. It shaved about $12  million from the Dodgers' 2009 payroll and cut Jones's salary next season to about $5 million. If the Dodgers can't trade him, Jones can ask for his release at the beginning of spring training.

    January 15, 2009: The Dodgers released Jones.

  • February 8, 2009: Jones signed with the Rangers, a one-year contract worth $500,000. Jones can also make up to $1 million in bonuses if he reaches 620 plate appearances.

  • November 6, 2009: Andruw filed for free agency.

  • November 25, 2009: Jones signed with the White Sox, a one-year deal worth $500,000, with a chance to make $1 million in performance bonuses.

  • January 21, 2011: Andruw signed with the Yankees, receiving a one-year, $2 million contract with an additional $1.2 million in incentives. He will earn $150,000 each for 250 and 275 plate appearances; $200,000 apiece for 300 and 325; and $250,000 each for 350 and 375 plate appearanaces.

  • December 30, 2011: The Yankees and Jones agreed on a contract for 2012. It has a base salary of $2 million with incentives that could earn him another $1.4 million.

  • December 16, 2012: Jone finalized a $3.5 million, one-year contract to play with Rakuten Eagles of Japan's Pacific League.

PERSONAL:
 

  • Andruw is a true five-tools player, which is very unusual. Most Big League stars are three- or four-tool players. It is not often that tools like this come around. You may see a guy who's a great hitter, but he might lack arm strength or defensive skills. But Jones is just a complete player in every phase of the game.
  • He hits the outside breaking pitch to the opposite field. But it is the fastball that he feasts on.

  • In April 1995, Jones was named Howe Sportsdata's Minor League Player of the Month. He hit .341 with nine homers, 25 RBI and stole 9 bases. Not bad for an 18-year-old.

  • In 1995, Andruw was third in the Sally League in homers, fourth in RBI, and led the league in stolen bases and runs. He was second in doubles and fourth in slugging percentage (.512). And, Jones was Baseball America's Minor League Player of the Year for 1995.

  • He makes consistent contact and produces tremendous bat speed, which results in numerous extra-base hits. "I know I can hit the fastball pretty good, but I need to work more on hitting the good good curveball and slider," Andruw says. His biggest weakness is hitting offspeed pitches. "I've got to adjust to hitting the offspeed pitch," he admits.

  • Mike Schmidt says that he recognizes power when a guy hits to the opposite field and the ball goes straight, rather than slicing. Not many guys can do it, but Andruw can hit the ball the other way like that.

  • On June 21, 1997, Andruw became the sixth player to hit a ball into the upper deck at Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium when he hit a 444-foot shot. The last time the upper level was reached was in April 1975 when Mike Schmidt did it. That was two years before Jones was born!

    Richie Allen, Greg Luzinski, and Roberto Clemente also deposited balls up there. Most people said it was over 500-feet. Former Dodgers pitcher and then-TBS announcer Don Sutton said, "All I know is that when I gave up a 400-foot home run, it didn't look like that." Andruw hit it off Phillies P Matt Beech.

  • Jones reached 50 homers at a younger age (21) than anyone in Major League history except two: Mel Ott of the Giants and Tony Conigliaro of the Red Sox.

  • Andruw has endured lengthy hitting slumps due largely to his inability to lay off breaking pitches down and away.

  • Jones uses 34-inch Louisville Slugger bats, either 30 or 31 ounces.

  • Even at home in his Buckhead, Georgia condo, Andruw grips a heavy sledgehammer that he bought at Home Depot. He grabs it with both hands, twisting the handle back and forth. His Dad showed him this exercise at a young age. And it is a big reason why Andruw can wrist balls for home runs.

    NEW HITTING COACH = NEW HITTING STYLE

  • In 2002, new Braves batting coach Terry Pendleton worked to motivate Andruw to return to hitting the ball to all fields. But Andruw exasperated Pendleton. Jones is oblivious to where he stands in the batter's box. When he is closer to the plate, he hits; when he isn't, he doesn't. But he just does not look where he is. Pitchers learned to keep fastballs away from Andruw. They attack him with a curves and sliders. Jones learned to hit the low-and-away pitches, so pitchers started snapping off a breaking pitch off the outside corner. But Andruw won't offer at them, instead accepting a base on balls.

  • Hitting coach Terry Pendleton stressed the importance of using the whole field to Jones, who continues to try and pull pitches away from him. Jones followed Pendleton's advice for several weeks, then reverted to pull-everything tactics that result in strikeouts and infield rollers. Privately, in 2002, players and coaches said they didn't understand Jones's refusal to consistently apply the advice.

  • By the end of the 2002 season, Andruw was hitting to right field about 20 percent of the time. He used to hit balls to right just 10 percent of the time, or less. He even developed an aversion to right field in the minors. "Whenever I hit it to right, they caught it," he said. "So I'd think 'I can't hit the ball to right; it's always an out.' "

    If Jones starts thinking that way now, he'll look over to the dugout to find Pendleton smirking and pointing to right field. "They're throwing me a lot of pitches away, so that's where I've got to go," Jones said. "My focus is to stay up the middle, so if I'm a little early I'll hit it to left, a little late I'll hit it to right field."

    Before the 2003 season, he pulled at least 50 percent of his hits to left field. "He's taking fastballs and sliders away and hitting them out of the park 400 feet away to right," Chipper Jones said. "That used to be a ground ball to short, or he swung through and missed it."

  • In 2004, Andruw struck out a career-high 147 times and had an .831 on-base/slugging percentage—17th among National League outfielders (not too good).

  • In 2005, Andruw joined Sammy Sosa as the only two foreign-born players to hit 50 home runs in one season. And he broke the Braves' franchise record with his 51 home runs. No previous Atlanta, Milwaukee, or Boston Braves—dating to the birth of the franchise in 1871—had ever reached the 50-homer plateau. Hall of Famers Eddie Mathews (1953) and Hank Aaron (1971) shared the previous record of 47.

  • July 15, 2006: Andruw's RBI single in the Braves win vs. the Padres was his 1,500th hit of his career.

  • Entering the 2013 season, Andruw had a lifetime .254 batting average with 434 home runs in 7,599 at-bats. He also has a .337 career on-base percentage and .486 slugging percentage.
BATTING:
 

  • Jones used to be the best defensive outfielder in the game.
  • He shows fine instincts in the outfield and uses his great speed to track down ANYTHING hit near his spot. His arm is one of the best in the game, too.

  • Andruw uses seemingly effortless motions. He has great control of his body in every aspect of the game. He is so fluid that it doesn't take an all-out burst of speed for him to get to a ball. He gets a tremendous jump off the crack of the bat.

  • Andruw's outfield play is unsurpassed by anybody in the game. He is at the top of the list in either center or right field.

    PERENNIAL GOLD GLOVER

  • Jones won his first Rawlings Gold Glove Award in 1998. And he won Gold Gloves again in 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007 -- giving him his tenth in a row.

    In 1999, Andruw led the Majors for the second straight year with 492 putouts. That broke the Braves' club record of 413 he tied in 1998. (Sam Jethroe also had 413, in 1952.)

    In 2005, Jones' .995 fielding percentage tied with Milwaukee's Brady Clark for the second-best mark among Major League center fielders.

    In 2006, Andruw committed just two errors in 384 total chances and registered four assists.

  • Jones grew up in Curacao playing on dirt fields. Major League outfield grass is soft and doesn't bother him. He developed his reflexes by catching tennis balls bounced off a wall. And even now, when Jones shags fly balls in batting practice, he simulates game situations. He tries to catch everything. He gets a great jump and can beat the ball to the spot. He takes excellent routes to the ball.

    DAD WAS GOOD TEACHER

  • Even if the wind is blowing all around, in and out, with fly balls confusing all the other outfielders on both teams, chances are Andruw will track them down easily. That is because his father, Henry Jones, used to fee him fly balls almost every day near a beach in Curacao, where the wind never takes a rest. "When I see a fly ball in the wind, it is easy compared to back home," Andruw said. "It doesn't matter, I catch it here. But down there, the wind is every day. You hit a pop fly there, you go back, you go forward, you go sideway. Not like a knuckleball, but it's moving," Jones explained.

  • Andruw's Dad taught him to always cheat in to take away the bloop hit. Some of the other things Henry Jones taught his son:

    Read the catcher's signs, so you know what pitch is coming.

    React even to foul balls, so you can better judge the fair balls.

    Run to the ball while keeping your head perfectly still.

    Sprint to the ball in a straight line, even if you have to take your eye off the ball until you approach where you think it is heading.

  • At one one, Andruw was the best defensive outfielder since Willie Mays, most educated observers agreed.

    "Jones is more or less the same kind of outfielder as Mays in center field," Giants manager Felipe Alou said. "To me, Willie Mays is the best outfielder I have ever seen playing the ball off the wall, robbing people of home runs—better than Andruw Jones. He's the best. Everything else, Andruw Jones is the same, except for the ability of Willie Mays going to crash against walls and climb walls."

    Alou, who played six seasons with Mays in San Francisco, is among the many current managers who have routinely seen Jones determine the outcome of a game with his glove. (Mark Bowman-MLB.com-3/26/04)

  • In the spring of 2007, after winning nine consecutive Gold Glove Awards while using gloves made by Wilson, Andruw Jones decided to begin utilizing gloves made by Mizuno.

    "[Wilson] never gave me the publicity that I should have gotten," Jones said. "I wasn't on the cover of their magazines or on the front of their Web site. Mizuno has told me that they would do all of that."

    When asked if the switch would force him to make any adjustments, Jones said that almost all outfield gloves, regardless of the manufacturer, are the same.

  • During the 2006 season, Jones registered 2.58 putouts per 9 innings. All other NL centerfielders combined for a 2.53 figure. Over the course of a full season, that works out to 9 more putouts, which otherwise would have been basehits. Research estimates that one single results in an average of .5 runs and a double leads to .8 runs. Assuming Jones saved an equal share of singles and doubles, those additional putouts prevented 6 runs over the course of 162 games, using this method.

    Many other factors influence these numbers. For one, the Braves had corner outfielders with tremendous range in 2006. They caught some fly balls that Jones could have hauled in had a slower player occupied that spot. Andruw also committed just two errors all year. The average center fielder made errors over twice as often. So, he saved the club runs in that way as well.

    Jones' defensive numbers peaked in 1999. That year he posted a spectacular 3.07 putouts per 9 innings. (Steve Fall-ChopTalk-June 2007)

FIELDING:
 
  • Jones is a burner on the bases, despite not having world-class speed. And he is very aggressive running them. He gets an excellent first step.
  • Before the Braves signed him, Braves' international crosschecker Paul Snyder tested Andruw's speed. He had him race a 60-yard dash against Sherton Saturnino, one of the club's fastest prospects and a fellow Curacao native. He quickly found out where Jones gets his tremendous athletic ability.

    "I get to the field for Andruw and Sherton to run, and Andruw's Dad is taking off his pants. He's got a baseball uniform on underneath," Snyder says. "I asked him what he was doing, and he said, 'I'm going to run, too.' Well Sherton ran his 6.5, Andruw ran a 6.73, and darned if his 46-year-old Dad didn't run a 7.16. It was the most incredible thing I have ever seen. I looked down at him and he has ankles like a man has wrists. Andruw's the same way, which is what you're looking for when you're searching for speed."

    POST-PLAYING CAREER POSITIONS

  • 2016: Jones returned to the Braves organization as a Special Assistant in the Baseball Operations Dept.
RUNNING:
 

  • April 22, 1996: Andruw had stitches after cutting his right hand in the shower following a Durham game.
  • May 18-July 4, 2008: An MRI showed Jones had torn cartilage and a buildup of fluid in his right knee. In addition to damaged cartilage which had to be surgically repaired, Andruw had a golf-ball sized wart behind his knee that needed to be surgically removed. Because of the wart's location, he said, it couldn't be drained.

    Surgery, by Dr. Neal ElAttrache at the Kerlan-Jobe Clinic on May 27, sidelined Andruw for over a month, putting Jones on the D.L. 

    It was the first trip to the D.L. for Jones in his big league career.

  • August 12-September 1, 2008: Andruw was on the D.L. with patella tendinitis in his left knee.

  • September 13, 2008: Jones was back on the D.L., this time with soreness in his right knee.

  • August 24-September 8, 2009: Andruw was on the D.L.with a left hamstring strain.
CAREER INJURY REPORT:
 
 
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