When Will "The Thrill" Clark arrived in Arlington ahead of the 1994 season, he faced the unenviable task of replacing a franchise icon in Rafael Palmeiro at first base. Having already established himself as a fierce, intense superstar with the San Francisco Giants, the left-handed hitting master brought a pristine, textbook swing and an unassailable competitive fire to the Lone Star State. While the national media frequently suggested he was entering a mid-career decline, Clark quickly proved that his pure hitting mechanics and high-leverage instincts were entirely intact.
He made an immediate, tone-setting impression during his inaugural 1994 summer in Texas. Clark silenced the critics by batting a blistering .329, hitting 13 home runs, and driving in 80 runs in just 110 games before the player strike abruptly ended the season. He earned an American League All-Star selection and a top-10 finish in the AL MVP race.
Far from declining, Clark became the steady hand at the heart of a highly explosive Rangers batting order. Across his five full seasons with the franchise, he was a model of line-drive consistency, routinely frustrating opposing pitching staffs by refusing to give away an at-bat. He batted over .300 in four of his five years in Texas, showcasing elite strike-zone discipline to post a stellar, premium .395 on-base percentage during his tenure.
His level-headed leadership and veteran stability reaped massive rewards for the organization down the stretch, anchoring the infield for the historic 1996 and 1998 squads that captured the franchise’s first two American League West division titles.
Following the 1998 campaign, Clark hit the open market as a free agent, moving on to Baltimore and eventually St. Louis before closing out his borderline Hall of Fame career. With the Rangers, Clark had 663 hits, 126 doubles, 78 home runs, and 373 RBIs while generating a .308/.395/.481 slash line (121 OPS+).
Comments powered by CComment