- Published in Top 50 San Diego Padres
4. Dave Winfield
Before sports specialization limited athletes’ paths, some rare prodigies had an explosive physical toolkit that broke traditional boundaries. Dave Winfield exemplified this exceptional, multi-sport athleticism. Standing tall at the University of Minnesota, Winfield achieved the remarkable feat of being drafted by three different professional sports leagues: the NBA's Atlanta Hawks, the ABA's Utah Stars, and the NFL's Minnesota Vikings, despite never playing college football. Ultimately, he chose baseball, and the San Diego Padres eagerly used the fourth overall pick in the 1973 amateur draft to secure a pioneering power hitter for a new era.
His exceptional innate talent was evident to such a degree that management opted to bypass the minor leagues entirely, promoting the 21-year-old phenom directly to the major league roster. Although Winfield had distinguished himself as a dominant College World Series MVP pitcher for the Golden Gophers, the Padres front office was unwilling to risk his dynamic physical frame on the mound. Instead, they promptly assigned him to right field, a position in which he demonstrated remarkable proficiency with rapid mastery.
By the 1974 schedule, his long, high-velocity swing yielded 20 home runs, signaling the arrival of a premier middle-of-the-order threat. He methodically sharpened his approach over the subsequent summers, turning baseline run-production into an absolute regular-season routine.
His national breakthrough occurred in 1977, when he hit 25 home runs to secure his inaugural All-Star invitation, marking the beginning of a distinguished streak of twelve consecutive appearances in the Midsummer Classic. Following this achievement with a strong 24-homer season in 1978, Winfield reached the zenith of his tenure in Southern California during an exceptional 1979 season. He delivered a remarkable display of run production and batting.308, hitting 34 home runs, and leading the league with 118 runs batted in, anchoring the San Diego offense. His highly efficient performance further validated his dominant peak, as he led all National League position players with an outstanding 8.3 bWAR and finished third in the National League MVP voting.
The clock was ticking on his beach residency. After a productive 1980 campaign with 20 home runs and a second Gold Glove, his relationship with the financially constrained team ended. Frustrated by their small-market limits and inability to build a winning team, Winfield tested free agency and signed a record-breaking contract with the Yankees, becoming the highest-paid player at the time.
He departed Southern California, leaving behind 1,134 hits, 154 home runs, 185 doubles, and 626 RBIs alongside a highly respectable .284/.357/.464 slash line across 1,117 games.
In 2001, the Baseball Hall of Fame inducted Winfield into their Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, and the Padres retired his number 31 the same year. San Diego also inducted Winfield into their Hall of Fame the year before.