Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB. Once that is done, we intend to look at how each team honor their past players and executive. As such it is news to us that the Texas Rangers will be retiring the number 10 of Michael Young.
Debuting for Texas in 2000 and playing there for 12 seasons, Young would become one of the most successful hitters in franchise history. The infielder would have six 200 Hit Seasons with two of those years being good enough to lead the AL (2005 & 2011). A seven-time All-Star, Young won the Batting Title in 2005 with a .331 Average and had a .301 Batting Average as a Ranger. He would also smack 177 Home Runs for the squad.
Defensively, he was incredibly versatile as he played at least 400 Games for the franchise at Second Base, Shortstop, and Third Base and was a Gold Glove winner in 2009 (SS). He was also known for his selfishness and leadership.
As of this writing, he is the franchise leader in Games Played (1,823), Hits (2,230), Doubles (415) and Runs Scored (1,085).
Young’s number will be officially retired on August 31 of this year.
Young’s #10 joins Ivan Rodriguez (#7), Johnny Oates (#26), Adrian Beltre (#29), Nolan Ryan (#34) and the league-mandated (#42) of Jackie Robinson.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate Michael Young for earning this very prestigious honor.
Michael Young was initially acquired from the Toronto Blue Jays through an understated mid-season trade in 2000. By the subsequent summer, he had secured regular playing time in Arlington. He not only solidified the central position in the infield but also demonstrated exceptional versatility, adapting to four different high-profile defensive roles at the direction of management while serving as the team's unequivocal captain. During a notable 13-season tenure in Texas, the highly durable infielder set a benchmark for consistent offensive output, ranking among the most distinguished careers in Lone Star sports history.
His debut as a consistent second baseman immediately highlighted him as a top-of-the-order threat. Young made a daily habit of driving line drives through the spacious gaps of the home ballpark, accumulating 204 hits and a strong .306 average during a standout 2003 season. He maintained this energetic, frontline performance over the next five years, earning his reputation as one of the top high-volume hitters in professional baseball. Remarkably, Young had six straight seasons with 200 hits from 2003 to 2008, and he matched that impressive feat again in a stellar 2011 season.
His 2005 season truly shined, marking the peak of his hardware-certified career. He confidently dominated at the plate, leading the entire major leagues with a career-high 221 hits and winning the American League batting title with a blazing .331 average. This remarkable consistency earned him widespread recognition across the nation, earning seven American League All-Star selections in a Texas uniform—culminating in a memorable 2006 midsummer game where his clutch, two-run triple earned him the MVP trophy.
It must be fairly acknowledged that analytical limitations restrict the comprehensive evaluation of his historical value through an algorithmic review. Young was an old-school, free-swinging contact hitter whose on-base percentage consistently hovered in the low to mid .300s, attributable to a highly aggressive approach and a modest walk rate. Defensively, his profile was notably variable; although he received an American League Gold Glove at shortstop in 2008 and willingly transitioned to third base in 2009 and to first base/DH in 2011 to accommodate emerging prospects, standard advanced efficiency metrics assess his range and glove as highly inconsistent, culminating in a career -4.0 defensive bWAR that significantly diminishes his advanced metrics.
The inevitable business exit materialized ahead of the 2013 schedule when, as the front office leaned heavily into a younger, analytically driven roster, Young waived his no-trade clause to facilitate a trade to the Philadelphia Phillies, drawing a definitive curtain on his historic residency in Arlington.
Young remains the all-time, undisputed Texas Rangers franchise leader in an astonishing array of categories, including games played (1,823), hits (2,230), runs scored (1,085), doubles (415), and triples (55), balanced against a stellar .300 batting average. He was inducted into the Rangers Hall of Fame in 2016.