Canadian baseball celebrity Joey Votto is retiring.
The 40-year-old very first baseman introduced in an Instagram blog post Wednesday night that he’s hanging up his cleats.
“That’s it. I’m done,” Votto stated in a video clip. “I am officially retiring from baseball.”
Votto played 17 MLB periods, making 6 all-star options, one Gold Glove and a 2010 National League MVP honor.
After playing his whole profession with the Cincinnati Reds, the Toronto indigenous authorized a minor-league agreement with the Blue Jays last springtime, however never ever played a big-time ready his home town group.
Votto homered off Philadelphia’s Zack Wheeler in his only springtime training at-bat on March 17 for the Blue Jays prior to he tipped on a bat in the dugout later on because video game and was sidelined for the following 3 months.
He had one crowning achievement, 4 runs batted in and a. 143 standard in 15 video games with Triple- A Buffalo this period.
“Toronto + Canada, I wanted to play in front of you. Sigh, I tried with all my heart to play for my people. I’m just not good anymore,” Votto composed in his blog post, thanking his moms and dads, sibling and previous colleagues and trainers.
“Thank you for all the support during my attempt.”
Toronto held Cincinnati in the ending of a three-game collection Wednesday evening.
Drafted out of senior high school by the Reds in the 2nd round of the 2002 MLB draft, Votto struck.294 with 356 crowning achievement and 1,444 RBI in 2,056 video games. He completed with a job on-base plus slugging percent of.920.
Votto published a career-best 37 crowning achievement throughout his MVP period. He additionally homered 36 times in 2017 and 2021.
A shoulder injury restricted him to 65 video games last period with the Reds.
“To the MLB fans. You energized me with your cheers, I loved the boos, the trash talk, the moments where I broke a road cities moment, or was humbled on stage,” Votto composed.
“I’ll never forget, early in my career, my first time at Wrigley Field and the crowd standing and cheering toward my failure. I remember standing at the plate, smiling and thinking, this is my home. I belong here.”