The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Big power, steep decline: Orioles’ Chris Davis retires

- By Noah Trister

BALTIMORE » Chris Davis’ ascent and decline were quick and steep.

In between, he was one of baseball’s top home run hitters — and that’s what Baltimore manager Brandon Hyde wanted to remember on the day Davis announced his retirement.

“Those really good years, those ‘12 to ‘17 years, he was a fixture in the lineup and a major run producer. He was a middle-of-the-order bat on a really, really good team,” Hyde said Thursday. “He’s done so much off the field as well. Great teammate — well liked in the clubhouse, well liked around the league.”

Davis became one of baseball’s most prodigious power hitters before his production dropped amid injury problems during his final seasons with the Orioles. Davis, 35, was going to miss the entire 2021 season after surgery in May to repair the labrum in his left hip.

“After an extended time dealing with my injury and recent hip surgery, I informed the Orioles about my decision to retire effective today,” Davis said in a statement released by the team. “I want to thank the Orioles partnershi­p group, led by the Angelos family, the Orioles organizati­on, my teammates and coaches.”

Next year was the final season of Davis’ $161 million, seven-year contract, a deal that became increasing­ly burdensome for the rebuilding Orioles.

Davis came to the Orioles in a 2011 trade from Texas. He hadn’t hit more than 21 homers in a season with the Rangers, but he hit 33 in his first full season with Baltimore. Davis led the majors with 53 homers in 2013 and 47 in 2015. He finishes his career with 295 in 13 seasons with the Orioles and Rangers.

A powerful left-handed hitter at 6-foot-4, Davis was a crucial part of Baltimore’s best run since the 1990s. He helped the Orioles reach the postseason in 2012, 2014 and 2016, although he did not play in the playoffs in 2014, when the team made it to the AL Championsh­ip Series.

Davis was suspended 25 games late in that 2014 season for testing positive for Adderall, a banned amphetamin­e. He later said he had been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder previously and been given a therapeuti­c use exemption for Adderall, but he did not have the exemption in 2014.

Davis’ free-swinging ways could lead to high home run and strikeout totals and low batting averages. He hit .196 with 26 homers in 2014 and .221 with 38 homers and a major league-leading 219 strikeouts in 2016 — the first year of his big contract.

After that, his numbers sank quickly, along with the team’s fortunes. He hit .168 in 2018 and went through an 0-for-54 streak in 2019. Davis hit just .115 over 55 at-bats last year, twice ending up on the injured list with knee problems.

“I’m sure Chris would like to have stayed healthy in his last couple years and put up bigger numbers,” Hyde said before Baltimore’s game against Detroit on Thursday. “But it wasn’t in the cards. I think the important thing is to focus on the really good years he had here, and everything that he has done for this organizati­on and the community here.”

A message thanking Davis was posted on the scoreboard between innings during Thursday’s game at Camden Yards.

 ?? GAIL BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Baltimore Orioles’ Chris Davis follows through on a two-run home run against the Chicago White Sox in the third inning of a baseball game in Baltimore, in this Tuesday, April 23, 2019, file photo. Slugger Chris Davis announced his retirement Thursday, Aug. 12, 2021, ending a career in which he became one of baseball’s most prodigious home run hitters before his production declined amid injury problems during his final seasons with the Baltimore Orioles.
GAIL BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Baltimore Orioles’ Chris Davis follows through on a two-run home run against the Chicago White Sox in the third inning of a baseball game in Baltimore, in this Tuesday, April 23, 2019, file photo. Slugger Chris Davis announced his retirement Thursday, Aug. 12, 2021, ending a career in which he became one of baseball’s most prodigious home run hitters before his production declined amid injury problems during his final seasons with the Baltimore Orioles.

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