Troy Edward Glaus Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
Troy Edward Glaus (/ˈɡlɔːs/; born August 3, 1976) is a former Major League Baseball first baseman and third baseman. Previously, Glaus played with the Anaheim Angels (1998-2004), Arizona Diamondbacks (2005), Toronto Blue Jays (2006-2007), St. Louis Cardinals (2008-2009), and the Atlanta Braves (2010). Glaus lettered in baseball while attending UCLA. He bats and throws right-handed.
(January 14) Traded to the St. Louis Cardinals for Scott Rolen. [2008]
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(December 9) Agreed to a four-year, $45 million contract with the Arizona Diamondbacks, which includes a provision that designates $1 million to help his wife defray the cost of running her equestrian business from Arizona. [2004]
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(27 December) Traded to the Toronto Blue Jays for former Diamondback Miguel Batista. [2005]
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Played college baseball at UCLA and helped lead the U.S. Baseball Team to a Bronze Medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.
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In Game 6 of the Series, down three games to two, the Angels were behind 5-0 going into the bottom of the seventh. They were, in effect, nine outs away from losing the Series. They added 3 Runs in the 7th and three more in the eighth on a home run by Darin Erstad and a two-run double by Troy Glaus to win 6-5, completing the biggest comeback in World Series history by a team facing elimination. Troy Glaus eventually won the World Series MVP due in part to his huge hit.
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Batted .385 with 3 Home Runs and 8 Runs Batted In in the 2002 World Series against the Giants. Glaus recorded six extra-base hits in the World Series, pacing Barry Bonds.
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Won the 2002 World Series MVP.
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Used to hold the single season American League record for homeruns in a season with 46 until David Ortiz broke the record.
Self
Title
Year
Status
Character
Prime 9
2010-2011
TV Series
Himself
Sunday Night Baseball
1999-2010
TV Series
Himself - Anaheim Angels Third Baseman / Himself / Himself - St. Louis Cardinals Third Baseman / ...
2006 MLB All-Star Game
2006
TV Special
Himself
2003 MLB All-Star Game
2003
TV Special
Himself - AL Starting Third Baseman: Anaheim Angels