Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Split G PA R H SO/BB BA OBP SLG OPS
Jason Varitek 94 3511 374 786 2.62 .251 .320 .404 .724
George Kottaras 34 1027 133 269 2.16 .293 .355 .432 .787
Victor Martinez 17 603 90 157 1.62 .297 .371 .485 .855
Dusty Brown 1 5 0 2 0.00 .500 .600 .500 1.100
Generated 9/3/2009
As Jason Varitek's offense has dwindled over the last few years, much has been made of his impact on the pitching staff. Many people, including some of the Red Sox pitchers, feel that Varitek's contributions in terms of preventing run-scoring by the other team (by assisting pitchers) outweigh any lack of offense he provides as a batter.
The table above suggests that this might well be true, at least this season. The opposing OPS is far lower against Varitek than it was againt George Kottaras when he was catching or against Victor Martinez since he joined the team in a July trade. All the numbers are better, including K/BB ratio and averages against.
CARD
I chose the card above because it reminds us that Varitek didn't come up in the Boston organization. Rather, he was acquired in one of the most lopsided trades in recent history:
July 31, 1997: Traded by the Seattle Mariners with Derek Lowe to the Boston Red Sox for Heathcliff Slocumb.
Slocumb was on the down side of his career by this point and while he wasn't horrible for the Mariners, he left as a free agent a year later and both of the minor leaguers acquired by the Red Sox went on to long, successful major-league careers.
Minor league baseball cards are often fantastic, as is the case with this card. There's the unusual team name, unusual logo, and the clean & simple look of the field. At first glance, I thought the "C" down near the bottom was on Varitek's belt buckle. In fact, it's just his position designation.

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