Bernard Gilkey

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Bernard Gilkey was an outfielder for the Mets from 1996 to 1998. He played 380 games and batted .273 as a member of the team. Gilkey hit 52 home runs and had 223 runs batted in with the Mets.

Gilkey came to New York from the St. Louis Cardinals in a trade for three minor league players on January 22, 1996. In '96, he led the Mets with 117 RBIs to tie a team record. Bernard's 44 doubles and .393 on-base percentage were also team highs for the season. In addition, he had 30 homers and a .317 batting average.

In his first game as a Met, he homered against his former St. Louis team in the Mets' 7-6 Opening Day win on April 1 at Shea Stadium. Three times during the year, Gilkey hit two homers in a game. On May 28, he connected twice in the Mets' 4-0 win over the Giants. At Colorado on July 24, Bernard had two homers in a 7-6 loss to the Rockies. In the first game of a doubleheader on July 30, Gilkey homered in his first two at bats in a 5-4 Mets victory over the Pirates at Shea. Against Pittsburgh one day later, he homered to tie the game in the ninth inning in an eventual 3-2 Mets win in 10 at Shea.

Although he did not match his '96 production, Bernard still had an impressive season in 1997. He had 129 hits for the year (including 31 doubles and 18 home runs) and was a National League co-leader with 12 sacrifice flies. At Shea on July 19, Gilkey hit a three-run homer in a 5-3 Mets win over the Reds. In a game against the Giants at Shea on August 27, he had a double, three singles and a sacrifice fly in the Mets' 15-6 victory. Bernard hit a three-run homer in the 11th inning to give the Mets a 9-6 win over the Expos on September 13 at Shea. At Philadelphia on September 15, he hit two homers and drove in the winning run with a tenth inning single in a 10-5 Mets triumph in the first game of a doubleheader.

Gilkey played 82 games for the Mets in an injury-plagued 1998 season. He had 60 hits for the year before his trade to the Arizona Diamondbacks on July 31. Bernard played three more major league seasons with the D'Backs, Red Sox and Braves before his retirement in 2001.






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