Kevin Pillar Bio, Age, Wife, Contract, Salary, MLB Career And Highlights

Kevin Pillar born as Kevin Andrew Pillar is an American professional baseball outfielder for the San Francisco Giants in the Major League Baseball(MLB). He was born on January 4th, 1989 in West Hills, California.

Kevin Pillar Biography

Kevin Pillar born as Kevin Andrew Pillar is an American professional baseball outfielder for the San Francisco Giants in the Major League Baseball(MLB). He was born on January 4th, 1989 in West Hills, California.

Kevin Pillar was conceived in the Los Angeles locale of West Hills to Mike and Wendy Pillar. He grew up a Los Angeles Dodgers fan. Kevin Pillar is Jewish and had a Bar Mitzvah; his mom is Jewish and his dad is Christian. Through the 2018 season, his 69 stolen bases set him seventh on the profession unequaled rundown of Jewish significant leaguers, legitimately behind Sam Bohne and in front of Sam Fuld. His epithet is K.P.

In secondary school at Chaminade College Prep, Pillar moved from the infield to the outfield in his lesser year for the baseball crew. He batted just shy of .400 for his secondary school vocation, with a high of .463 in his senior year. He additionally played on offense, protection, and uncommon groups with the football crew, just as point watch on the ball crew, and earned first-group all-alliance praises in each game.

Kevin Pillar Age

He was born on January 4th, 1989 in West Hills, California, USA.

Kevin Pillar Wife

Kevin wedded Amanda Gulyas in October 2014. His better half brought forth a girl in October 2017.

Kevin Pillar Contract | Kevin Pillar Salary

Kevin Pillar marked a 1 year/$5,800,000 contract with the Toronto Blue Jays, including $5,800,000 ensured, and a yearly normal pay of $5,800,000. In 2019, Kevin will procure a base pay of $5,800,000, while conveying an absolute pay of $5,800,000. Kevin’s balanced compensation with the San Francisco Giants is $5,644,085

Kevin Pillar Height

He is 1.83 m tall.

Kevin Pillar Giants | Kevin Pillar MLB

Toronto Blue Jays

2013

Kevin was called up to the Blue Jays without precedent for his profession on August 14, 2013, after focus defender Colby Rasmus was put on the 15-day handicapped rundown and utility player Emilio Bonifacio was exchanged to the Kansas City Royals.

He was the principal individual from Toronto’s 2011 draft to arrive at the majors, and as of April 2015, was the most reduced choice of his significant group draft class to get to the majors. General director Anthopoulos expressed that, at the season of his call-up, he looked at Pillar as a “genuine focus alternative”.

Kevin made his real alliance debut that night against the Boston Red Sox. He was given uniform number 22. He was 0-for-4 with one strikeout, and made a wonderful, head-long, plunging get in the outfield in the Blue Jays’ 4–3 additional innings win.

Kevin recorded his first profession hit and RBI in a doubleheader against the New York Yankees on August 20. On August 24, Pillar hit his first vocation grand slam, a three-run shot off Houston Astros starter Brad Peacock.

2014

In 2014, in the wake of beginning the season with the Blue Jays, Pillar was optioned to the Buffalo Bisons on March 22. He was called up to the Blue Jays on May 13, after Jonathan Diaz was optioned to Triple-A. Kevin had arrived at base securely in a group high 26 straight games with Buffalo and posted a triple slice of .305/.344/.461 out of 34 games, while driving the association in copies and driving Triple-A with an 18-game hitting streak.

On June 9, Pillar hit a stroll off single, scoring Erik Kratz to give the Blue Jays a 5–4 prevail upon the Minnesota Twins. On June 24 he was sent down to Buffalo for tossing his bat after director John Gibbons expelled him for substitute Anthony Gose. He was reviewed on August 26 when Nolan Reimold was assigned for the task.

2015

In the 2015 offseason, the Blue Jays gained Michael Saunders from the Seattle Mariners, and Pillar was required to go after the fourth outfielder job heading into spring preparing. Be that as it may after Saunders tore his meniscus before the beginning of spring preparing Pillar ventured in as the beginning left defender.

Kevin made a few feature reel gets all through the season, including scaling the left-field divider to loot Tim Beckham of a grand slam on April 15. Blue Jays fans cast a ballot it the play of the year and Pillar considered the catch a “groundbreaking minute” that got him from lack of clarity to noticeable quality Toronto and around the association.

On June 2, Pillar recorded his first profession two-grand slam game and turned into the main right-gave player to hit two homers in a single game off of Washington Nationals’ ace Max Scherzer. He was named the Blue Jays Player of the Month for June, as decided on by the Toronto Chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA), for a month wherein he batted .365 (fourth in the AL) with 5 stolen bases (tied for seventh in the AL) and 18 RBIs (tied for tenth in the AL).

On September 28, Pillar was named the American League Player of the Week for September 21–27. He batted .524 with 2 grand slams, 6 RBIs, and 5 stolen bases during that week.

Kevin played his first full Major League season in 2015 and set a few vocation highs. He completed the normal season batting .278 with 12 homers, 56 RBIs, and 25 stolen bases (fifth in the AL), as his 86.21 stolen base rate was fourth-best in the group.

Kevin played in every one of the 5 rounds of the 2015 American League Division Series against the Texas Rangers and batted .333 with 1 grand slam and 4 RBIs. Kevin and the Blue Jays then lost the American League Championship Series in 6 games to the Kansas City Royals, who proceeded to win the World Series.

On October 29, Pillar was declared as a finalist for the Gold Glove grant in focus field, alongside Kevin Kiermaier and Mike Trout, with the honor, in the end, going to Kiermaier. On November 11, Pillar was named the 2015 Wilson Defensive Player of the Year for focus field.

2016

Kevin opened the season as the Blue Jays’ lead-off hitter, however, battled, hitting .188 without any strolls through April 16, and was descended in the request by director John Gibbons. Toward the beginning of August, Pillar was set on the impaired rundown with left thumb damage acquired while taking a base; he later experienced offseason medical procedure to fix a torn thumb tendon.

To that point in the season, Pillar had played in 109 of 112 games, and his 2.6 Wins Above Replacement (WAR) was second just to Josh Donaldson in the group. On September 6, Pillar was declared as the Blue Jays’ chosen one for the Roberto Clemente Award.

Kevin showed up in 146 games for the Blue Jays in 2016 and hit .266 with seven grand slams, 53 RBIs, and 14 stolen bases. On barrier, he positioned # 1 among real class focus defenders with 21 Defensive Runs Saved and a UZR (Ultimate Zone Rating) of 21.4.

He drove all MLB focus defenders in guarded an incentive as indicated by Fangraphs and was just outperformed in a protective incentive by shortstops Brandon Crawford and Francisco Lindor. Kevin battled with the bat in the postseason, going 3-for-32 at the plate with one grand slam and two RBIs.

Kevin was named as a finalist for the Gold Glove Award in focus field, alongside Jackie Bradley Jr. what’s more, Kevin Kiermaier. On October 28, he was granted the Fielding Bible Award for the inside field position.

2017

On February 8, 2017, Pillar was declared as the spread competitor for the Canadian adaptation of R.B.I. Baseball 17. During the offseason, Pillar attempted to improve his plate discipline, with the objective of turning into the lead-off hitter for the Blue Jays.

Right off the bat in the season, he split time at the lead-off job with Devon Travis; in any case, Travis battled in the job and Pillar turned into the regular lead-off hitter in late April. On May 13, Pillar turned into the American League pioneer in hits with 47, after a 3-for-4 execution against the Seattle Mariners. The next day, Pillar hit the principal stroll off grand slam of his vocation, a performance shot off Mariners closer Edwin Díaz to give Toronto a 3–2 triumph.

In the Blue Jays’ 8–4 misfortune to the Atlanta Braves on May 17, Braves pitcher Jason Motte hit out Pillar with a fastpitch. Kevin at that point called Motte a homophobic slur, Motte and Braves catcher Kurt Suzuki stood up to him, and the two holes hurried onto the field.

Following the game, Pillar openly apologized to Motte. The following day, the Blue Jays held a public interview at which Pillar apologized once more, and the group reported that Pillar would be suspended for two games; he was likewise fined an undisclosed sum by MLB.

For the 2017 season, Pillar batted .256/.300/.404 with profession highs in copies (37) and grand slams (16), as he scored 72 runs and stole 15 bases. His .997 handling rate as an inside defender was the best in the group, and his eight helps as a middle defender were second-most in the AL. On October 28, he has named a middle field Gold Glove grant finalist.

2018

On January 12, 2018, Pillar marked a one-year, $3.25 million contract with the Blue Jays, staying away from pay discretion. In Toronto’s 5–3 triumph over the New York Yankees on March 31, Pillar turned into the principal Blue Jay to take three bases in a single inning, when he stole second, third, and home plate in the eighth.

It was likewise the group’s first effective straight take of home since Aaron Hill did as such in 2007. On July 1 he made a divider jumping grand slam looting get that was evaluated the # 2 cautious play of the year on MLB Network’s “Main 100 Plays of 2018″. He was put on the handicapped rundown on July 15 in the wake of spraining his privilege sternoclavicular joint (where his collarbone connects to his chest divider) on a plunging get.

Kevin completed the 2018 season driving the group in batting normal (.252), pairs (40; a lifelong high), and stolen bases (14) while coming in tenth in the American League in stolen-base rate (83.25%). He additionally hit 15 grand slams and 59 RBIs. With the group exchanging pitcher Aaron Loup during the season, Pillar moved toward becoming – at 29 years old – the longest-tenured dynamic Blue Jay.

2019

In January 2019, Pillar marked a one-year, $5.8 million contract with the Blue Jays, keeping away from discretion.

San Francisco Giants

2019

On April 2, 2019, the Blue Jays exchanged Pillar to the San Francisco Giants for Alen Hanson, Derek Law, and Juan De Paula.

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Pillar Highlights | Defensive Highlights | Career Highlights

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