Josh Hamilton Bio - Biography

Name Josh Hamilton
Height 5'11
Naionality American
Date of Birth 09-June-1969
Place of Birth America
Famous for



There is no such thing as a can’t-miss baseball prospect. For years, Josh Hamilton served as living proof of this axiom. The first pick in the 1999 baseball draft, he suffered a stunning decline that saw him squander his once-in-a-generation talent. Lost in a haze of alcohol and drugs, Josh tumbled from the top of the sports world to bottom of the barrel. After going years without picking up a bat and ball, he miraculously rediscovered the game—and, thankfully, it rediscovered him. This is his storyJoshua Holt Hamilton was born on May 21, 1981 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Click here for a complete listing of today's sports birthdays.) His parents, Linda and Tony, were both excellent athletes. Tony had been a baseball and football star in high school. Linda was a top amateur softball player. They met on a baseball diamond and were married six months later. They had two boys, Josh and his older brother, Jason.

Tony worked at a Ditch Witch dealership and spent every free moment grooming the careers of his wife and two sons. They ate more family meals at the concession stand than they care to remember. Tony was a demanding coach to his sons, doling out discipline hand-in-hand with advice.

As far back as Josh can remember, his life was focused on becoming a top draft choice and then a pro baseball star. His parents still have a scrap of paper from grade school, in which he scrawled out detailed plans for becoming a major leaguer. His teacher told him to follow his dreams. Support from friends, family and the community was never lacking.

Josh ran track and played football and soccer in addition to baseball. Eventually he would pare down to baseball exclusively. Tony would throw endless BP to his youngest son, with Linda shagging flies. Josh switched to wood bats when his teammates were using aluminum. He also worked out with a medicine ball to strengthen his hands and wrists.

Jason, meanwhile, was busy setting all kinds of records at Athens Drive High School in Raleigh. Josh would go on to break just about all of them. As he filled out, Josh became a picture-perfect athlete for the Jaguars. Before long, Josh gave up on track—there weren't any shoes big enough to fit him.







Already Josh was being compared to big-league sluggers. Paul O’Neill was the name mentioned most often. Josh stood 6–4 and weighed a rock-solid 200 pounds. Like the New York Yankees All-Star, he had explosive power, great coordination, muscles on top of muscles, and large and supple hands. Josh’s feet soon grew so large that he needed custom-made cleats.

Josh played centerfield and pitched for Athens Drive. He ran the 60-yard dash in 6.7 seconds, and as he matured, he did not lose this speed. Josh came into his own in 1998 during his junior season. His fastball touched 96 mph on the radar, and no one had ever seen a high-schooler with a quicker bat. His teammates nicknamed him “Hammer.” His famous and funny pre-game ritual was to change into his uniform in his ’89 Camaro, blasting Lynyrd Skynyrd’s "Double Trouble" and "Brand New Key" by Melanie.

Josh didn’t get much to hit as a senior, but he made the most of what the strikes he saw. Josh batted .529 in 25 games with 13 homers, 20 steals, 35 RBIs and 34 runs scored. On the mound, he lost just once in eight decisions, fanning 91 batters in 56 innings. For the second season in a row, Josh was honored as North Carolina’s Player of the Year. He made the cover of Baseball America while he was still in school.

Heading into the June draft, Josh was a guaranteed Top 5 pick. A flawless player with a squeaky-clean off-field reputation, he kissed his grandmother before every game. How could a team go wrong drafting a kid like Josh?With one season under their belt, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays owned the first pick in the 1999 draft and were shopping for a franchise player. High school pitching prospect Josh Beckett was a possibility, as were college stars Eric Munson and Barry Zito. The Rays considered Josh in this group, as well. The team eventually picked him because of his great makeup.


Paul O'Neill, 1987 Fleer



Josh ended up signing for a then-record $3.96 million bonus. He had every reason to be confident at this point. He was a once-in-a-lifetime player. Josh predicted three years in the minors, 15 in the majors and then a five-year wait for the Hall of Fame. And as his first pro season unfolded, it looked like that timetable might be conservative.

Josh joined the Princeton Pirates of the Appalachian League. After missing a game with food poisoning, he just tore it up. In his first pro game, he launched a 380-foot screamer into the night for a home run. Josh wound up belting nine more homers and knocking in 48 runs to go with 17 steals and a .347 average.

Josh’s teammates at Princeton included Carl Crawford and Doug Waechter, a couple of high school football stars who would soon reach the majors. Hard-throwing Seth McClung was also on that squad, which was managed by Bobby Ramos, who backed up Gary Carter at catcher for several years with the Montreal Expos.

The Rays bumped up Josh to Class-A Hudson Valley in August. He led the Renegades to the NY-Penn League title, hitting .429 with a pair of homers and eight RBIs in the postseason.

Josh’s parents were there for every game, having quit their jobs to travel through the minor leagues with their son. The Devil Rays were not crazy about this arrangement, but in the end, there was not much they could do about it. The Hamiltonsfollowed behind the team bus, Linda cooked Josh's meals, and Tony went over each game’s performance with his son.

Josh opened the 2000 camapign with the Charleston River Dogs of the South Atlantic League. He batted an eye-popping .448 in April before cooling off and settling into a nice rhythm. In his first full professional season, Josh batted .302 with 13 homers, 61 RBIs and 14 stolen bases. He was the youngest player invited to the Futures Game and collected three hits in four at-bats to lead Team USA’s 3–2 victory. Josh was also the top player in the Southern League’s All-Star Game.

On the last day of July, Josh felt a twinge in his right knee while chasing a fly ball. The injury was diagnosed as a torn lateral meniscus, which required season-ending arthroscopic surgery. Josh was nevertheless named the league’s co-MVP, sharing the honor with J.R. House. He was also voted Minor League Player of the Year by USA Today.

Josh went into the 2001 campaign rated as the game’s top prospect by Baseball America. That February, he and his parents were in an accident, their car rammed by a truck that had run a red light. Josh suffered back injuries, and his mother was badly hurt. Linda and Tony returned home to Raleigh where she could get medical treatment. Josh, meanwhile, started the year with Class-AA Orlando, but his back never felt right . After 23 games, he went on the DL.

At 20-years-old, Josh was alone for the first time in his life. With lots of time and money at his disposal, he fell in with a group that hung out at a tattoo shop in Bradenton, Florida. They weren’t bad guys, he has said, but they were into some bad things.

Eventually, Josh would be covered with tattoos, including tribal signs he didn’t understand and images of the devil and Jesus. He also began experimenting with drugs and alcohol for the first time in his life.

Tampa Bay's management sensed that something was seriously wrong and ordered Josh to see a sports psychologist. When he admitted he had tried drugs, he was shipped immediately to the Betty Ford Clinic. There, he says, doctors tried to convince him that his problems could be traced to his inability to sever ties with his parents and grow up independently. Josh got so angry he walked out of rehab.

Josh was sent back to Charleston when he came off the DL, then tore a quadriceps muscle three games later and his season was over. A few months later, Tamba Bay assigned Josh to the Arizona Fall League. There, he hurt himself after just two games and went home. Meanwhile, his drinking and drug use continued.


Josh hamilton, 1999 Baseball America


In 2002, Josh found himself in Bakersfield playing Class-A ball again. His left shoulder and elbow were sore all year, and his back injury also kicked up. Limited primarily to DH duties, he hit .303 with nine home runs and 44 RBIs in 56 games. His season ended prematurely in July—the third straight year he failed to make it to the finish line. Tampa Bay set up a meeting with Dr. James Andrews, who later operated on Josh’s elbow and shoulder.

During spring training in 2003, Josh failed a drug test and was suspended. Unable to stay clean, he had his career officially put on hold. Every time he flunked a drug test, Major League Baseball tacked another 12 months onto his suspension. He returned to Raleigh but could not bring his life under control.

Finally, in 2004, Josh stopped taking tests altogether. At that point, he was out of baseball. Josh continued to drift in and out of rehab, wanting badly to kick his habits but unable to do so . Many a time he consumed enough cocaine and booze to kill a normal human being, but his amazing body pulled him through.

Josh’s greatest piece of luck came when he showed up at the home of Mike Chadwick, a businessman who lectured around the state on how he had beaten drugs and alcohol. Chadwick explained to Josh that he was in a life-and-death battle. Josh could either quit or die. Chadwick pointed out to Josh that he had advantages others like him did not. There was a group of good supportive people who cared about him and were not interested in baseball. This group eventually included Chadwick’s daughter, Katie, who had known Josh back in his high school days.

The relationship between Josh and Katie blossomed, and the two got married in the winter of '04. She had a daughter, Julia, from a previous marriage, and they decided to have a child of their own. Josh convinced Katie that he was clean, but soon he fell back to his old ways. Tony and Linda gave the couple the last $200,000 left from Josh’s bonus so they could buy a small house. Josh took the leftover cash and blew it on drugs.

Katie gave birth to a girl named Sierra in September of 2005. By then, Josh was smoking crack again. Katie had thrown him out of their house, and he had moved in with grandmother Mary. She was the only one left in the family willing to take him in.

On October 6th, Josh vowed to give up drugs and alcohol. He had lost 50 pounds, and his complexion was ghostlike. Baseball was completely off his radar at this point. All that consumed Josh was his next high. Everything that was important to him was gone. He had hit rock bottom.

Josh always made for good copy in the mdeia, and when got out that he had cleaned up his act, articles began appearing in print and online. One of these stories reached the desk of Roy Silver, owner of The Winning Inning, a training academy that blends the fundamentals of baseball and Christianity. Silver invited Josh to join his staff and work his way back into the game.

Josh showed up at the The Winning Inning complex in Clearwater, Florida in January of 2006. He cleaned the restrooms and took care of the field. After his duties were completed, he was able to use the academy’s training facilities. Dead broke, he slept on an air mattress in an unused office. College teams would often play at the complex, and the students had no idea that the guy in cargo shorts raking the infield was probably the best player on the diamond.

Once, when he was tidying up the bullpen, Josh asked the pitchers warming up if he could toss a few. It had been almost three years since he had thrown a ball in anger. The ball exploded into the catcher’s glove at 95 mph, and the college boys looked at Josh in slack-jawed awe. Impossible as it seemed, he still had it.Although Josh had been clean and sober for only eight months, Major League Baseball was impressed enough by his progress to allow him to get back on the field. Josh played 15 games for one of his former clubs, Hudson Valley of the NY-Penn League. Tampa Bay had to run Josh through waivers, where anyone could have claimed him for $20,000. There were no takers.

That made the next turn of events a little surprising. After the '06 season, Josh was taken by the Chicago Cubs in the Rule 5 Draft. Tampa Bay had decided to leave him off the 40-man roster, thinking no one would gamble on a player with his past. The team was wrong. Actually, Chicago's move was a pre-arranged deal with the Cincinnati Reds, who needed outfield depth. The Reds paid $100,000 to the Cubs for their third pick, which enabled Cincinnati to move up from #15, where the club might not have had a shot at Josh.

One of the first things the Reds did was to find Josh an around-the-clock companion to keep him out of trouble. Manager Jerry Narron suggested his brother John, a hitting instructor in the Milwaukee Brewers’ system. John had once coached Josh in youth-league basketball, and like Josh, he was deeply religious.


Josh Hamilton,
2002 Bowman Chrome



Josh made the Reds in 2007 as part of a power-packed outfield with Ken Griffey and Adam Dunn. As he prepared to take his long-awaited first major-league at bats, against the Cubs, the fans at Great American Ballpark gave him a long ovation. “Congratulations Josh,” said Chicago catcher Michael Barrett. “You deserve it. Take it all in."

Josh had his ups and downs during the year, and so did the Reds. By mid-season, he had found his groove. After 298 at-bats Josh was hitting close to .300 and had 19 home runs. He was, by any measure, an unqualified success.

Josh’s great season was derailed by a wrist injury, and many worried that without baseball he would relapse. Narron actually moved in with Josh at this point, and they wiled away the hours watching movies and playing video games.

After the season, the Texas Rangers approached the Reds about Josh. The club had almost made him a Rule 5 pick the previous year, and it still needed a centerfielder. The Rangers had scouted Josh throughout '07. They were convinced that he had turned the corner. After much haggling, the Reds managed to extract Edinson Volquez, the Rangers’ number-one pitching prospect, and Danny Herrera, another young hurler. Cincinnati needed pitching badly, and with young centerfielder Jay Bruce on the cusp of stardom, Josh was expendable.

The only distressing part of Josh’s first year in the majors was grumbling from some Cincinnati teammates that he was getting too much media attention. His inspiring story made great headlines, and his locker was busy each time the team played in a new city. Sensitive to this situation when he moved to the Rangers, Josh was incredibly touched when, during his introductory press conference, he noticed team leaders Michael Young, Hank Blalock and Ian Kinsler in the audience.

The 2008 Rangers did not have much in the pitching department, so they looked to their sluggers to win games. Josh quickly emerged as the best of the bunch. He batted over .500 until the final week of spring training. In the team’s first regular-season series, against the Seattle Mariners, Josh pulled a JJ Putz heater into the stands with a man on in the ninth inning to turn a 4–3 deficit into a 5–4 win. Earlier in the game, he had flashed some leather, sprinting to the track in left-center to make an over-the-shoulder basket catch on a drive off the bat of Brad Wilkerson.

After one month, Josh was crushing the ball at a .330 clip with six homers and a major-league best 32 RBIs. Nonetheless, the baseball pundits were near unanimous in their analysis of him at this point: Josh had nowhere to go but down. All he did in May was win his second straight Player of the Month award. On June 1, he was leading the league with 15 homers and 63 RBIs, and was in the thick of the batting race.

Josh wasn’t just torturing enemy pitchers. He was getting it done in the outfield, too. In a May game against the Mariners, he made a wall-banging, game-saving catch in a 5–2 victory. In the club's next series against the Houston Astros, he had a 5-for-5 game with six RBIs. Josh was crushing the ball from foul pole to foul pole.

In July, he slammed a walk-off homer off Francisco Rodriguez. By the All-Star break, Josh had 95 RBIs. He then electrified the crowd at Yankee Stadium with a performance for the ages in the Home Run Derby. Fans felt like they were the second coming—they just weren't sure if it was of Mickey Mantle or Roy Hobbs.

Texas fans, meanwhile, are thrilled to be witnessing the greatness that the baseball world had all but given up on. So is the rest of baseball. Josh is clean, sober and back on track.


Josh has one of baseball’s most magnificent swings. It is smooth and powerful. Fans who get to the ballpark early can tell when he’s taking batting practice just by the sound the ball makes when it explodes off his bat. During games, they are amazed at how hard it is to tempt Josh to swing at pitches outside the strike zone. His knowledge of the strike zone helps make him a great hitter. Josh uses the entire field and can clear any fence in the majors. in other words, he's a pitcher's worst nightmare.

Josh is fast in the outfield with a great first step and flawless instincts. He plays a shallow center field, but can get to the wall to track down long drives. He has one of the strongest arms in the American League. He can throw 250-foot strikes to home plate.

A fan favorite, Josh is friendly and generous with his time before games. He also speaks to groups about his ordeal with drugs and alcohol. He will stay at these events until he has answered every question from the audience. Friends and teammates still worry about a relapse. Josh takes his life one day at a time, which is a perfect philosophy for the baseball diamond as well

Josh Hamilton Photos