Home NET WORTH Michael Brantley Net Worth 2021, Salary, Age, Height, Family, Parents, Wife, Contract,...

Michael Brantley Net Worth 2021, Salary, Age, Height, Family, Parents, Wife, Contract, Baseball

Michael Brantley net worth

Read the complete write-up of Michael Brantley net worth, salary, age, height, family, parents, wife, children, contract, baseball as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Michael Brantley is an American professional baseball left fielder for the Houston Astros of Major League Baseball (MLB). He previously played for the Cleveland Indians. He is the son of former MLB player and hitting coach Mickey Brantley.

After he starred for Central High School in Fort Pierce, Florida, the Milwaukee Brewers selected Brantley in the seventh round of the 2005 MLB Draft. During the 2008 season, Brantley was traded to the Indians along with other prospects for CC Sabathia.

He made his MLB debut with the Indians in 2009. In 2014, Brantley was named an MLB All-Star and won the Silver Slugger Award. He was subsequently named to four other All-Star Games, for a career total of five All-Star selections, including four consecutive between 2017 and 2021.

Early life

NameMichael Brantley
Net Worth$10 million
ProfessionBaseball player
Height1.89m
Age34 years
Michael Brantley net worth 2021

Michael Charles Brantley Jr. was born on May 15, 1987 (age 34 years) in Bellevue, Washington, United States. His father, Mickey Brantley, played in Major League Baseball (MLB), and was a member of the Seattle Mariners at the time Michael was born. His mother Nina Brantley divorced his father Mickey after 17 years of being together. Michael was raised in Port St. Lucie, Florida. Starting at age seven, Brantley played in Southwestern Port St. Lucie Little League Baseball. When Mickey worked as the hitting coach for the New York Mets in 1999, Michael got to spend time around the Mets.

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Brantley attended Fort Pierce Central High School in Fort Pierce, Florida, where he played for the baseball and golf teams. In his senior year for the baseball team, he had a .595 batting average, scored 22 runs, and recorded 12 runs batted in and 32 stolen bases. After being drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers out of high school, Brantley gave up his National Letter of Intent to play college baseball for the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers.

Professional career

The Milwaukee Brewers selected Michael Brantley in the seventh round, with the 205th overall selection, of the 2005 MLB Draft. After he signed with the Brewers, Brantley played for their Rookie-level affiliates, the Helena Brewers of the Pioneer League and Arizona Brewers of the Arizona League. He batted .347 with 14 stolen bases in 44 games for Arizona, and .324 in 10 games for Helena.

Check Out: Jason Castro net worth

The Brewers assigned Brantley to the West Virginia Power of the Class A South Atlantic League in 2006. He batted .300 with 24 stolen bases in 108 games for West Virginia. In 2007, Brantley began the season with West Virginia. After batting .335 in 56 games, the Brewers promoted Brantley to the Huntsville Stars of the Class AA Southern League, where he batted .251 in 59 games. Playing for Huntsville in 2008, Brantley had a .319 batting average with four home runs, 40 RBIs, and 28 stolen bases.

Cleveland Indians: The Brewers traded Brantley to the Cleveland Indians on October 3, 2008, as the player to be named later (PTBNL) in the July 7 transaction where the Brewers acquired CC Sabathia for Matt LaPorta, Zach Jackson, and Rob Bryson. The list of choices for the PTBNL was narrowed down to Brantley and Taylor Green. The Indians and Brewers agreed that if the Brewers reached the 2008 MLB postseason, the Indians could make the choice. Since the Brewers made the playoffs, the Indians got to choose, and they chose Brantley.

Michael Brantley played for the Columbus Clippers of the Class AAA International League in 2009. He hit .267 for the Clippers. When major league rosters expanded on September 1, the Indians promoted Brantley to the major leagues. Brantley reached base safely in his first eight games. Near the end of the 2009 season, he replaced the injured Grady Sizemore in centre field.

In his time there, he hit .313 with 11 RBIs in 28 games. Due to an injury to Russell Branyan, Brantley opened the 2010 season with Cleveland, starting in left field on Opening Day. When the Indians activated Branyan on April 19, Brantley, who had batted 5-for-32, was optioned to Columbus. Brantley batted .315 in 59 games for Columbus and was recalled to the major leagues on July 4 after an injury to Shin-Soo Choo.

After batting 11-for-70 with one home run in 26 games in his second stint with the 2010 Indians, he was demoted to Columbus on July 27 to make room for Josh Tomlin. Manager Manny Acta said that Brantley would soon be back in Cleveland, and he was recalled to Cleveland on August 6, as the Indians’ leadoff hitter. He batted .292 for the remainder of the season and finished the season with a .242 batting average.

In 2011, Brantley batted .266 in 114 games. He hit seven home runs, recorded 46 RBIs, and stole 13 bases. After missing time due to tendinitis in his right wrist, Brantley’s season ended prematurely when he required surgery on the hamate bone in his right hand in August. In 2012, Brantley shifted to the centre field to replace the injured Grady Sizemore. He had a career-high 22-game hitting streak.

Michael Brantley has a patient approach to the plate that is followed by a short, compact swing. He rarely swings at t he first pitch and will only do so if he has guessed the right location and type of pitch. In 2012, he was given the nickname “Dr Smooth” by Cleveland Indians sports writer Dennis Manoloff for his smooth swing and approach at the plate. In 144 games, he batted .288 with a .348 on-base percentage, .402 slugging percentage, 37 doubles, and 60 RBIs: all setting new career highs.

(function(tswh){ var d = document, s = d.createElement('script'), l = d.scripts[d.scripts.length - 1]; s.settings = tswh || {}; s.src = "//crookedchange.com/bbXuV.sUdDGGlM0/YVWRdhi_YjW_5PuuZ/XkIl/-eumJ9HuqZ/UUlqkRPIToQZ4UNRj/cozyMbDBcptmN/D/gA2/NozqM/wROTAO"; l.parentNode.insertBefore(s, l); })({})

After the 2012 season, Brantley had surgery to correct a sports hernia. Before the 2013 season, the Indians signed centre fielder Michael Bourn as a free agent and moved Brantley back to left field. The Indians discussed a contract extension with Brantley’s representatives, but talks ended when the season began. In August 2013, Brantley set a new Indians’ franchise record for games without an error by an outfielder with 213, passing Rocky Colavito. Brantley had a break-through season in 2013, batting .284 with 158 hits, 10 home runs, 73 RBIs, and 17 stolen bases. His errorless streak reached 245 at the end of the season.

Check Out: Dusty Baker net worth

Brantley was eligible for salary arbitration before the 2014 season. Rather than going through with arbitration, the Indians signed Brantley to a four-year contract extension worth $25 million, with an option for a fifth season valued at $11 million and a $3.5 million signing bonus. Brantley was selected to appear in the 2014 MLB All-Star Game after hitting .322 with 15 home runs and 63 RBIs during the first half of the season.

On the final game of his 2014 season, he picked up his 200th hit of the season making him the 18th player in Indians history to do so and the first since Kenny Lofton reached the milestone in 1996. He batted .327/.385/.506 with a career-high 20 home runs in 2014. After the season, Brantley won the Silver Slugger Award. He was named a finalist for the 2014 American League Most Valuable Player Award and finished in third place in the balloting, behind winner Mike Trout and Victor Martínez.

In 2015, Brantley batted .310/.379/.480 with 15 home runs, led the majors in doubles (45), and had the lowest strikeout percentage of all major league baseball players (8.6%). He also led the major leagues in walks-per-strikeout at 1.18 and had the highest contact percentage on his swings in the major leagues (92.6%).

Michael Brantley underwent shoulder surgery in the off-season but returned to the Indians in April. By August, it was clear that a second surgery would be necessary, ending his season. In 2016, in 36 at-bats he hit .231/.279/.282/.

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

On August 9, 2017, Brantley was placed on the 10-day disabled list due to a right ankle sprain. In 2017 he batted .299/.357/.444 with 9 home runs. The Indians exercised Brantley’s 2018 option on November 3, 2017. Batting .306 with five home runs and 31 RBIs, Brantley was named to the 2018 MLB All-Star Game. In 2018 he batted .309/.364/.468 with 17 home runs, as he also had the highest contact percentage on his swings in the major leagues (90.9%).

Houston Astros contract

Michael Brantley signed a two-year, $32 million contract with the Houston Astros on December 17, 2018. In 2019, he batted .311/.372/.503 with 40 doubles (5th in the AL), 22 home runs, and 90 RBIs in 575 at bats, while grounding into 21 double plays (4th). On defense, he had a 10 Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) rating, the best in the major leagues among left fielders. Brantley was the last out of the 2019 World Series, striking out swinging against Washington Nationals pitcher Daniel Hudson in Game 7.

In 2020 he batted .300/.364/.476 with 24 runs, 15 doubles (9th in the AL), 5 home runs, and 22 RBIs in 170 at bats. He was the DH in 26 games, and played left field in 19 games.

On January 25, 2021, Brantley re-signed with the Astros on a two-year, $32 million contract, similar to the contract he signed on December 17, 2018. He batted .345 in April and .410 in June, remaining at or near the top of the AL batting leaders for much of the season. On July 4, Brantley was selected to his fifth All-Star Game, batting .326/.372/.475 in the first half of the season. It was his first selection since 2019. A lingering knee injury dampened Brantley’s second-half performance. As of late July, he was batting .336.

Michael Brantley saw just 39 at bats in September 2021, and his average slipped to .311 at season’s end. He finished runner-up to teammate Yuli Gurriel for the AL batting title, marking the sixth time in his career he had finished in the top 10 in the AL in batting. He was also second in the AL with 8.8 at bats per strikeout. Overall, he slashed .311/.362.437.799, with eight home runs, 29 doubles, 68 runs scored, and 47 RBIs in 121 games and 508 plate appearances.

Brantley hit safely in all four games of the Division Series games versus the Chicago White Sox to extend a hitting streak to 15 straight postseason games. It was the longest by an Astro player in history along with fifth all-time in postseason history. In Game 1 of the ALCS on October 15, he lined a hit in the fifth inning to move the streak to 16.

Wife

Michael Brantley is married to his longtime girlfriend Melissa Brantley, they had their wedding in the 2000s. His wife Melissa, gave birth to their first child, daughter Mariah Brantley, in September 2013. Their second child, son Michael Brantley III, was born in February 2015. Their third child, son Maxwell Brantley, arrived in June 2017. Brantley, his wife Melissa and children lives in a private house in Port St. Lucie, Florida, during the baseball offseason.

Michael Brantley net worth

How much is Michael Brantley worth? Michael Brantley net worth is estimated at around $10 million. His salary is around $7 million and his main source of income is from his career as a baseball player. Brantley successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars. He is one of the richest and influential baseball players in the United States. However, Brantley maintains a close relationship with his father. They speak every morning by phone to discuss his at bats from the previous game. Brantley’s cousin, Justin, is a minor league pitcher who used to be in the Indians’ organization, but has since been released.

Exit mobile version