Kennie Steenstra

Kenneth Gregory Steenstra (born October 13, 1970) is an American former professional baseball pitcher and current coach. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Chicago Cubs. He attended Wichita State University.

Kennie Steenstra
Pitcher / Coach
Born: (1970-10-13) October 13, 1970
Springfield, Missouri
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
May 21, 1998, for the Chicago Cubs
Last MLB appearance
June 7, 1998, for the Chicago Cubs
MLB statistics
Win–loss record0–0
Earned run average10.80
Strikeouts4
Teams

High school

Kennie attended Plato High School, in south central Missouri. Steenstra broke the record for being the winningest high school pitcher with 65 victories.

Draft

Steenstra was selected in the 12th round, 331st overall by the Cubs in the 1992 MLB draft.

Minor leagues

Steenstra was used almost entirely as a starter in his pre-major league pro career. In fact, he was used as a reliever only four times. He saw quite a bit of success in the minors, with a string of three very successful seasons between 1992 and 1994. In 1992, with the Geneva Cubs and Peoria Chiefs, he went a combined 9-3 with a 1.89 earned run average. In 1993 he went 14-6, and in 1994 he went 9-7 with a 2.61 ERA for the Orlando Cubs.

Major leagues

On May 21, 1998 at the age of 27, Steenstra made his MLB debut wearing number 49 for the Cubs. In one inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers, he gave up one hit, one walk, struck out one and surrendered no runs. Overall, he finished with a 10.80 ERA in 3⅓ innings, striking out four, but giving up two home runs (the first to Javy López and the second to Magglio Ordóñez). In total, he gave up seven hits and allowed two runners to steal against him. He played his final game on June 7. During the 1998 season, Steenstra earned $170,000.

After the majors

After his brief stint in the majors, Steenstra bounced around in the minors until 2002 in the Atlanta Braves, Seattle Mariners, Arizona Diamondbacks, St. Louis Cardinals, Baltimore Orioles and Florida Marlins organizations.

In between, he played winter ball with the Águilas del Zulia and Leones del Caracas clubs of the Venezuelan League during two seasons spanning 1995–1998.

Following his playing days, he has worked as a pitching coach for the Lincoln Saltdogs (2004), Delmarva Shorebirds (2005–2006) and Frederick Keys (2014).

Steenstra was hired to be the pitching coach for the Bowie Baysox AA affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles for 2018. He was promoted to pitching coach of the AAA Norfolk Tides prior to the 2020 season.[1]

gollark: Chemistry/physics/maths/CS etc. are even more broadly defined and complex though, bad examples.
gollark: Yes, knowledge has improved in an absolute sense but apparently vaccine trials are still only successful 1/3 of the time generally.
gollark: You can get it *later*, probably.
gollark: The annoying thing is that, regardless of whether the mRNA ones *are* actually bad at all, with wide enough deployment someone will get a heart attack or something after getting it due to sheer random chance and people will start complaining.
gollark: I mean, "logically" it shouldn't do awful things, sure, but immunology and biology in general are hellishly complex and unpredictable.

References

  1. Joe Trezza (November 25, 2019). "Orioles announce 2020 development staff". MLB.com. Retrieved November 26, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.