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Raines, Tim

Biographical/Historical Info
Raines, Tim

Inducted to the Hall of Fame in: 2017

Primary team: Montreal Expos

Primary position: Left Fielder

Tim Raines finished his big league career as the most successful base stealer – ranked by percentage – in MLB history.

He also a part of baseball’s most exclusive club: The one percent of big leaguers elected to the Hall of Fame.

Born Sept. 16, 1959 in Sanford, Fla., Raines was selected in the fifth round of the 1977 MLB Draft by the Montreal Expos. During his first full season in the big leagues in 1981, he batted .304 with 71 stolen bases in a strike-shortened campaign – electrifying fans with his speed. He finished second in Rookie of the Year voting, 19th in MVP voting and earned his first All-Star selection.

Raines earned All-Star Game selections in each of his first seven full seasons. He finished in the Top 10 in MVP voting three times and won a Silver Slugger and a batting title in 1986 with a .334 average. He led the league in stolen bases from 1981-1984 and in runs scored in 1983 and 1987.

In 1991, after 13 years in Montreal, Raines was traded to the Chicago White Sox. After five years on the South Side, Raines went to the Yankees and got a taste of postseason success. Raines helped the Bronx Bombers to World Series Championships in 1996 and 1998.

But six months after signing a free agent contract with the Athletics in 1999, Raines was diagnosed with lupus. He spent the rest of the year and all of 2000 undergoing treatment and recovery.

Raines returned to the big leagues in 2001 and played for the Expos, Orioles and Marlins during his final two seasons. On a minor league rehab assignment for a shoulder injury, Raines and his son, Tim Raines Jr., became the first father-son pair to play against each other in a professional game. Later that year, he played with his son as a member of the Baltimore Orioles.

During his 23-year career, Raines recorded 2,605 hits, 980 RBI and a .294 batting average. He hit better than .320 for three in a row (1985-87) and his 808 stolen bases rank fifth all-time. He is the only player in big league history with at least 100 triples, 150 home runs and 600 stolen bases and is the only player to record four different seasons with at least 50 extra-base hits and 70 steals

Raines finished his big league career with the best stolen base percentage (84.7) of any player with 400-plus steals.

He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2017.

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Hall of Fame Classic game lineup card, 2022 May 28
Object number: HF-2022-0013-01
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
2022 May 28
Tim Raines 37th Consecutive Steal shoes
Object number: B-1995-0147
Nike (Firm)
1995 July 18
Tim Raines 500th Stolen base
Object number: B-1989-0152
Rawlings Sporting Goods Company
1987 August 13
Tim Raines All-Star Game bat
Object number: B-1987-0132
Cooper Bats
1987 July 14
Tim Raines Batting photograph, 1997
Object number: BL-1997-05488-029
Raines, Tim
1997
Tim Raines bobblehead
Object number: B-2018-0030-185
Bobble Dreams USA
2002 July 14
Tim Raines Hall of Fame induction plaque
Object number: B-2017-0099
Matthews International Corporation
2017
Tim Raines helmet
Object number: B-2002-0211
American Baseball Cap, Inc.
2002
Tim Raines home run bat
Object number: B-1997-0325
Louisville Slugger
1997 September 30
Tim Raines Portrait photograph, 1994
Object number: BL-1994-02031-001
Chicago White Sox (Baseball team)
1994
Tim Raines Sliding and Joe Morgan Catching photograph, either 1981 or 1982
Object number: BL-2002-00935-009
Morgan, Joe, 1943-2020
1981 or 1982
Tim Raines Sliding photograph, undated
Object number: BL-2002-00935-010
Raines, Tim
undated