Tyler O'Neill | |||||||||||||||
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![]() O'Neill with theSt. Louis Cardinals in 2019 | |||||||||||||||
Baltimore Orioles – No. 9 | |||||||||||||||
Outfielder | |||||||||||||||
Born: (1995-06-22)June 22, 1995 (age 29) Burnaby,British Columbia,Canada | |||||||||||||||
Bats: Right Throws: Right | |||||||||||||||
MLB debut | |||||||||||||||
April 19, 2018, for the St. Louis Cardinals | |||||||||||||||
MLB statistics (through 2024 season) | |||||||||||||||
Batting average | .246 | ||||||||||||||
Home runs | 109 | ||||||||||||||
Runs batted in | 278 | ||||||||||||||
Stats atBaseball Reference ![]() | |||||||||||||||
Teams | |||||||||||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||||||||||
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Medals
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Tyler Alan O'Neill (born June 22, 1995) is a Canadian professionalbaseballoutfielder for theBaltimore Orioles ofMajor League Baseball (MLB). He has previously played in MLB for theSt. Louis Cardinals andBoston Red Sox. He has representedCanada in international play, winning a gold medal at the2015 Pan American games. Listed at 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) and 210 pounds (95 kg), he throws and bats right-handed.
TheSeattle Mariners selected O'Neill in the third round of the2013 MLB draft. In 2016, he was theSouthern League Most Valuable Player (MVP). On July 21, 2017, the Mariners traded him to the Cardinals. After making his MLB debut in 2018, O'Neill struggled with injuries and split time between MLB and the minor leagues for two seasons before he became the Cardinals' starting left fielder in 2020, winning his firstGold Glove Award.
O'Neill attendedGaribaldi Secondary School inMaple Ridge, British Columbia and played for theLangley Blaze of theBritish Columbia Premier Baseball League.[1][2] He grew up a fan of theSeattle Mariners.[3] He committed to playcollege baseball atOregon State University for theOregon State Beavers.[4]
TheSeattle Mariners selected O'Neill in the third round of the2013 MLB draft.[5][6] He signed with the Mariners and made his professional debut with theArizona League Mariners. In 2014, O'Neill played in only 51 games between the Arizona League Mariners,Everett AquaSox andClinton LumberKings due to a broken bone in his right hand he suffered after punching a concrete wall in the dugout.[7] He spent 2015 with theBakersfield Blaze, where he posted a .260 batting average to go along with 32 home runs and 87 RBIs.[8][failed verification] O'Neill played for theCanada national team at the2015 Pan American games inToronto and the2015 WBSC Premier12.[9][10][11] In the 2015 Pan Am Games final, Canada defeated theUnited States 7–6 in extra innings to claim thegold medal.[12]
He spent 2016 with theJackson Generals of theSouthern League,[13] where he batted .293 with 24 home runs and 102 RBIs.[14] Jackson won the Southern Leaguechampionship after a league best 84–55 record, and O'Neill was theSouthern League Most Valuable Player (MVP). In seven playoff contests, he batted .448, three home runs and eight RBIs.[15] He began 2017 with theTacoma Rainiers of theClass AAAPacific Coast League (PCL).
On July 21, 2017, theSt. Louis Cardinals acquired O'Neill for pitcherMarco Gonzales and assigned him to theMemphis Redbirds of the PCL.[16]
O'Neill finished 2017 with a combined .246 batting average, 31 home runs, and 95 RBIs in 130 games between Tacoma and Memphis.[17] The Redbirds became the 2017PCL champions after defeating theEl Paso Chihuahuas in five games in the league championship final,[18] giving O'Neill consecutive minor league championships with two different organizations at two different levels. The Cardinals added him to their40-man roster after the season to protect him from being chosen in theRule 5 Draft.[19]
MLB.com ranked O'Neill as St Louis' fourth best prospect going into the2018 season.[20] He competed inspring training for an opportunity to make the major league roster as a reserve, but hamstring and oblique injuries kept him out of play.[21] He began the season with Memphis[22] and was promoted to MLB on April 19, 2018.[23] He had been leading the PCL with six home runs and 18 RBI. He made his MLB debut the next night atWrigley Field against theChicago Cubs, making him the sixth Canadian-born player to appear on an active MLB roster on the season.[24] He was sent back down on April 28 after seven hitless at bats and recalled again on May 18.[25] He mustered his first MLB hit, a single offYacksel Ríos of thePhiladelphia Phillies that same night in a 12–4 St. Louis win. O'Neill hit his first MLB home run the next day offLuis García.[26] On May 21, he amassed his first four-RBI game, and homered in his third consecutive game the following day.[27] He was optioned back to Memphis on May 31 and was recalled by St. Louis for the second time on July 2 to take the spot ofDexter Fowler, who had gone on paternity leave. He was placed on the 10-daydisabled list on July 5 with a hamstring strain,[28] was activated on June 17, and was optioned back to Memphis.[29] He was recalled once again on July 31 following the trade ofTommy Pham,[30] and spent the remainder of the season in St. Louis. He hit his firstwalk-off home run on September 22, a 414-foot shot, against theSan Francisco Giants, leading St. Louis to a 5-4 victory.[31] In 61 games for the Cardinals, O'Neill batted .254 with nine home runs and 23 RBIs.[32]
In 2019, O'Neill made St. Louis' Opening Day roster, but his season was interrupted by injuries alongside being reassigned to Memphis for over a month.[33] He was recalled to St. Louis in June, and finished the year with them. Over sixty games, he hit .262 with five home runs and 16 RBIs.[34]
O'Neill made St. Louis' Opening Day roster in 2020, and spent the whole season there starting in the outfield, slashing .173/.261/.621 with seven home runs and 19 RBIs over 139at-bats.[35] After the season, he was awarded his first everGold Glove Award for left field after leading major league left fielders with nine defensive runs saved and four outs above average alongside not committing an error over 344 innings.[36]
O'Neill returned as St. Louis' starting left fielder in 2021.[37] On September 20, O'Neill was named the National League Player of the Week after leading the Cardinals to a 6-0 week while batting .391 with three home runs, nine runs scored, and a 1.308 OPS.[38] He was later named the National League Player of the Month for September after hitting .328/.377/.731 with 13 home runs, thirty RBIs, and a 1.108 OPS.[39] O'Neill finished the 2021 season with 482at-bats over 138 games, slashing .286/.352/.560 with 34 home runs, eighty RBIs, and 15 stolen bases.[40] He won his second consecutiveGold Glove Award in left field, being one of five Cardinals (an MLB record) to win the award.[41]
O'Neill opened the season as the club's starting left fielder. In mid-May, he lost hissalary arbitration case against the Cardinals, resulting in a $3.4 million salary as opposed to his requested salary of $4.15 million.[42] He struggled to open the season, slashing .195/.256/.297 with two home runs and 42 strikeouts over 32 games before he was placed on the injured list in mid-May with a sore shoulder.[43] He was activated on June 7.[44] On June 20, he was placed back on the injured list with a hamstring injury before being activated in mid-July.[45] He was placed back on the injured list with another hamstring injury in September, and missed the remainder of the season.[46] Over 96 games with the Cardinals, he hit .228 with 14 home runs and 48 RBIs.[47] He was sent to play for theSalt River Rafters of theArizona Fall League after the season to rehab.[48]
On January 13, 2023, O'Neill agreed to a one-year, $4.95 million contract with the Cardinals, avoiding salary arbitration.[49] O’Neill hit .228 in 29 games for St. Louis before he was placed on the injured list with a lower back strain. He was transferred to the 60-day injured list on June 16.[50] He was activated on July 20.[51]
O'Neill hit home runs for the Cardinals in four consecutive Opening Day games, from 2020 through 2023, tying the major-league record (also achieved byTodd Hundley,Gary Carter, andYogi Berra).[52]
On December 8, 2023, the Cardinals traded O'Neill to theBoston Red Sox forNick Robertson and Victor Santos.[53] O'Neill hit a home run in Boston's Opening Day game against theSeattle Mariners, giving him five consecutive Opening Day home runs, a major-league record.[54][55] O'Neill followed his record-breaking Opening Day home run with another home run against the Mariners and three against theLos Angeles Angels on the season-opening West Coast road trip.[56] He also hit a home run in his first at-bat atFenway Park against theBaltimore Orioles to lead the Majors.[57] In 133 games for the Red Sox, O'Neill slashed .241/.336/.511 with 31 home runs and 61 RBI.[58]
On December 10, 2024, O'Neill signed a three–year, $49.5 million contract with theBaltimore Orioles.[59][60]
O'Neill plays thepiano, and entertained his teammates in the clubhouse duringspring training in 2017 by playing the theme song to the"Lord of the Rings" film series on a keyboard.[61] He has said his favourite song to play is "O Canada".
An avidweightlifter, O'Neill has been recorded on video quarter-squatting as much as 585 pounds (265 kg). He was given the nickname "Popeye" while playing in the Southern League.[62] O'Neill's father, Terry, was named Mr. Canada (an honour given to the nation's best body builder) in 1975.[63]
O'Neill and his wife, Stephanie, were married in December 2021 inHawaii.[64] In January 2023, O'Neill and Stephanie welcomed their first child, Audrie.[65]
Achievements | ||
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Preceded by | National League Player of the Month September 2021 | Succeeded by |