Jeffrey Franklin Kent (born March 7, 1968) is an American former second baseman who played for 17 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1992 to 2008. He played for six teams in his career, becoming best known for his six seasons with the San Francisco Giants from 1997 to 2002. A five-time All-Star, he was one of the top power-hitting second basemen in major league history, with twelve seasons of 20 or more and eight seasons with over 100 runs batted in (RBI).
After several seasons of modest success for three teams, often being shifted to third baseman, Kent enjoyed a surge in productivity at age 29 after being traded to the Giants. He led the team in RBI every year from 1997 to 2000, settling into the cleanup hitter in the lineup behind Barry Bonds and helping the team win a division title in 1997 by driving in 121 runs. The following year, he hit 30 home runs for the first time and raised his RBI total to 128, and in 1999, he became the seventh San Francisco player to hit for the cycle. He was named the National League (NL) Most Valuable Player in after leading the team to the best record in the major leagues, batting .334 with 33 home runs, 125 RBI and a career-high 114 runs scored. In 2001, he set a Giants franchise record by hitting 49 doubles, and in 2002, he batted .313 with a career-high 37 home runs as the team captured its first NL pennant in 13 years. Joining the Houston Astros as a free agent, he helped them reach the 2004 playoffs, leading the club with 107 RBI. He retired after four seasons spent with his hometown Los Angeles Dodgers in 2008.
Kent's 351 home runs as a second baseman are a major league record, Jeff Kent: his numbers will earn him hall of fame consideration Kent taking his place among all-time greats and his career .500 slugging percentage is the second highest at the position, behind only Rogers Hornsby. His 540 doubles in the NL were tied for tenth in league history when he retired, with his career total of 560 being the fourth-most by a second baseman; he also ranked third among second basemen in RBI (1,518) and (984), and sixth in total bases (4,246). His 2,008 games at second base in the NL were third-most in league history when he retired, and he ranked eighth in league history in (3,981), sixth in assists (5,508), and fourth in (1,258). In , Kent will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. He will also have his number 21 retired by the Giants that same year.
He was dismissed from the baseball team after clashing with his coach over leadership, culminating in Kent being told to switch to second base, which he did not like; he was soon told to turn in his uniform, which he did.
Afterwards, he played with American Legion and Connie Mack League baseball and earned a college scholarship.
But Kent's career took off in San Francisco, starting in 1997. Immediately inserted in the line-up behind superstar Barry Bonds, and with the confidence of manager Dusty Baker, Kent finally rose to his full potential, hitting .250 with 29 home runs and 121 RBI. Jeff Kent career stats Baseball-Reference.com The Giants won their first division title in eight years, but were swept in the Division Series by the Miami Marlins, with a pair of home runs by Kent providing the only Giants runs in a 6-2 loss in the finale. He was consistently among the top RBI hitters in the league over his next five seasons with the Giants, amassing 689 RBI over six years; he also won the 1998 Willie Mac Award for his spirit and leadership. On Opening Day in 1998 he had a career-high five hits in a 9-4, 13-inning road win against the Astros, including a three-run home run and an RBI double in the final frame. On July 24 he drove in a career-high seven runs with two home runs including a grand slam in a 12-2 win over the Cincinnati Reds.
On May 3, 1999, playing atypically at first baseman, he again collected five hits, hitting for the cycle in a road game against the Pittsburgh Pirates, though Pittsburgh scored three runs with two out in the ninth inning to win 9-8. On June 12 he had another five hits including a three-run home run in a 15-11 road win over the Seattle Mariners; shortly afterward, he was named to the All-Star team for the first time, and played the All-Star Game's second half, although he grounded into a double play to end the contest. On June 4, 2000 he had a pair of home runs and a pair of doubles for a career-high 12 total bases as the Giants walloped their cross-bay rival Oakland Athletics 18-2 in a road game. Kent's contributions were recognized that year (33 home runs, 125 RBI, .334 batting average, and a .986 fielding percentage) with the National League MVP Award, beating out teammate and perennial MVP candidate Bonds. Despite Bonds overshadowing Kent in almost every offensive category, it was Kent's clutch hitting in RBI spots that won many games for the Giants that year, and ultimately won him the award. The Giants had the major leagues' best record at 97–65, but lost to the Mets in the National League Division Series 3–1, although Kent had hits in all four games. 2000 SF Giants Baseball-Reference.com
On May 1, 2001 he again had seven RBI in an 11-6 road win over the Pirates, with a three-run home run and two RBI doubles, one with the bases loaded. On May 13 he hit his 200th home run in a 6-3 win over the Mets. He ended the season with 390 assists at second base, leading the league for the only time in his career, edging the Astros' Craig Biggio by one assist. In 2002, Kent had another stellar year for a second baseman (37 home runs, 108 RBI, .313 batting average), leading the NL with 81 extra-base hits, and also leading the league in double plays for the only time with a career-high 113. On September 9 he reached 1,000 RBI with a sacrifice fly in a 6-5 win over the Dodgers. The combination of Kent and MVP winner Bonds propelled the Giants to a 95–66 record, good enough for the NL Wild Card. The Giants beat the Atlanta Braves in the Division Series 3–2 and the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL Championship Series 4–1. With San Francisco in the World Series for the first time since 1989, Kent had a pair of two-run home runs in a 16-4 blowout in Game 5 to take a 3-2 Series lead. The Giants nearly clinched the championship (failing to hold a 5–0, 7th-inning lead) in the sixth game, before falling to the Anaheim Angels in seven games. 2002 SF Giants Baseball-Reference.com Despite the team's success that season, Kent's relationship with the Giants had soured. The Giants front office had lost confidence in him after an incident during spring training left him with a broken wrist. Kent had initially claimed that he had broken his wrist after slipping and falling while washing his truck; ensuing media reports indicated that, in reality, he had crashed his motorcycle while performing and other stunts, in direct violation of his contract.Schulman, Henry. "Story should not have laugh track", San Francisco Chronicle, March 26, 2002, p. C1.
In addition, the growing tension between Kent and Bonds, which had been developing for years, finally boiled over: a midseason fight in the Giants dugout was widely reported in 2002 and caught on television.Schulman, Henry. "Giants now battling each other", San Francisco Chronicle, June 26, 2002, p. C1. The feud between the two was so bad that, at the end of the season, San Francisco Chronicle beat reporter Ray Ratto said of the two, "The one who lives longer will attend the other's funeral, just to make sure he's dead." The departure of manager Dusty Baker also factored into Kent's eventual decision to leave the Giants.
From May 14 to June 11, he collected a hit in 25 hitting streak, the longest streak in the league that season, and set a new franchise record; Willy Taveras topped his mark in 2006. On September 29, 2004, he hit his 300th home run in a 6-4 win over the Cardinals. Three days later, he hit a pair of home runs in a 9-3 win over the Colorado Rockies to give him 278 as a second baseman, surpassing Ryne Sandberg as the all-time leader at that position. In Game 5 of the NL Championship Series, Kent hit a three-run walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth to break a scoreless tie and put Houston ahead of the St. Louis Cardinals three games to two in the series. However, the Cardinals would win Games 6 and 7 in St. Louis to capture the pennant.
But he was clearly slowing down; he made two trips to the disabled list in the 2006 season because of a hand sprain and an oblique injury, but came back late in the season and helped the Dodgers reach the postseason. On September 27 he hit his 500th double to drive in the last run in a 6-4 road win over the Rockies. The Dodgers were swept by the Mets in the Division Series, though Kent banged out eight hits in three games, with four including a home run and a double in the final game. He batted .302 in 2007, but also led the league in errors for the fourth time. On July 19, 2008, he picked up his 1,500th RBI with a 9th-inning home run in a 3-2 road loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks, joining Nap Lajoie and Rogers Hornsby to become the third second baseman to reach the milestone. Four days later, he became the twelfth player in major league history to play 2,000 games at second base, in a 5-3 road loss to the Rockies. He ended his final season with a road series against the Giants on the last weekend of the campaign, getting his last home run in a 6-5, 10-inning loss, and his last hit in a 2-1 win. He finished his career on October 15 in Game 5 of the 2008 NLCS, when he strikeout looking against Cole Hamels to end the 7th inning, going hitless in 9 at bats in the postseason. Kent announced his retirement from baseball on January 22, 2009.
Kent appeared as a contestant on the summer 2009 television series Superstars, where he was teamed with actress Ali Landry in a series of sports competitions. They finished in fifth place in the competition. TV Guide Superstars page In 2012, Kent participated in , the 25th season of the American CBS competitive reality television series Survivor. He was the ninth contestant voted off, which placed him tenth and made him the second member of the jury, giving him a right to vote for the eventual winner at the Final Tribal Council. When he was voted off, Kent claimed that the million dollar prize was "six hundred grand by the time Barack Obama takes it".
He has been an advocate for Major League Baseball using blood tests for HGH. Since 2011, Kent has served as a spring training instructor for the San Francisco Giants. He also coaches his sons' Little League teams, and in 2014 he became a volunteer assistant for Southwestern University's baseball team. In 2011, Kent donated $100,000 and raised awareness to help reinstate the Cal baseball program, which was being cut for cost-saving purposes. In 2014, Kent announced the creation of the Jeff Kent Women Driven Scholarship Endowment to provide a full scholarship each year to one female student-athlete at UC Berkeley in perpetuity.
In 2008, Kent donated to the campaign to ban same-sex marriage in California.
Kent's son, Colton, played his prep baseball at Lake Travis High School in Austin, Texas. Colton signed to play college baseball at BYU, but transferred to the College of Southern Idaho (CSI) after a year at BYU.
Kent's other son, Kaeden, played college baseball at Texas A&M University. He was chosen by the New York Yankees in the third round of the 2025 MLB draft and currently plays for the High-A Hudson Valley Renegades.
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