Justis Logan Morrison (born August 25, 1987), nicknamed "LoMo", is an American former professional baseball first baseman and . He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Miami Marlins, Seattle Mariners, Tampa Bay Rays, Minnesota Twins, Philadelphia Phillies and Milwaukee Brewers. He was the 2008 Florida State League MVP, and played in the 2010 All-Star Futures Game. Entering the 2010 baseball season, Morrison was considered by Baseball America to be the #2 prospect in the Florida Marlins farm system, and the #20 overall prospect. That season he made his major league debut with the Marlins.
Morrison was drafted after his senior year (2005) at Northshore High School in Slidell, Louisiana, by the Florida Marlins in the 22nd round, but decided to attend Maple Woods (MO) Community College, and was signed as a draft-and-follow prior to the 2006 Major League Baseball draft. In his freshman year, Morrison batted .436/.532/.743 for the MCC-Maple Woods Monarchs with 9 and 45 RBIs in 140 at bats.
In 2008, Morrison batted .332/.402/.494 with 13 home runs, 74 RBIs, and 38 doubles for the Class High A Jupiter Hammerheads. He led the Florida State League in batting average (.332), hits (162), doubles (38), and OBP (.402), and was 2nd in total bases (241), 6th in RBIs (74), tied for 6th in home runs (13), 7th in runs (71), and tied for 8th in walks (57). He was named Florida State League MVP, was league Player of the Week on June 16 and August 4, was TOPPS league Player of the Month for July, was named a Baseball America High Class A All Star and Baseball America Minor League All Star, and was both a mid-season and a postseason All Star, was a Baseball America First Team Minor League All Star, was ranked the #3 prospect in the FSL by Baseball America, and was named the Best Hitter for Average in the Marlins organization by Baseball America. He finished 4th in the Florida State League in at bats (488), 4th in OPS (.896), and 5th in SLG% (.494). He then played for the Mesa Solar Sox in the Arizona Fall League. There, he batted .404 (3rd in the league), was on the All Prospect Team, was named a Rising Star, and was Player of the Week on November 3.
A broken bone in his right thumb limited Morrison to 79 games at Double-A in 2009, where he batted .277/.411 (7th-best in the league)/.442 with 8 home runs, 47 RBIs, and 18 doubles.
In 2010, Morrison played for the Jupiter Hammerheads and New Orleans Zephyrs. He was an MiLB.com Florida Organization All Star, and an All-Star Futures Game selection. On July 27, 2010, the Florida Marlins called up Morrison to replace the injured Chris Coghlan. He went 1–4 that night as the starting , recording his first major league hit in his debut. Morrison wore number 20 his first 2 years in Florida, before switching to number 5 in 2012 when the Marlins changed their name from Florida to Miami. In 2010 in the major leagues, playing left field he batted .283/.390/.447 with 2 home runs and 18 RBIs in 244 at bats, and was 8th in the National League in triples, with 7.
On August 13, 2011, Morrison was optioned back to New Orleans. Ten days later, he was called back up to the majors. In his first at bat, he hit a home run. On September 15, 2011, Morrison filed a grievance against the Marlins for what he said was an unfair demotion to the minors. In 2011 in the majors, at 23 years of age in his first full season, playing almost exclusively left field, he batted .247/.330/.468 with 23 home runs and 72 RBIs in at 462 bats.
On February 11, 2012, Morrison switched to uniform number 5. The number had been retired for the entirety of the Marlins' existence in honor of the late Carl Barger, the team's founding president and chief operating officer. (Barger's favorite player had been Joe DiMaggio, whose number 5 was retired by the New York Yankees.) Morrison requested the number in honor of his late father, who had encouraged Morrison to model his career after Hall of Famer George Brett, whose number 5 was retired by the Kansas City Royals. Several subsequent Marlins players wore the number 5 after Morrison.
On May 22, 2012, Morrison was moved to first base after the Marlins sent teammate Gaby Sánchez to Triple-A. He had played first base before playing left field. On June 10, 2012, Morrison was moved back to left field after the Marlins called Sanchez back up. He played 21 games at first, with a fielding percentage of .994 and one error, and 59 games in left field. In 2012 he batted .230/.308/.399 with 11 home runs and 36 RBIs in 296 at bats. His season ended early due to right knee inflammation, and he underwent surgery to repair his patella tendon. In 2012, Morrison was the Marlins' nominee for the Roberto Clemente Award, given to a player who shows outstanding commitment to helping others both on and off the field.
In 2013 he batted .242/.333/.375 with 6 home runs and 36 RBIs in 293 at bats, while playing first base.
Morrison appeared in 146 games and 457 at bats for Seattle in 2015, with 115 starts at first base. He hit .225/.302/.383 with 17 home runs and 54 RBIs, with a wRC+ of 90, a significant dropoff from his 2014 value of 111. His fielding percentage of .996 was identical from 2014 to 2015, but his Defensive Runs Saved total of -7 was worse in 2015 than his 0 total in 2014. Morrison also struggled against left-handed pitchers in 2015, hitting .190 with a 19.4 percent strikeout rate, both marks worse than his .241 average and 14.3 percent strikeout rate against righties.
Morrison wore number 7 with the Rays. Having supplanted incumbent first baseman James Loney with a solid spring training, Morrison began 2016 with the lion's share of starts at first base, with utility man Steve Pearce as his platoon-mate. He appeared in 107 games in his first season in Tampa Bay, making 78 starts at first base, and 17 as designated hitter. For the 2016 season he hit .238/.319/.414 with 14 home runs and 43 RBIs in 353 at bats, striking out in a career-high 22.4% of his plate appearances. Morrison played his final game of the season on September 11, as a torn left wrist sheath injury requiring surgery cut his season short. Of the 95 starts he made, only 11 came against left-handed pitchers, and as a whole, Morrison hit .258 (16–62) against lefties while benefiting from a .341 BAbip, compared to his overall BAbip of .278. After the 2016 season, he became a free agent. On February 6, 2017, Morrison signed a one-year contract worth $2.5 million to remain with the Rays for the 2017 season.
Morrison showed improved power and situational hitting in 2017, becoming the everyday first baseman, instead of the original plan of platooning with right-handed hitter Rickie Weeks Jr. On May 22, Morrison hit his 12th home run of the year; on that day in the 2016 season, Morrison hit his first of the year. On May 31, he hit his 15th home run of the year, passing his 2016 total of 14. On July 1, Morrison hit his 23rd and 24th home runs against Dylan Bundy, passing his career high. After being snubbed by the Home Run Derby and missing out on the All-Star vote, Morrison was left out of the All-Star festivities in 2017. He voiced his displeasure with the Home Run Derby selections by criticizing Gary Sánchez, who had 13 home runs and was the final player allowed in the derby, saying, "I remember when I had 14 home runs ... that was a month and a half ago." Morrison became only the second player in history with 24 or more home runs at the All-Star Break not to be selected. In 2017 he batted .246/.353/.516 with 85 RBIs and was 4th in the American League in (with 8), 5th in home runs (38; a career high, and 3rd-most in club history), 6th in at bats per home run (13.5), and 8th in walks (81) in 512 at bats, while playing first base. He hit a home run every 9.67 at bats in games on the road, the 9th-best rate in American League history.
Morrison was one of the first baseball players to gain popularity on Twitter, first gaining a large following during his first full season in the major leagues in 2011. After posting multiple controversial tweets in the years following, Morrison stopped using Twitter in August 2015.
Morrison and his wife Christie married in 2013. Together, have one child, a daughter who was born in September 2015. They owned a home in Jupiter, Florida but sold it in 2020 for $745,000.
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