Frederick Steven Auerbach (born February 15, 1950) is an American former Major League Baseball shortstop.
He split his one season in the Pilots' farm system between the Pioneer League's Billings Mustangs and the Midwest League's Clinton Pilots, batting a combined .238 with four and 29 runs batted in between the two.
He began the season with Clinton (now a Milwaukee Brewers affiliate). After batting .325 through the first month of the season, he made the jump all the way up to triple A, where he batted an even .300.
Auerbach played in a career high 153 games in on his way to several career highs. He split the season as the Brewers' lead-off hitter and just ahead of the pitcher in the eight hole. Batting lead-off, he batted just .198 with only 28 runs scored, but as an eighth hitter, he batted .303 with 21 RBIs. Overall, he batted .218 with two home runs and thirty RBIs.
Backing up Russell at short and Davey Lopes at second, and occasionally pinch hitting, Auerbach saw very limited playing time in , but batted .342 in his limited role. He reached the postseason for the first time in his career, and got a double in his only at bat in the 1974 National League Championship Series.
An injury to Russell early in the season landed Auerbach a stating job with the Dodgers for most of the first half of the season. He was batting below .200 for much of the time Russell was gone, but managed to get his batting average up to .209 by the time Russell returned. He had just twelve at bats after that. He saw very little playing time in as well, getting six hits in 47 at bats all season.
Auerbach saw a slightly increased role in . On April 22, he hit his first home run in nearly four years off San Francisco's Vida Blue. His second home run of the season initiated a come from behind rally against the Dodgers on July 2, yet Auerbach was batting just .167 through July. He would then go on a 12-for-19 tear that would raise his average to .327 for the season.
Following Pete Rose's departure via free agency, Auerbach saw more playing time at third base in . He continued to be thorn in the side of his former franchise, but it took a personal turn during the Dodgers' May 25 17–6 mauling of the Reds. With the Dodgers already ahead 14–2, Lopes drilled a 3–0 fastball for three-run home run. Auerbach found that 'unsporting', and a bench-clearing brawl ensued. On June 27, he went 3-for-5 with three doubles and two RBIs in the Reds' 9–1 victory over the Dodgers.
He batted .210 with one home run and twelve RBIs for a Reds team that captured the National League West by a game and a half over the Houston Astros. Auerbach went hitless in two at bats in the 1979 National League Championship Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Auerbach batted .333 in 24 games for the Reds in when his contract was purchased by the Texas Rangers on his wedding day of July 19. He never reported to his new team, and sat out the remainder of the season.
Games | Plate appearance | At bat | Runs | Hits | 2B | 3B | Home runs | RBI | Stolen bases | BB | Strikeout | HBP | Avg. | Fld% |
624 | 1567 | 1407 | 167 | 309 | 56 | 5 | 9 | 86 | 36 | 127 | 198 | 6 | .220 | .956 |
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