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  • Mark DeRosa

    Birth Date: 02/26/1975

    Mark DeRosa Bio

    Cubs Video

    Mark DeRosa is a former professional baseball utility player who spent 16 seasons in MLB, including two years with the Chicago Cubs.

    [This page comes courtesy of @matto1233, who previously wrote up DeRosa's fun career in a "Remember Some Cubs" article.]

    In many ways, Mark DeRosa was always the versatile athlete that he would come to be known for in his professional baseball playing career. He was both a baseball and football star while growing up in New Jersey–so much so that he would go on to start at both quarterback and shortstop for the University of Pennsylvania. 

    Drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the seventh round of the 1996 MLB Draft, DeRosa made his MLB debut in 1998. He was mostly a utility player for the Braves until 2004, when he was given the starting third base job out of spring training. After watching him hit just .239/.293/.320 and tear his ACL in September, the Braves declined to offer DeRosa a contract, making him a free agent. 

    DeRosa played as a stopgap for the Texas Rangers in 2005, and finally had his breakout in 2006, becoming a full-time player and hitting .296/.357/.456. This led to the Cubs signing him to a three-year, $13 million contract as a part of their spending spree in the offseason between 2006 and 2007. Thus began the legend of Mark DeRosa in Chicago. He played an integral role on Cubs teams that won back-to-back division titles in 2007 and 2008. In those two campaigns, he hit .289/.373/.451, with 31 total home runs. 

    DeRosa started most often at second base for those Cubs teams, but in a lot of ways, he was Ben Zobrist before Ben Zobrist. In addition to the keystone, DeRosa appeared in games at third base, right field, left field, first base, and even shortstop. 

    I have a confession to make: Because I was an impressionable middle-school kid at the time, those Cubs teams hold a very special place in my heart. Sure, I have memories of 2003, and of Sammy Sosa blasting home runs onto Waveland Avenue, but 2007 and 2008 was the first time the Cubs were good at a point when I was also old enough to appreciate and absorb them.

    In retrospect, I recall DeRosa being both a fan favorite, and the heart and soul of those Cubs teams. It seemed he was almost everybody’s favorite player–my grandma included. I am not ashamed to admit that my online video game username, that I still use to this day, includes the number ‘7’ because of DeRosa. But was he actually good? Or did the much younger version of me simply appreciate the way he played baseball and latch onto him for different, unknown reasons that only kids can understand?

    Across the 2007 and 2008 seasons, DeRosa was fourth on the Cubs in overall WAR, according to FanGraphs. His 6.6 WAR trailed only Alfonso Soriano, Aramis Ramirez, and Ted Lilly. He produced more WAR than both Derrek Lee and Carlos Zambrano, who were rightly viewed as cornerstone players of that era. He was a vital piece of those teams. 

    However, after those two seasons, that would be it for DeRosa in a Cubs uniform. He was traded to Cleveland that offseason for a package that included Chris Archer, and things just weren’t quite the same in Chicago. The Cubs disappointed in 2009, as they failed to make the playoffs, leaving many wondering if DeRosa was the glue that held everything together. 

    But things weren’t quite the same for DeRosa, either. He still proved himself a valuable player in 2009, but after being traded to the Cardinals at the trade deadline, he hit just .228/.291/.405. While he would go on to play four more seasons for the Giants, Nationals, and Blue Jays, he racked up just 538 plate appearances in those seasons, and hit .227 with eight home runs in that time. 

    Now, you’ll find DeRosa as a studio analyst with MLB Network. He was the manager for Team USA in the 2023 World Baseball Classic, leaving many to wonder if managing a big-league team might be in his future. 

    DeRosa was the perfect player for the Cubs at the perfect time. He contributed two-thirds of his 10.1 career fWAR in just two seasons with the Cubs, and the Cubs won the division in both of those seasons. We’ll never know what would have happened had the Cubs kept him around for the 2009 season. 

    Here is something that we do know: Chris Archer, who was the headline piece coming back to the Cubs in the trade that sent him away, was eventually traded to Tampa Bay for Matt Garza. Garza was eventually traded to the Texas Rangers for Mike Olt, Justin Grimm, and Carl Edwards Jr. Grimm and Edwards would both go on to record very important outs out of the bullpen in the 2016 playoffs for the Cubs. So, in a roundabout way, DeRosa was still contributing to the Cubs and helping them win a World Series in 2016. That, alone, should make us remember him even more fondly, and makes me feel validated in my childhood appreciation of him. 

    Mark DeRosa Statistics

    Standard Batting Table
    Season Age Team Lg WAR G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS OPS+ rOBA Rbat+ TB GIDP HBP SH SF IBB Pos Awards
    1998 23 ATL NL 0.0 5 3 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .333 .333 .333 .667 77 .301 69 1 0 0 0 0 0 /6H  
    1999 24 ATL NL -0.2 7 8 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 .000 .000 .000 .000 -100 .000 -148 0 0 0 0 0 0 /H6  
    2000 25 ATL NL 0.1 22 15 13 9 4 1 0 0 3 0 0 2 1 .308 .400 .385 .785 100 .421 145 5 0 0 0 0 0 H6  
    2001 26 ATL NL 0.9 66 184 164 27 47 8 0 3 20 2 1 12 19 .287 .350 .390 .740 89 .341 94 64 3 5 1 2 6 6H/4D57  
    2002 27 ATL NL 0.9 72 232 212 24 63 9 2 5 23 2 3 12 24 .297 .339 .429 .768 100 .340 99 91 5 3 2 3 3 46H/957  
    2003 28 ATL NL 0.0 103 288 266 40 70 14 0 6 22 1 0 16 49 .263 .316 .383 .699 81 .322 82 102 6 5 0 1 0 H456/7D3  
    2004 29 ATL NL -1.1 118 345 309 33 74 16 0 3 31 1 3 23 53 .239 .293 .320 .614 59 .281 55 99 6 3 4 6 3 5H6/47  
    2005 30 TEX AL 1.3 66 166 148 26 36 5 0 8 20 1 0 16 35 .243 .325 .439 .764 97 .343 98 65 5 2 0 0 0 946/H5D3  
    2006 31 TEX AL 3.6 136 572 520 78 154 40 2 13 74 4 4 44 102 .296 .357 .456 .812 108 .366 115 237 13 6 0 2 1 954/67D3  
    2007 32 CHC NL 2.2 149 574 502 64 147 28 3 10 72 1 2 58 93 .293 .371 .420 .792 101 .356 104 211 17 7 3 4 2 459/3H67  
    2008 33 CHC NL 1.8 149 593 505 103 144 30 3 21 87 6 0 69 106 .285 .376 .481 .857 117 .388 124 243 9 9 2 8 0 4975/H36  
    2009 34 2TM 2LG 1.7 139 576 515 78 129 23 1 23 78 3 2 47 121 .250 .319 .433 .752 99 .334 99 223 11 7 2 5 1 5739/H4D  
    2009 34 CLE AL 1.3 71 314 278 47 75 13 0 13 50 1 1 29 63 .270 .342 .457 .799 113 .348 111 127 6 3 1 3 1 57/93DH  
    2009 34 STL NL 0.4 68 262 237 31 54 10 1 10 28 2 1 18 58 .228 .291 .405 .696 83 .318 85 96 5 4 1 2 0 5/H3479  
    2010 35 SFG NL -0.7 26 104 93 9 18 3 0 1 10 0 2 9 16 .194 .279 .258 .537 48 .260 56 24 6 2 0 0 0 7/4H  
    2011 36 SFG NL 0.1 47 97 86 9 24 2 0 0 12 1 1 8 18 .279 .351 .302 .653 89 .315 100 26 4 2 0 1 0 H53/4  
    2012 37 WSN NL -0.6 48 101 85 13 16 5 0 0 6 1 0 14 18 .188 .300 .247 .547 51 .271 53 21 3 0 1 1 0 H5/79346  
    2013 38 TOR AL 0.7 88 236 204 23 48 12 1 7 36 0 0 28 49 .235 .326 .407 .733 100 .330 102 83 8 1 0 3 1 H453D/7  
    16 Yrs 10.6 1241 4094 3633 538 975 196 12 100 494 23 18 358 707 .268 .340 .412 .751 95 .341 98 1495 96 52 15 36 17 54H9673D  
    162 Game Avg 1.4 162 534 474 70 127 26 2 13 64 3 2 47 92 .268 .340 .412 .751 95 .341 98 195 13 7 2 5 2    
                                                               
    ATL (7 Yrs) 0.5 393 1075 975 135 259 48 2 17 99 6 7 65 149 .266 .318 .371 .690 78 .315 78 362 20 16 7 12 12 H654/79D3  
    CHC (2 Yrs) 4.0 298 1167 1007 167 291 58 6 31 159 7 2 127 199 .289 .373 .451 .824 109 .372 114 454 26 16 5 12 2 49573H/6  
    TEX (2 Yrs) 4.9 202 738 668 104 190 45 2 21 94 5 4 60 137 .284 .350 .452 .802 106 .361 112 302 18 8 0 2 1 9546/HD73  
    SFG (2 Yrs) -0.6 73 201 179 18 42 5 0 1 22 1 3 17 34 .235 .313 .279 .593 67 .287 77 50 10 4 0 1 0 H753/4  
    TOR (1 Yr) 0.7 88 236 204 23 48 12 1 7 36 0 0 28 49 .235 .326 .407 .733 100 .330 102 83 8 1 0 3 1 H453D/7  
    CLE (1 Yr) 1.3 71 314 278 47 75 13 0 13 50 1 1 29 63 .270 .342 .457 .799 113 .348 111 127 6 3 1 3 1 57/93DH  
    STL (1 Yr) 0.4 68 262 237 31 54 10 1 10 28 2 1 18 58 .228 .291 .405 .696 83 .318 85 96 5 4 1 2 0 5/H3479  
    WSN (1 Yr) -0.6 48 101 85 13 16 5 0 0 6 1 0 14 18 .188 .300 .247 .547 51 .271 53 21 3 0 1 1 0 H5/79346  
                                                               
    NL (13 Yrs) 3.7 880 2806 2483 364 662 126 9 59 314 17 13 241 458 .267 .338 .396 .734 90 .336 93 983 64 40 14 28 14 45H6973/D  
    AL (4 Yrs) 6.9 361 1288 1150 174 313 70 3 41 180 6 5 117 249 .272 .343 .445 .789 106 .352 110 512 32 12 1 8 3 594H36D7  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 11/3/2025.

    See all » Mark DeRosa Articles

    Remember Some Cubs: Mark DeRosa

    Today, we continue our offseason series highlighting and reminiscing about some favorite Cubs of yesteryear. This installment is about one of the most charismatic, versatile, and (it can't be ignored) handsome members of two division-winning Cubs clubs.

    See all » Mark DeRosa Videos

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