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Ryan Zimmerman announced his retirement from baseball.
Zimmerman, 37, spent 17 years with the Nationals, and played in 16 total seasons for the club after missing a year while sitting out due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Drafted with the fourth overall pick of the 2005 MLB Draft, the former Virginia standout finishes with a career batting line of .277/.341/.475 and 284 home runs, and he was also a terrific defender at third base until injuries -- and Anthony Rendon -- saw him move from the position. While not likely to be heading to Cooperstown, Zimmerman will be remembered fondly by Nationals fans, and he should see his number retired in the coming years -- if not in 2022.
Ryan Zimmerman said Wednesday morning on 106.7 The Fan in D.C. that he is planning on playing next year.
Zimmerman told reporters at the conclusion of the regular season that he was undecided about continuing his playing career, but it now sounds like he is at least going to prepare to give it a go for what would be his age-37 campaign. The free agent first baseman posted a .243/.286/.471 batting line with 14 home runs and 16 doubles over 110 games (273 plate appearances) for the Nationals in 2021.
Ryan Zimmerman said after Sunday's finale that he's undecided about whether to return in 2022.
Zimmerman received a rousing ovation from the fans and acknowledgement from his team and even the opposing dugout during Sunday's game, so it had all the trappings of a proper send-off for his career, but he's not 100 percent ready to walk off into the sunset. “Do I want to keep playing? I think I can keep playing,” said Zimmerman. “I think I had a really good year with the role that I was supposed to do. Now it’s a decision of whether I want to keep doing that or do I want to be around my family a little bit more.” Zimmerman turned 37 last week and batted .243/.286/.471 (104 OPS+) with 14 homers in 273 plate appearances this season. He had a .901 OPS against left-handed pitching, so there's a case to be made for him to continue in a part-time role. Still, the career National has had a heck of a career either way and was deserving of being celebrated on Sunday.
Ryan Zimmerman went 2-for-4 with a double in Tuesday's loss to the Rockies.
Zimmerman picked up his 15th double of the campaign in Tuesday's loss. The veteran slugger is hitting .245/.283/.474 with 14 home runs and 45 RBI in 106 games played.
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