Bob Hamelin

© ProCards

Sport: Baseball
Born: November 29, 1967
Town: Randolph, New Jersey

Robert James Hamelin was born November 29, 1967 in Elizabeth and grew up in Randolph, NJ. Bob was a fantastic player in youth baseball, but his career really took off after his family moved to California in 1979. He starred in football and baseball for Irvine High School, attracting scouts from both sports. As a senior for the Vaqueros in 1986, he was named the conference Defensive Player of the Year. At 6’1” and 225 pounds, Bob was an appealing recruit in both sports.

Notre Dame was interested in Bob as an offensive lineman, but he wanted to pursue baseball in college. Lou Holtz promised he could play both sports, however Bob felt that playing baseball year-round on the west coast gave him the best chance at success. He attended UCLA and was name a freshman All-American, but left school as a sophomore and enrolled in junior college. Bob continued to play well for Rancho Santiago Community College in Santa Ana and also played a few games for Team USA.

In the spring of 1988, the Kansas City Royals selected Bob in the second round of the MLB Draft. He worked his way up the system, always hitting well but lacked speed on the base paths and was below average in the field. A back injury also affected his swing.

Finally, in 1993, Bob had a power surge, hitting 29 homers for Omaha of the Class-AAA American Association. He was rewarded with a cup of coffee by the Royals that season, and then won a regular job in 1994. That year, playing first and DHing, he ranked among the league leaders with 24 home runs, a .599 slugging percentage and a .987 OPS. At season’s end he was named AL Rookie of the Year, finishing ahead of Manny Ramirez and Rusty Greer.

Unfortunately, the promise of Bob’s first full season quickly unraveled. In 1995, his average cratered to .168 and, in 1996, he batted just .225. When Bob failed to produce in Spring Training the following year, the Royals released him. Bob caught on with the Tigers and enjoyed something of a resurgence with 18 homers and a .270 average in 1997. That earned him a free-agent deal with the Brewers in 1998, their first year in the National League. He split first base duties with John Jaha, but did not hit well and was cut by Milwaukee after the season.

© Pinnacle Brands

Bob found himself back in the Tigers organization as a minor leaguer in 1999. Two months into the season, after grounding out, he returned to the dugout and told manager Gene Roof, “I’m done.” After the game he collected his wife, Marie, and one-year-old son and drove back to their home in Kansas City. He later said that the thought of being called up by the Tigers didn’t excite him…so he knew it was time to quit baseball.

After starting a construction company and steering clear of baseball for several years, Bob returned to the game as a scout. He worked for the Nationals, Blue Jays and Red Sox. Among sports collectors, Bob is known for what may well be the worst baseball card of all time (left).