American baseball third baseman who spent his entire 19-year MLB career with the Atlanta Braves, winning the 1999 National League MVP Award and 1995 World Serie
Born Larry Wayne Jones Jr. in DeLand, Florida, on April 24, 1972, the future Hall of Famer earned his nickname "Chipper" from his father, who noted his son's spirited personality as a child. Jones developed his switch-hitting abilities early, displaying natural talent from both sides of the plate that would define his professional career. The Atlanta Braves selected him first overall in the 1990 MLB Draft straight out of The Bolles School in Jacksonville, Florida. Jones made his major league debut in 1993 and quickly established himself as one of baseball's premier third basemen. His breakout season came in 1995 when he helped lead the Braves to their first World Series championship since moving to Atlanta. The peak of his individual success arrived in 1999, when he captured the National League MVP Award after batting .319 with 45 home runs and 110 RBIs. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Jones anchored a Braves lineup that won 14 consecutive division titles, serving as the offensive catalyst for one of baseball's greatest sustained runs of success. Over his 19-year career, all spent with Atlanta, Jones compiled exceptional statistics that cement his status among the game's elite switch-hitters. He finished with a .303 career batting average, 468 home runs, and 1,623 RBIs while maintaining remarkable consistency from both sides of the plate. His eight All-Star selections and 1999 MVP award highlight individual excellence that complemented his team's sustained dominance. Jones represents the rare combination of individual brilliance and organizational loyalty in modern professional sports. His unanimous election to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2018 recognized not only his statistical achievements but his embodiment of excellence during baseball's offensive explosion of the late 1990s and early 2000s. As the greatest position player in Atlanta Braves history, Jones bridged the gap between baseball's traditional values and its modern evolution, leaving an indelible mark on the franchise and the sport.
Switch-hitting third baseman, franchise player for Atlanta Braves
How They Played
Switch-hitting third baseman with exceptional plate discipline and clutch hitting
Lasting Impact
Hall of Fame third baseman, one of the greatest switch-hitters in baseball history
Career Honours
- World Series Champion (1995)
- National League MVP (1999)
- NL Batting Champion (2008)
| Team | Period | Games | Jersey |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atlanta Braves | 1993–2012 | 2499 | #10 |