Griffin began his career as a member of the
Cleveland Indians, who signed him as an amateur free agent in 1973. On December 5, 1978, before having played a full season in the majors, he was traded, along with Phil Lansford (minors), to the
Toronto Blue Jays for
Víctor Cruz. Griffin made an immediate impact, sharing the
American League Rookie of the Year Award in 1979 with
John Castino. In 1980, Griffin led the majors in triples, tying
Willie Wilson of the
Kansas City Royals with 15; both Griffin and Wilson set an AL record for most triples in a single season by a switch-hitter. Five years later in 1985, Wilson himself shattered the record that he shared with Griffin by tallying 21 triples. In 1984, Griffin was named to the All-Star team. This was explained by
John Feinstein of
The Washington Post as: "Making the All-Star team the hard way: Major league baseball pays the expenses for each player here and for one guest. In most cases, players bring wives or girlfriends.
Dámaso García, the Toronto Blue Jays' second baseman, brought his shortstop, Alfredo Griffin. When the
Tigers'
Alan Trammell hurt his arm and could not play tonight, Manager
Joe Altobelli named Griffin to the team, partly because he's a fine player, but mostly because he was here." Griffin spent six years with the Blue Jays from 1979 to 1984, playing in 392 consecutive games. He was traded after the 1984 season to the
Oakland Athletics, where, despite his reluctance to draw walks and a tendency to be overaggressive on the basepaths, he began to harness the offensive promise that he showed in 1980. Griffin won the American League
Gold Glove Award in 1985. After establishing personal bests in most offensive categories with the Athletics, Griffin was traded to the
Los Angeles Dodgers for
Bob Welch prior to the 1988 season. The three-team trade, which included the
New York Mets, also netted the Dodgers
Jay Howell and
Jesse Orosco. All three teams involved in the deal would go on to win their respective divisions in 1988. A
Dwight Gooden fastball broke Griffin's hand in May 1988, causing him to miss some time, but he returned to start all 12 of the Dodgers' postseason games at shortstop in 1988, winning his first
World Series title. In 1990, Griffin became the last player to finish last in the
National League, of those who qualified for the batting title, in
batting average,
on-base percentage, and
slugging percentage. Griffin returned to Toronto in 1992 and was a bench player as the Blue Jays won the first of two consecutive championships. On October 23, 1993, he stood on deck as
Joe Carter faced
Mitch Williams in the ninth inning of Game Six. His career came to an end moments later when Carter homered to win the World Series for Toronto. Griffin was the first player in major league history to have started three times for the opposing line-ups in a
perfect game: against
Len Barker (Cleveland) in 1981 for the Toronto Blue Jays, then against
Tom Browning (Cincinnati) in 1988 and
Dennis Martínez (Montreal) in 1991, both for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Griffin ended his 18-year playing career with a .249 batting average, 24
home runs, 527
runs batted in, and a 67
OPS+ in 1,962 games played. Writer
Bill James named Griffin the most aggressive baserunner of the 1980s. ==Coaching career==