Kansas City Royals 2007 Butler made his major league debut on May 1, 2007,
singling in his first
at bat, but was sent to the minors after playing 10 games. He was recalled on June 19 after the Royals put slugger
Mike Sweeney on the disabled list. Butler batted .292 in his rookie year, along with 8 home runs and 52 RBI.
2008 In Butler's sophomore season, he hit .275, with an on-base percentage of .324 and a slugging percentage of .400. He was demoted mid-season to Triple-A Omaha, but later recalled. In 443 plate appearances (118 more than his rookie year), he recorded 11 home runs and 55 RBI.
2009 In 2009, Butler batted .301, while surpassing 500 at bats for the first time in his career. He solidified himself as the Royals' number three hitter with his emerging gap power, and improved discipline at the plate. Butler led the Royals with career highs in RBI (92) and doubles (51), the latter number approaching
Hal McRae's team record of 54. He also had a career high in home runs, with 21. Only five players had hit at least 20 home runs and 50 doubles in a season by his age. Butler was named the American League Player of the Week two times (August 2–8 and September 7–13). He also played almost all of the 2009 season at first base, whereas before he was almost exclusively the designated hitter. He led all AL first basemen in errors, with 10. He was the American League Player of the Month for September. He was named the 2009 Royals Player of the Year.
2010 The 2010 season saw a slight drop in Butler's power numbers, dropping from 21 home runs and 92 runs batted in to 15 home runs and 78 RBI. However, he posted a .318 batting average, the highest of his career to that point. His .388 on-base percentage was also a career best. He also hit 45 doubles. On the flip side, he grounded into 32
double plays, the most in the American League. In 2011 season, the promotion of first baseman
Kila Ka'aihue from Triple-A Omaha meant that Butler would spend time alternating between first base and designated hitter to open the 2011 campaign. However, with Ka'aihue's demotion in May,
Eric Hosmer was called up from Triple-A Omaha and became the team's everyday first baseman, with Butler becoming the full-time DH. On July 26, Butler was a
triple short of a
cycle in a loss to the
Boston Red Sox. Butler followed with four home runs in the next three games. Butler won the 2011
Hutch Award. He was the American League Player of the Week for July 25–31.
2012 On July 1, 2012, Butler was selected to his first All-Star Game as a reserve on the American League roster. No Royals player was selected by fan or player vote but American League All-Star Team manager
Ron Washington made Butler one of his seven selections. At the time of his selection, Butler was hitting .297 with 16 home runs and 48 RBIs. He won the American League Player of the Week Award for the week ending on July 29. After the season, he was named a 2012 American League Silver Slugger DH and received the 2012 Edgar Martinez Outstanding Designated Hitter Award.
2013 On May 28, 2013, Butler got his 1,000th hit in the first inning,
bringing in Alex Gordon against St. Louis Cardinals' rookie pitcher
Tyler Lyons. He played in all 162 games, hit 15 home runs and drove in 82 runs while drawing a career high 79 walks. He had a slash line of .289/.374/.412. He grounded into 28 double plays, the most in the American League. In 2015, Butler batted a career-low .251 with a .390 slugging percentage. Two weeks later, on September 11, 2016, the Athletics released Butler from his contract. He batted .276 with four home runs and 31 RBIs in 85 games over the year.
New York Yankees Butler signed with the
New York Yankees on September 15, 2016, after a season-ending injury to
Aaron Judge. He played in a dozen games, and was not re-signed after the season by the Yankees or signed by any other team, though he was just 30 years old.
Career statistics In 1414 games over 10 seasons, Butler posted a .290
batting average (1479-for-5105) with 592
runs, 322
doubles, 5
triples, 147
home runs, 728
RBI, 500
bases on balls, .354
on-base percentage and .441
slugging percentage. He finished his career with a .992
fielding percentage as a first baseman. In 13 postseason games, he hit .262 (11-for-42) with 3 runs, 3 doubles, 8 RBI and 5 walks. ==Coaching career==