San Diego Padres Lee was drafted in the first round (14th overall) of the
1993 MLB draft by the San Diego Padres, and made his MLB debut on April 28, 1997.
Florida Marlins Lee was traded, along with prospects, to the Florida Marlins a year later for
Kevin Brown, Lee was a member of the
2003 World Series Marlins championship team. Lee won his first
Gold Glove during the 2003 championship season and his spectacular grab and unassisted
putout on a hard-hit
Hideki Matsui one-hop line drive snuffed out a
Yankees rally and ended Game 5 of the World Series with a Marlins victory. The Marlins went on to win the World Series in Game 6.
Chicago Cubs Lee was traded to the Cubs for
Hee-seop Choi, who, coincidentally, had been scouted by Lee's father years before. He hit .278 with 32
home runs and 98
RBIs in his first year with the Cubs. In , Lee had a career first half of the season, with an MLB-leading .376
batting average, 72 RBIs, and a tie for the major league lead in home runs with 27. The Cubs had traded superstar
Sammy Sosa, who had previously been one of their best hitters, before the 2005 season. Lee showed early on that he could more than compensate for the loss, and while Sosa had a disappointing 2005 season with the Baltimore Orioles, Lee had a career year. By midseason, he was among MLB's leaders in each of the
triple crown categories: batting average, home runs, and RBIs. Lee finished the season with a career-high 46 home runs and led the National League in batting average (.335),
slugging percentage (.662),
on-base plus slugging (1.080),
hits (199),
doubles (50),
extra-base hits (99),
total bases (393), and
runs created (167). His batting average was the highest by a Cub since
Bill Madlock's .339 in and made him the first Cub since
Bill Buckner in to win a National League batting title. Lee became the first player in major league history to record 50 doubles, 40 home runs, and 15 stolen bases in one season. He also finished third in
NL MVP voting and won the NL
Gold Glove and
Silver Slugger awards at first base that year. Lee was named to the U.S. roster for the
World Baseball Classic, where he was the first player to hit a home run for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic. On April 10, , Lee signed a five-year, $65 million extension with the Chicago Cubs. The deal replaced his contract for the 2006 season and extended him as the Cubs' first baseman through the 2010 season and included a no-trade clause. He broke his wrist less than two weeks later, in a collision involving baserunner
Rafael Furcal, and he missed 59 games due to the injury. The Cubs posted a 19–40 record during Lee's stint on the
disabled list. Later, Lee went back on the disabled list with a post-traumatic inflammation in the outer bone of the medial side of the wrist. In 2008, Lee hit 20 home runs, 90 RBIs and had a .291 batting average as the Cubs had the best regular-season record in the National League, leading the Cubs to the NL Central championship, later losing in the NLDS to the Los Angeles Dodgers, 3–0. In 2009, Lee overcame a slow start with a 21-game hitting streak from May 29 until June 24 and finished ninth in the voting for
NL MVP, as he had a .306 batting average, and hit for 35 home runs and 111 RBIs. On June 9, 2010, Lee hit his 300th career home run in a game against the
Milwaukee Brewers. On June 25, 2010, Lee was involved in a dugout altercation with Cubs pitcher
Carlos Zambrano after the pitcher gave up four runs in the first inning and apparently blamed Lee for failing to field a sharply-hit lead-off double. Zambrano was suspended for his behavior.
Atlanta Braves In late July 2010, Lee used his 10-and-5 rights to veto a trade to the
Los Angeles Angels. On August 18, 2010, Lee, with his approval, was traded to the
Atlanta Braves for minor league pitching prospects Robinson Lopez, Tyrelle Harris, and Jeffrey Lorick. Lee began to serve as the Braves' starting first baseman on August 20, 2010, including postseason play in the
NLDS.
Baltimore Orioles Lee was signed from free agency to a one-year contract with the
Baltimore Orioles for the 2011 season. He played in 85 games with the last place Orioles, batting .246 with 12 home runs and 41 runs batted in.
Pittsburgh Pirates On July 30, 2011, Lee was traded to the Pirates for minor league Class A first baseman Aaron Baker and cash considerations. Lee hit two home runs in his first game as a Pirate. He was hit by a pitch and broke a bone in his left wrist on August 3, and missed most of the next month, but then finished the season productively as the Pittsburgh first baseman. Playing in 28 games as a Pirate in 2011, Lee batted .337 with seven home runs and 18 RBIs. ==Personal life==