Draft and minor leagues Longoria was selected by the Tampa Bay Rays as the third overall pick in the
2006 Major League Baseball draft. Longoria was called the "best pure hitter" among college players in the 2006 draft class by
Baseball America. He was the highest draft selection in school history. Tampa Bay gave him a $3 million
signing bonus. He was widely considered the top third base prospect in the minors and one of the top prospects at any position. Longoria followed up his successful debut with another stellar year in . Starting the year with Montgomery, Longoria hit .307/.403/.528 with 21 home runs and 76s RBI in 105 games for the Biscuits before a late-season promotion to the Triple-A
Durham Bulls. In 31 games with the Bulls, he hit .269/.398/.490 with five home runs and 19 RBIs, but also had 29
strikeouts. He finished 2007 with a combined average of .299/.402/.520, 26 home runs, 95 RBIs, 110 strikeouts, and 73
walks for an
OBP of .402. In October 2007, sportswriter
Ken Rosenthal opined that Longoria "might be next season's
Ryan Braun, making a rapid ascent to the majors." Some scouts in particular said that the way that the ball "explodes off his bat" reminded them of Braun. He was expected to start at third for Tampa Bay in 2008 with the move of
Akinori Iwamura to
second base, but ultimately failed to make the opening day roster and was optioned to Triple-A Durham. According to reports, the Rays elected to send him down to complete his development, citing his short 31-game stint in Durham and drawing comparisons to the seasons of two other highly heralded third-base prospects.
Tampa Bay Rays (2008–2017) 2008 On April 12, 2008, the Rays placed
Willy Aybar on the
disabled list and called up Longoria from Triple-A Durham to replace him on the major league roster and on the 40-man roster. Longoria made his major league debut that night going 1-for-3 with an RBI. Longoria hit his first career home run on April 14, against the
New York Yankees at
Tropicana Field. He had his first career two-homer game on May 24, and drove in six runs as the Rays defeated the
Baltimore Orioles 11–4. Both of the homers came off the
Orioles' Steve Trachsel, also a Long Beach State alumnus. On July 19, 2008, Longoria hit his first career
grand slam off
Toronto's Roy Halladay in the fifth inning as part of a 6–4 winning effort. On April 18, the Rays signed him to a six-year, $17.5 million contract with options for 2014, 2015, and 2016. The first six years of the contract covered his arbitration years, with three more years added by team options. If the team exercised its one-year option for 2014, and then its two-year option for the 2015 and 2016 seasons, the deal could be worth up to $44 million. There was a general consensus that this contract was among the most team-friendly, in terms of
dollars per
Wins Above Replacement, in Major League Baseball. On July 10, Longoria won the 2008 All-Star game AL Final Fan vote over
outfielder Jermaine Dye of the
Chicago White Sox,
outfielder José Guillén of the Kansas City Royals,
first baseman Jason Giambi of the New York Yankees, and
second baseman Brian Roberts of the Baltimore Orioles. Longoria went 1–4 in the game and hit a game-tying ground-rule
double in the bottom of the eighth inning. He also participated in the Home Run Derby that year. He hit 3 home runs. On August 11, Longoria was placed on the disabled list with a fractured wrist. On September 18, Longoria had his first three home run game against the
Minnesota Twins at
Tropicana Field. On September 20, Longoria caught the game-ending out, from
Joe Mauer in foul territory as the Rays clinched their first playoff spot in team history. On October 2, in the first postseason game for both Longoria and Tampa Bay, Longoria hit two home runs in his first two at-bats to help lead the Rays past the Chicago White Sox 6–4. Longoria was the first rookie and second player overall to homer in his first two postseason at bats. The first to do so was Longoria's hitting coach at Triple-A Durham,
Gary Gaetti, who did it with the Minnesota Twins in 1987. On October 14, 2008, Longoria set the rookie mark for most home runs (4) hit in a postseason series, breaking
Miguel Cabrera's record set in 2003. The Rays made it to the
2008 World Series (their first in franchise history) but were defeated by the
Philadelphia Phillies. After the 2008 season, Longoria was honored with
Sporting News Rookie of the Year Award for the American League, as well as the American League
Rookie of the Year Award. He became the fourth third baseman to win the award. He also became the sixth player and the first since
Nomar Garciaparra in
1997 to win a Rookie of the Year Award unanimously. He was also named the third baseman on the
Topps Rookie All-Star Team.
2009 In April, Longoria knocked in his 100th career RBI, in his 135th game. The only then-active players to get to 100 RBIs more quickly were
Ryan Braun (118 games) and
Albert Pujols (131 games). At the end of April, Longoria became the first player in Rays franchise history to be named the AL
Player of the Month. He had also won two of the four
Player of the Week awards for the month of April. Longoria drove in 131 runs in his first 162 games in the majors, the third-highest total through May 2009 of any active player. Longoria was selected by the fans to start the
2009 MLB All Star Game on July 5, 2009. Due to a finger injury, he was kept out of the lineup. Longoria won the American League
Gold Glove Award for his position on November 10. Two days later, he won a
Silver Slugger Award.
2010 In 2010, Longoria hit for the highest average of his career at .294 and was selected to play in the All Star Game for the third consecutive season. He performed well, getting a hit in his only official at-bat, in addition to having a walk and a run scored. Across the board, Longoria's 2010 season was statistically impressive, including 96 runs scored and 46 doubles as well as 5 triples. Surprisingly, though, his home run and RBI production fell from 33–113 in 2009 to 22–104 in 2010. After the season, Longoria won the Gold Glove Award at third base for the second straight year.
2011 During the 2011 season Longoria missed 30 games to start the year. On September 28, 2011, Longoria hit a walk-off home run in extra innings against the New York Yankees to give the Rays an 8–7 victory, and more importantly, a spot in the playoffs. Earlier in the month, the Rays were facing a deficit of nine games in the wild card race to the Boston Red Sox. However, an epic collapse of the Red Sox, where they went 7–20 in the final games of the year, and a surge of the Rays, allowed them to overtake the Red Sox and eliminate them on the final day of the regular season. Longoria's home run came just three minutes after the Red Sox suffered a walk-off loss to the Baltimore Orioles.
2012 {{quote box On April 30, 2012, Longoria suffered a partially torn hamstring after sliding to second base when being
caught stealing. His injury placed him on the 60-day disabled list. He missed 13 weeks and returned to the lineup on August 7, 2012. In the 85 games Longoria missed, the Rays earned a record of 41–44. The rest of the season, the Rays were 49–28, for a 63.6% winning percentage. On October 3, 2012, Longoria finished off the 2012 season with three home runs in the final game. On November 26, 2012, Longoria was signed to a six-year, $100 million contract extension that could have kept him in Tampa Bay through 2018.
2013 On August 19, 2013, Longoria hit his 25th home run of the season, giving him his fourth 25-homer season, which tied him with
Carlos Peña for the most such seasons in Tampa Bay history. Longoria drove in his 500th career RBI after hitting a sacrifice fly vs. the
New York Yankees on June 20, 2013, to plate
Sean Rodriguez. He also hit two home runs in the 8–3 win. Longoria hit two home runs on September 25, 2013, against the Yankees at
Yankee Stadium. These home runs gave him No. 30 and No. 31 on the year, also giving him his third career season with 30 home runs. The Rays won the game 8–3. During the
2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game vs. the
Texas Rangers, Longoria hit a two-run home run in the third inning. It would eventually be the go-ahead run, giving the Rays a fourth playoff berth in franchise history. Some of his 2013 highlights included playing in the most games of his career with 160; he missed two with a foot injury. He had a walk-off home run vs. the
San Diego Padres on May 11 when the Rays were down, 6–7. It was his first walk-off home run since the Game 162 walk-off against the
New York Yankees in 2011.
2014 The 2014 season was Longoria's seventh season as a Major League player. On Opening Day, Longoria went 0–4, but on April 4, 2014, hit the 163rd home run of his career to tie the Rays franchise record of most home runs, a record which was held for many years by
Carlos Peña. During a 14-game stretch after his first home run, Evan had no home runs, until April 19, 2014, when Longoria hit his career homer No. 164 and claimed the all-time Rays record for home runs, passing Carlos Peña. Longoria struggled in the first half that year, batting only .257 to go with 11 home runs and 44 RBI. On July 18, the Rays started the second half playing the
Minnesota Twins after the All-Star Break (which was hosted by the Twins); in the game, Longoria had a bases clearing double which would seal the win for the Rays. On July 20 in the same series, Longoria hit a double off of
Kevin Correia in the third inning, tying
Carl Crawford for the franchise record in doubles with 215. In the same game, he hit his second double of the game, driving in
Matt Joyce, breaking the doubles record held by Crawford, along with tying the Rays' all-time RBI mark, also held by Crawford, at 592. Facing
St. Louis Cardinals reliever
Jason Motte two days later, Longoria hit a solo home run off a 1–1 fastball, making Longoria the team's all-time RBI leader.
2015 On September 2, Longoria hit his 200th career home run. Longoria finished the season with a .270 average, 21 home runs, and 73 runs batted in over 160 games played. Longoria was also a finalist for the
Gold Glove Award at third base for the American League.
2016 Longoria came out of the gate swinging, belting 19 first half
home runs with a .526
slugging percentage. His first half performance earned him a spot in the 2016
All-Star Final Vote. In the end, the four time All-Star would lose out to
Michael Saunders of the
Toronto Blue Jays. For the second consecutive year, Longoria appeared in all but two of the Rays regular season games. He would finish 2016 hitting .273/.318/.521 with a career-high 36
home runs and 98
RBIs over 685
plate appearances.
2017 On April 2, Longoria hit his fourth career Opening Day home run. Entering August 1, Longoria was hitting .328 with a .919 OPS after the All Star Break. That night, he would continue his hot streak, becoming just the second Tampa Bay Ray to
hit for the cycle, the first having been
B. J. Upton in 2009. Longoria homered in the first, tripled in the third, singled in the seventh, and doubled in the ninth. In the ninth, Longoria was originally called out at second before replay overturned the call. Per
Elias Sports Bureau, Longoria became the first player to hit for the cycle while having one of his hits reviewed. Offensively, Longoria had a down year, slashing .261/.313/.414 with 20 home runs, however he excelled defensively, and won his third career
Gold Glove Award.
San Francisco Giants (2018–2022) 2018 On December 20, 2017, the Rays traded Longoria and cash considerations to the
San Francisco Giants for
Christian Arroyo,
Denard Span,
Matt Krook, and
Stephen Woods. On May 5, 2018, Longoria hit a double to mark his 1,500th career hit in an 11–2 victory over the
Atlanta Braves. On June 14, Longoria was hit by a pitch on his left hand and left the game. Soon after, it was revealed that there was a fractured fifth metacarpal in his left hand. Two days into his injury, it was revealed that Longoria was facing surgery, which would likely keep him out for 6–8 weeks. Longoria experienced a disappointing 2018 season with the Giants as he hit a career-low 16 home runs (which led the Giants), had a career low in runs batted in with 54 and tied his career low with a .244 batting average.
2019 In 2019, he batted .254/.325/.437, with 20 home runs and 69 RBIs in 453 at bats.
2020 On August 21, 2020, at
Oracle Park, in a 6–2 win over the
Arizona Diamondbacks, Longoria hit his 300th career home run off of
Robbie Ray with one out in the bottom of the third inning. He became the 150th player in Major League history to reach the milestone. In 2020, he batted .254/.297/.425 with 7 home runs and 28 RBIs in 193 at bats. He was 2nd among NL third basemen with a .984 fielding percentage. In the 2021 regular season, he batted .261/.351/.482 with 13 home runs and 46 RBIs in 253 at bats.
2022 On March 30, 2022, it was announced that Longoria would miss Opening Day and be out six weeks following surgery to repair a torn ligament in his finger. In 2022, in addition to a 24-at-bat stretch with AAA Sacramento in which he batted .333, with the Giants he batted .244/.315/.451 in 266 at bats with 14 home runs and 42 RBIs. He played 68 games at third base with the Giants, and 17 at DH.
Arizona Diamondbacks (2023) On January 5, 2023, Longoria signed a one-year, $4 million contract with the
Arizona Diamondbacks. On June 27, Longoria homered off of
Taj Bradley of the
Tampa Bay Rays, giving him the distinction of having hit home runs against all 30 MLB teams. Longoria batted .223 in 74 games. The Diamondbacks made it into the playoffs with 84 wins, with Longoria making an appearance in each game of their run to the National League pennant, where he collected three RBIs combined, which included one in Game 6 of the NLCS that made it 3–0 in an 5–1 victory where Arizona was facing elimination. The 15 years between his first and second
World Series appearance is the longest for a position player. He will be inducted into the Rays Hall of Fame and have his number retired by the franchise on July 11 and 12, 2026, respectively. ==International career==