Early career Initially drafted by the
Baltimore Orioles in the 10th round of the amateur draft, Weiss decided to put his professional baseball career on hold and attended the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1984, he played
collegiate summer baseball with the
Wareham Gatemen of the
Cape Cod Baseball League where he was named a league all-star and set a league record for most doubles in a season. In June 1985, he was the 12th overall pick in the draft. At the age of 23, he made his major league debut for the Oakland Athletics in September . The club was impressed enough with the young shortstop's talent that they traded starter
Alfredo Griffin that December, making him their starting shortstop for 1988. His offensive numbers were low (.250 average, three
home runs, 39
RBIs and 44
runs scored), but his defensive wizardry helped lead the A's to their first
American League pennant since . The
1988 World Series was a rematch of the 1974 matchup, with the
Los Angeles Dodgers winning the
National League pennant. His costly
error in Game 4 helped the Dodgers win the Series in five games, but he was voted American League Rookie of the Year for 1988 as the third consecutive Oakland player to win the award after sluggers
José Canseco in 1986 and
Mark McGwire in 1987. He also made the
1988 Topps All-Star Rookie Roster.
Mid-career In the A's repeated as AL pennant winners, meeting their crosstown rival
San Francisco Giants in the
1989 World Series. Although the Series would be overshadowed by the
Loma Prieta earthquake on October 17 which delayed play for ten days, Weiss homered and the A's swept the Giants to claim their first world title in fifteen years. saw Weiss put up his best offensive numbers to date in
hits, runs and
batting average, while also
stealing nine bases. The A's won their third straight pennant, but Weiss was injured in the
1990 American League Championship Series against the
Boston Red Sox and missed Oakland's
1990 World Series loss to the
Cincinnati Reds, four games to none. Limited by prior injuries, he didn't play much in as the A's missed the playoffs for the first time since 1987. In what would be his final year in Oakland, he hit .212 in and was traded to the new NL expansion
Florida Marlins for
Eric Helfand and a player to be named later during the offseason. He played in 158 games in for the Marlins, but after the season became a free agent, chose to sign with the
Colorado Rockies (which, like the Marlins, was also a new NL expansion team in 1993) becoming the first player to appear for both of these 1993 expansion teams. Weiss spent four years in Colorado, posting career highs in home runs (8) and RBIs (48).
Later career In December 1997, he signed with the
Atlanta Braves. As the team's starting shortstop, Weiss hit .280 and made the All-Star team in 1998, the only time in his career he did so. The Braves finished with 106 wins but lost the NL pennant to the
San Diego Padres, although he was slowed by injuries and appeared in less than a hundred games for the first time since 1991. The next season, his decline continued with a disappointing .226 batting average. While with the Braves, Weiss's family had a health scare when his 3-year old son contracted E. Coli from an Atlanta water amusement park which caused his kidneys to shut down. Weiss's son made a full recovery. In Game 3 of the
1999 NLDS against the
Houston Astros, however, he made a stunning defensive play to save the season. In the bottom of the tenth, with the bases loaded, one out and the score tied,
Tony Eusebio hit a sharp grounder up the middle. Weiss ranged hard to his left, fell on his stomach and threw to home for the force. After the game, he said the ball nearly ripped the glove off his hand. Weiss and the Braves went on to win the game, and with it the division series, on their way to the NL pennant and the
1999 World Series, which they lost to the
New York Yankees. In 2000, he only had 192 at-bats, mostly due to losing the starting shortstop job to the emergent
Rafael Furcal, who would go on to win Rookie of the Year just like Weiss twelve years prior. He retired after that season. ==Player profile==