, June 25, 1978 Griffey made his MLB debut with the Reds on August 25, 1973, finishing 2-for-4 in a 6–4 win over the
St. Louis Cardinals.
That season, Griffey played in only 25 games, but batted .384 with three home runs and 14
RBI. The following season, Griffey saw more playing time with 88 games, and hit .251 with two home runs and 19 RBI. Griffey's best season came in 1976, when he lost the batting title to
Bill Madlock of the
Chicago Cubs on the final day of the season. Griffey, leading Madlock .338 to .333, was initially pencilled into the starting lineup, but manager
Sparky Anderson, after talking with Reds stars
Pete Rose,
Johnny Bench,
Joe Morgan, and
Tony Pérez, pulled Griffey. However, Madlock went 4-for-4, and news spread to the Reds. Griffey entered the game as a pinch hitter, batting 0-for-2 and falling behind Madlock. Griffey said after the game that he wanted to play but listened to Anderson. Griffey finished with a career-high .336 average, six home runs, and 74 RBI in 148 games. He also finished with a career-high 34 stolen bases. He finished eighth in
NL Most Valuable Player voting, The Reds won their second consecutive
World Series title in 1976, though Griffey batted 1-for-17 in the series. He played for the Yankees from 1982 to 1986 at first base and outfield. Injuries often plagued Griffey, who hit .306 with 11 homers and 46 RBI in 1983, his best season with the Yankees. An incident during his tenure, where he was told to take his son,
Ken Griffey Jr., off the field, while white teammate
Graig Nettles' son was allowed to stay, resulted in Griffey Jr. later refusing to consider playing for the Yankees. On June 30, 1986, Griffey was traded to the
Atlanta Braves with
Andre Robertson in exchange for
Claudell Washington and
Paul Zuvella. Griffey played only one full season with the Braves in 1987, batting .286 with 14 home runs and 64 RBI in 122 games. He batted .280 with two home runs and 4 RBI in 25 games with the Reds to finish the season. They became the first father and son to be teammates in MLB. Although Griffey played in only 21 games to finish the season, he excelled, batting .377 with three home runs and 18 RBI. Griffey played in his final major league game on May 31, 1991, against the
Texas Rangers. In November, Griffey chose to retire after 19 seasons due to a neck injury. In 1,997 games, Griffey compiled a lifetime batting average of .296, with 152
home runs and 859
RBI. ==Post-playing career==