Atlanta Braves In 1994, Mordecai made it to the majors but only for four
at bats. His first tour was from May 3–20 for the Atlanta Braves, when he replaced
Jeff Blauser on the roster. Mordecai's first
hit was a three-run
home run in the ninth
inning against the
Philadelphia Phillies. Mordecai continued to torment the Phillies throughout his career. He received the John M. Zwack III Memorial Award for being the most community-minded player. Mordecai played on the
1995 World Series team as a bench player. He made his first start at
second on July 16 at
San Diego. In the
NLDS he went 2-for-3 with a
double and 2
RBI. His
pinch-hit single in the ninth inning of Game 2 gave the Braves the go-ahead
run. In the World Series, he went 1-for-3. Unfortunately for Mordecai, the Braves had
Mark Lemke at second base,
Chipper Jones at
third and
Fred McGriff at
first preventing him from getting more than a reserve role with the team. Mordecai was the Braves' starting third baseman on opening day 1996, though only because Chipper Jones was on the DL with an injury. On August 30, he collected the first three-hit game of his career at
Chicago.
Montreal Expos Mordecai's inability to stay consistent while a member of the Braves frustrated the front office and, in 1998, he joined the
Montreal Expos. Mordecai made 53 starts the next year. He then enjoyed his best seasons there in 2000 and 2001. On April 2, 2001, Mordecai demonstrated his versatility by playing
catcher in the tenth inning of a game against the Cubs after Montreal's first catcher,
Michael Barrett, was ejected and their second catcher,
Sandy Martínez, was injured.
Florida Marlins In the midst of the 2002 trade deadline he was traded to the
Florida Marlins. His statistics for the season drastically improved after the trade. The following season, he was again a key part in helping the inexperienced Marlins win the
2003 World Series. In Game 6 of the
NLCS, the Marlins were five outs away from being eliminated when Cubs fan,
Steve Bartman, prevented a foul ball from being potentially caught by extending his arms over
Moisés Alou while Alou attempted to field the pop-up. Mordecai's subsequent three-run double blew the game open, highlighting the Cubs' historic collapse in what is sometimes referred to as simply "
The Inning". Mordecai would go on to win his second World Series, as the Marlins handily defeated the Yankees in the World Series. On June 1, 2004, Mordecai again filled the role as emergency catcher, this time for eight innings after
Ramón Castro was injured. On September 29 2004 Mordecai while playing third base caught the final out of the
Montreal Expos final home game preserving a 9-1 Marlins win over the Expos Mordecai took a job as
manager with the Marlins minor league affiliate
Jamestown Jammers in December 2004. A few days later, the team announced that they would give him a chance to join the team in September so he could reach ten years of Major League service. Mordecai played two games in 2005 before retiring for good. Mordecai also worked as a batting coach for MLB before turning to coaching for a private High School in Dothan, Alabama. The school in Dothan is Houston Academy. His last high school game was against the Leroy Bears on the road in the first round of the Alabama State High School Playoffs in 2009. ==Coaching==