In the minor leagues, Nixon led the league twice in stolen bases ( in the
South Atlantic League with 67 & in the
International League with 94), runs scored (1980 in the South Atlantic League with 124 & 1983 in the International League with 129), hits (162 in 1983 in the International League), at bats (557 in 1983 in the International League) and walks (57 in 1979 in the
Appalachian League, 113 in 1980 in the South Atlantic League and 110 in 1981 in the Southern League). He started out as an infielder but was switched to outfield in 1983 due to his superior speed and frequency of errors (56 in 127 games in 1981 at shortstop for the Nashville Sounds). In 1982, Nixon stole 107 bases in a combined season between the AA level
Nashville Sounds and the AAA level
Columbus Clippers. In 17 seasons Nixon played with the
New York Yankees (1983),
Cleveland Indians (1984–87),
Montreal Expos (1988–90),
Atlanta Braves (1991–93. 1999),
Boston Red Sox (1994),
Texas Rangers (1995),
Toronto Blue Jays (1996–97),
Los Angeles Dodgers (1997) and
Minnesota Twins (1998). Nixon shares the single game stolen base Major League record with 6 on June 16, 1991. He held the
Atlanta Braves single season record for stolen bases with 72 in 1991; the record was broken by
Ronald Acuña Jr. in 2023. On July 25, 1992, Nixon made a catch over the wall to rob
Andy Van Slyke of a home run, a catch that was replayed many times on sports news programs. Nixon made the final out of the
1992 World Series attempting to bunt for a base hit with a runner on third and 2 out in extra innings of Game 6. Nixon had successfully bunted for base hits many times for the Braves. On his previous at-bat, Nixon had singled home the tying run (swinging, not bunting) with 2 out in the bottom of the ninth to send Game 6 to extra innings. It was the second World Series in history to end on a bunt. (
Lee Lacy of the Dodgers popped out on a bunt attempt to end the
1977 World Series.) In the
1999 National League Championship Series, 40-year-old Nixon made one of the key plays to save the series for the Braves. After the Braves had blown 5–0 and 7–3 leads in Game 6 and trailed 8–7 in the 8th inning, Nixon, a pinch runner at first base with one out, changed the momentum of the game and the series by stealing second and going to third when the throw went into center field. Nixon went on to score the tying run, and the Braves eventually won the game and series in extra innings. In his career, Nixon batted .270 with 11
home runs, 318
RBI, 878
runs, 1,379
hits, 142
doubles, 27
triples, and 620
stolen bases in 1,709 games. In his postseason career, Nixon hit .321 with a .396
on-base percentage, 13 runs and 11 stolen bases in 24 games. In eight career World Series games, Nixon hit .310 with five stolen bases. ==Personal life==