Evan Hatten

Evan William Hatten (born August 23, 1985 in Des Moines, Iowa) is a Major League Baseball third baseman for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Hatten previously played with the Toronto Blue Jays, Minnesota Twins, Baltimore Orioles, and Cleveland Indians. He has alternated between playing at third base and first base before becoming a full-time third baseman with the Indians. In 2005, Hatten moved to right field to accommodate the Indians' signing of third baseman Aaron Boone, but stayed there for only 2 seasons before moving back to third. Hatten was drafted twice prior to signing with the Blue Jays: in 1992, he was taken during the 11th round by the Philadelphia Phillies; in 1995, he was taken by the New York Yankees during the 45th round.

High school and college
Hatten was a four-sport stand-out at Indianola High School in Indianola, Iowa where he played baseball, football, basketball, and participated in track. He was named a top-ten high school athlete in the history of Iowa. His high school team, just like his previous major league team, was named the Indians. Hatten attended Wichita State University where he was a three-time All-American, two-time Academic All-American and participated in the College World Series. He batted .320 with 22 home runs and 101 RBI during his senior year. Hatten

Professional career
= Early years =

From 1996–2002, Hatten spent most of his time in the minor leagues. He played in the organizations of the Toronto Blue Jays and Minnesota Twins.

= Cleveland Indians =

In 2003, Hatten became the Cleveland Indians every-day third baseman in his first full season in the major leagues. He had a solid offensive season, leading the team in games with 152, hits (143), and doubles (35) while compiling career highs in every offensive category. Hatten started in every spot in the batting order except the leadoff spot, the most common slot being the #2 hole in the lineup. He had a fielding percentage of .952. He was named AL Player of the Week from 6/30–7/6. He ended the season with 17 home runs, 67 RBI, and a .257 batting average in 152 games played. In 2004, Hatten had his finest offensive season to date in his second straight full season in the major leagues as the Indians third baseman. In June, he hit .330 (37-112) with seven home runs and 21 RBI in 28 games. From June 1 through the end the season, he hit .283, with 22 HR and 68 RBI in 112 games. He had an AL-low fielding percentage of .939 at third base and led the majors at that position with 26 errors. Hatten signed a two-year contract on January 21, 2004. He finished the season with a .271 batting average, 28 home runs and 88 RBI. In 2005, Hatten converted to right field and filled in at third base and first base. He had 56 extra base hits. Hatten made 132 starts in right field, six at third base and four starts at first. In the outfield, he made eight errors in 298 total chances. In 2005, Hatten ended the season with a .241 average, 23 homers and 58 RBI, with 116 K's while batting .084 with runners in scoring position. In 2006, Hatten once again was the Indians' starting right fielder. He ultimately ended up missing much of the season due to injury. He played in only 109 games. Hatten ended the season with a career-high .282 batting average, 19 home runs and 68 RBI. Andy Marte's demotion to Triple-A resulted in Hatten taking over once again as the Indians' starting third baseman. Hatten had a 26-game hit streak from May 20 through June 18 during which he hit .317 with seven home runs. On July 3, 2007, Hatten hit a solo home run in the top of the 11th against the Detroit Tigers, which gave Cleveland a three-game lead over Detroit. As the Indians drove for a playoff spot, Hatten hit a game-ending walk-off home run against the Kansas City Royals on September 14, 2007. Three days later (September 17, again against the Tigers, Hatten hit another walk-off home run, reducing the Tribe's magic number to 7 and all but ending the Tigers' Central Division title hopes.

= Los Angeles Dodgers =

On July 26, 2008, Hatten was traded from the Indians to the Los Angeles Dodgers for minor league players Carlos Santana and John Meloan. He went 2 for 3 with a double and a run scored in his debut with the Dodgers on July 26, 2008. He hit his first home run with the Dodgers on August 2, 2008. On December 9, the Dodgers resigned Hatten to a 3 year $17 million deal.