Daniel Vogelbach: Height| Salary| Weight| Wiki| Bench press

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Daniel Vogelbach: Engaged| Family| Net Worth| Home run

Daniel Taylor Vogelbach is an American professional baseball first baseman for the New York Mets of Major League Baseball. He was drafted in the second round of the 2011 MLB draft by the Chicago Cubs. In July 2016, Vogelbach was traded to the Seattle Mariners and made his MLB debut with them two months later.

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Daniel Vogelbach: Height| Salary| Weight| Wiki| Bench press

Height:

He is 6′ 0 feet tall.

His debut for the Mets, in front of an engaged crowd in the heat of a pennant race Sunday night, was something different.

Salary:

His salary is 800,000 USD

Daniel Vogelbach makes an annual average salary of $1,000,000.

“That was awesome,” Vogelbach said after the Mets’ 8-5 victory over the Padres in front of 39,395 at Citi Field. “I don’t know that I have played in an environment like that, at least with the home team. Pretty cool to call it my home field now.”

Weight:

Daniel Vogelbach: Height| Salary| Weight| Wiki| Bench press

His weight is 270 lbs

The first-place New York Mets added some much-needed punch at designated hitter Friday, acquiring Daniel Vogelbach from the Pittsburgh Pirates in a trade for rookie reliever Colin Holderman.

Wiki:

Vogelbach attended Bishop Verot High School in Fort Myers, Florida. He committed to play college baseball at the University of Florida.

As a senior, he had a .551 batting average with nine home runs and was The News-Press All-Area Baseball Player of the Year.

At the time, he was listed at 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) tall and weighing 325 pounds (147 kg).

Bench press:

There was much sorrow and wailing and gnashing of teeth and rending of extra-large replica jerseys this offseason when it was revealed that Kyle Schwarber, the Cubs’ leftfielder and resident big beefy baseball boy, had lost 20 pounds over the winter.

For him, Chicago, and his nominal attempts at playing defense, this kind of slimming down is a good thing.

But for those who enjoyed the sight of Schwarber as the game’s meatiest man, it was a crushing blow—and, what’s worse, an abdication of his hard-earned title of MLB’s Large Adult Son.

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