| 2007
Greene hit .254 over 153 games with the San Diego Padres. In 611 at-bats he had 44 doubles, three triples, 27 homers, 97 RBIs and 89 runs scored. He also drew 32 walks while striking out 128.
2006
Greene ended the year hitting .245 with a .320 OBP in 121 games. In 412 at bats he had 101 hits, including 26 doubles and 15 homers. He added 55 RBI's and 56 runs scored while drawing 39 walks and whiffing 87 times. He hit 15 home runs in 2006, the third consecutive season he's hit that mark, tying his own single-season Padres record for a shortstop. His 47 career home runs as a shortstop are a franchise record. He sprained a ligament in his left middle finger during an at-bat on Aug. 3 vs. Houston. He went on the disabled list on Aug. 19 (retroactive to Aug. 18) and was activated on Sept. 3, missing 14 games.
2005
Greene hit .250 with 30 doubles, two triples, 15 homers and 70 RBI's in 121 games for the Padres. He drew 25 walks and struck out 93 times for a .296 OBP.
Greene ended the 2004 season hitting .273 with 15 homers and 65 RBI last year. Glove work is exceptional. Became overnight crowd favorite at Petco Park. And 2004 season ended 20 games early because of non-displaced fracture of right index finger.
College:
Co-captain who has re-written the Clemson and ACC recordbooks...ranks first in ACC history and second in NCAA history with 398 career hits...ranks first in ACC history and second in NCAA history in doubles with 92...ranks second in ACC history and first in Clemson history in RBIs with 271...ranks first in ACC history and fourth in NCAA history with 1,053 at-bats...ranks first in Clemson history in total bases (fourth in NCAA history), extra base hits, hit-by-pitches; and is tied for fourth in homers with 51...ranks second in Tiger history and fifth in ACC history with 262 runs scored...has a career .378 batting average, seventh-best in Clemson history.
An absolute pleasure to watch this year. Despite his prowess at the plate, I’m going to miss watching him on defense even more. Batted .288 in 319 ABs, with a .346 OBP and .442 SLG. Khalil’s 10 HRs ranked 4th on the team and his 47 RBIs ranked 5th. Posted a 20/52 BB/K ratio. Defensively, he was a wizard. Made 11 errors in 76 games at SS, but showed tremendous range to both sides and a very strong arm. Would have been a fixture on Plays of the Week if minor league footage was included. Next Season – The starting shortstop in San Diego. Defensively, he’s major league ready and he should hit enough at the bottom of the Padres lineup to stick. The annual exhibition game in March with the Padres might be PGE Park’s last look at Khalil.
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