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Jazz Chisholm Jr.

"Jazz Chisholm Jr. is one of the rare Bahamian-born players to reach the major leagues, and his path from Nassau to a Yankees uniform has run through three organizations and two defensive positions."

~3 min read · Updated July 6, 2026 · AI Generated · Claude Sonnet
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The thing to know

Chisholm is one of a small handful of Bahamian-born players ever to appear in a major-league game, in a country where baseball competes for attention with basketball, track and field, and cricket.

Why fans care

As a young, athletic infielder now wearing pinstripes, Chisholm represents the kind of positional flexibility — moving between second base and center field — that modern rosters increasingly value, and his arrival in New York puts a Caribbean-born player in one of the sport's most visible jobs.

What gets missed

Casual fans often treat Chisholm's journey as a simple trade transaction; what gets lost is that he's part of an exceptionally thin pipeline of Bahamian talent to MLB, a path shaped by geography and infrastructure rather than lack of athletic tradition.

Cross-cultural lens — what each side sees that the other misses
For Japanese fans

アメリカのファンにとってすら、バハマ出身の選手がメジャーリーグに到達すること自体が珍しい。バハマではバスケットボールや陸上競技の方が人気が高く、野球専用の育成システム(ドミニカ共和国やベネズエラにあるようなMLB球団のアカデミー)がほとんど存在しないため、ジャズ・チザムJr.のような選手が育つこと自体が例外的な道のりだったと言える。

For American fans

When you see Chisholm's home country listed as the Bahamas, it's worth knowing that baseball is not the dominant sport there — basketball and track and field draw far more attention and resources. Unlike the Dominican Republic or Venezuela, the Bahamas has no dense network of MLB academies, which makes his route to affiliated ball and the majors considerably less traveled than that of most Caribbean-born players.

Born in Nassau, Bahamas, in February 1998, Jazz Chisholm Jr. was drafted by the Arizona Diamondbacks, made his major-league debut with them in September 2020, and became a fixture with the Miami Marlins before a mid-career move to the New York Yankees. Publicly listed at 5'11" and 184 pounds, he bats left and throws right, and has moved between second base and the outfield over his career.

By the numbers
YearTeamGAVGHRRBISBOPS
2026NYY91 .223133726.698
2025NYY130 .242318031.813
2024147 .256247340.760
Career670 .244121 345156.760

Source: MLB Stats API · regular season

A Rare Point of Origin

Jazz Chisholm Jr. was born in Nassau, the capital of the Bahamas, in February 1998. Bahamian natives remain uncommon in major-league box scores; the country has produced only a small number of MLB players across the sport's history, a fact that has as much to do with baseball's limited institutional footprint on the islands as with any scarcity of athletic talent. Track and field, basketball, and cricket have traditionally drawn more attention and public investment in the Bahamas than baseball, which lacks the dense scouting and academy infrastructure that feeds young players out of the Dominican Republic or Venezuela into American professional systems.

From Arizona to Miami to the Bronx

Chisholm entered affiliated baseball through the Arizona Diamondbacks organization and made his major-league debut on September 1, 2020. He was later traded to the Miami Marlins, where he spent the bulk of his early career establishing himself as an everyday infielder before a move to the New York Yankees brought him into one of the sport's highest-profile clubhouses. Along the way, his defensive assignment has shifted — from shortstop and second base toward outfield duty — a kind of positional fluidity that has become increasingly common for athletic, left-handed-hitting players whose value lies partly in their ability to play more than one spot competently.

Cultural context · For this audience

American fans tend to assume MLB's international talent flows almost entirely through a few well-known pipelines — the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Japan, South Korea. The Bahamas sits outside that infrastructure almost entirely, with no major academy system and a sporting culture where basketball and track receive far more institutional support. A Bahamian-born player reaching the majors is, structurally speaking, a considerably longer shot than it would be for a similarly talented player from a country with an established MLB development pipeline.

A Left-Handed Hitter Built for Versatility

Listed at 5'11" and 184 pounds, Chisholm bats left and throws right — a combination that, paired with his speed and defensive range, has made him useful in multiple defensive alignments rather than locked into a single position. That versatility is less a story of unusual talent than of modern roster-building: teams increasingly prize players who can move around the diamond as matchups and injuries dictate, and Chisholm's career has tracked that shift as much as any individual choice of his own.

What Comes Next

Now playing for the Yankees, Chisholm occupies a visible spot in a storied organization, carrying with him a background that remains statistically rare in the sport. Whatever the shape of his career from here, his presence on a marquee roster keeps a small but real thread of Bahamian baseball history in the public eye — a reminder that the game's talent pipelines, however established they may seem, still have room for players who arrive from outside the usual routes.

Related finds affiliate
Official MLB Shop and Amazon links matched to Jazz Chisholm Jr. and the New York Yankees.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. gear at the official MLB Shop

This profile was written by AI (Claude Sonnet) using publicly available sources. Interpretations and cultural notes are AI-generated and may not reflect the views of the player, their team, or MLB. This page contains affiliate links.