After the 1986 season, the Mariners traded Tartabull to Kansas City for prospects Scott Bankhead, Mike Kingery, and Steve Shields.[3] In 1987, Tartabull improved to .309/34/101. Although sometimes slowed by injuries, Tartabull had five productive seasons with Kansas City, culminating with an All-Star selection in 1991. That same year, Tartabull led the major leagues in slugging percentage (.593). He became a free agent after the 1991 season and signed a deal with the Yankees worth more than $5 million a year (the deal being the first piece of news on ESPN Radio[citation needed]), but he never again matched his production in Kansas City.
In July 1995 the Yankees traded Tartabull to the Athletics for Rubén Sierra and Jason Beverlin.[4] Following his trade out of New York, Tartabull expressed his disdain for Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, saying that getting out of New York was like having been "released from jail".[5] The Athletics traded him to the White Sox the following winter for Andrew Lorraine and minor leaguer Charles Poe.[6] He had 101 RBIs but scored 58 runs, fewer runs than all but one player in history with at least 100 RBIs. Tartabull wound down his 14-year career with the Phillies in 1997, appearing in just three games.
Tartabull retired following the 1997 season with a career batting average of .273, 262 home runs, and 925 runs batted in. (When Danny's father José Tartabull was asked how his son was such a slugger while José hit only two home runs in his MLB career, the elder Tartabull said, "(Danny) gets his power from his mother.")
Personal life
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A warrant was issued for Tartabull's arrest on May 12, 2012 after he failed to appear for a 180-day jail sentence, and is on the Most Wanted List for Los Angeles County Child Services Department.[7] He has been named the top deadbeat dad in Los Angeles after allegedly failing to pay more than $275,000 in child support for his two sons.[7] Tartabull was arrested July 24, 2017, on suspicion of unpaid child support after he called police to report his car was broken into.[8]
Other media
During the 1994–1995 MLB strike, Tartabull and a handful of other striking players appeared as themselves in the November 27, 1994 episode of Married With Children (Season 9, Episode 11.)