After Conforto played college baseball for the Oregon State Beavers, the Mets selected him in the first round of the 2014 MLB draft with the 10th overall pick. He made his MLB debut in 2015. He was an All-Star in 2017, and an All-MLB Second Team outfielder in 2020. He became a free agent after the 2021 season, but missed the 2022 season due to a shoulder injury.
Prior to the 2014 season, he was named the preseason Sporting News College Baseball Player of the Year.[20] Conforto finished the season hitting .345 (4th)/.504 (1st).547 (2nd) with 52 runs (1st), 16 doubles (3rd), seven home runs (3rd), 56 RBIs (2nd), and 55 walks (1st), and 12 hit-by-pitch (9th) in 203 at bats over 59 games.[21] He again was named the Pac-12 Baseball Player of the Year.[22] He was also a finalist for the Golden Spikes Award and the Dick Howser Trophy.[23][24]
In 2016 with AAA Las Vegas in the Pacific Coast League, Conforto batted .422 (leading the PCL)/.483 (first)/.727 (2nd) with 30 runs, 9 home runs, and 28 RBIs with a 1.209 OPS in 128 at bats.[30][33]
New York Mets (2015–2021)
On July 24, 2015, the Mets promoted Conforto to the major leagues.[34] He made his debut later that day, picking up his first major league RBI on a groundout, but going 0-for-3 while becoming the 1,000th player to appear in a game for the Mets.[35] The next day, he collected his first major league hit - an RBI infield hit - as part of a four-hit game.[36] He hit his first major-league home run on August 3 off Marlins' starter Tom Koehler.[37] He finished the season batting .270/.335/.506 with 30 runs, 9 home runs, and 26 RBIs in 174 at bats over 56 games played, and was in the top 3% in the major leagues with a maximum exit velocity of 115.0 mph.[38][39] On defense, he exclusively played left field.[40] The Mets won the 2015 National League pennant, making Conforto the third player in history to have played in the Little League World Series, College World Series, and Major League World Series, along with pitcher Ed Vosberg and catcher Jason Varitek.[41] Conforto hit two home runs in Game 4 of the 2015 World Series, becoming the first rookie to homer twice in a world series game since Andruw Jones accomplished the feat in Game One of the 1996 World Series.[42]
Entering 2016, Conforto became the Mets everyday left fielder. After a torrid start in April, Conforto began to slump once May came. From May 1 to June 25, 2016, Conforto's batting average dipped to .130. On June 25, the Mets demoted Conforto to the Las Vegas 51s of the Class AAAPacific Coast League and called up Brandon Nimmo.[39] Conforto was recalled to the majors on July 18.[43] After his return to the Mets, Conforto began playing both corner outfield positions. He made his major league debut in center field on July 23, 2016, as a defensive replacement. For the season, he batted .220/.310/.414 with 12 home runs and 42 RBIs in 304 at bats for the Mets, and was again in the top 3% in the major leagues with a maximum exit velocity of 115.0 mph.[38][44]
Conforto started the 2017 season as the Mets fourth outfielder but worked his way to a starting job. He was selected to the 2017 MLB All-Star Game in Miami after hitting .285/.405/.548 through the first half.[45] On August 24, during a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Conforto suffered a season-ending injury during a swing, as he dislocated his left shoulder and tore his posterior capsule.[46] He elected to have surgery on September 2.[47] For the 2017 season, Conforto batted .279/.384/.555 and hit 27 home runs with 72 runs and 68 RBIs in 373 at bats.[40]
In 2018, Conforto hit .243/.350/.448 and led the Mets with 28 home runs, 82 RBIs, and 78 runs scored, as his 84 walks were 8th in the NL and his 159 strikeouts were 7th in the league, in 543 at bats.[44] He had the 11th-longest home run in baseball for the season, at 472 feet.[38]
On May 28, 2019, Conforto hit his first major league grand slam, against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium.[48] He finished the season batting .257/.363/.494, with a .856 OPS, and career highs in home runs (33) and RBIs (92), as he had 84 walks (9th in the NL), in 549 at bats.[40]
In 2020 for the Mets, Conforto played in 54 games, batting .322 (7th in the National League)/.412 (6th)/.515 with 40 runs, 9 home runs, 31 RBIs, and 7 hit by pitch (6th) in 202 at bats.[44] He was in the top 5% in the major leagues with a maximum exit velocity of 114.4 mph.[38] He led NL outfielders in assists, with six, playing right field exclusively.[40]
Prior to the 2021 season, the Mets offered Conforto a $100 million contract extension. He declined.[49]
On April 8, 2021, Conforto was the batter during a rare walk-off hit by pitch to win a game against the Miami Marlins. The HBP call was controversial, with umpire Ron Kulpa saying after watching a post-game replay that he felt his call was in error, and that Conforto instead should have been charged with a strike.[50] On September 30, Conforto was entering a game against the Miami Marlins in what could have been his final game as a Met at Citi Field. Conforto went 3-for-5 with two RBIs and a double. He made his mark defensively as well: In the top of the ninth inning, up 12-3, Conforto recorded the second out of the inning with an impressive diving catch. Following the play, Conforto received a standing ovation from the fans, despite a disappointing 2021 season. Conforto appeared to be in tears, and later described his emotions during the game as "something I've never really felt before". He also acknowledged first base coach Tony Tarasco, who held Conforto's hand up in the air before Conforto entered the dugout.[51] Conforto finished the 2021 season batting .232/.344/.384 with 14 home runs and 55 RBIs in 406 at bats, with a career-worst slugging percentage, as well as a batting average and OPS worse than any season of his aside from 2016, which was the first year he began the season in the majors.[40] On defense, he exclusively played right field.[40]
Free agency (2022)
Following the 2021 season the Mets offered him a qualifying offer (one-year for $18.4 million), which Conforto also declined, instead choosing free agency.[52] The 2021–22 Major League Baseball lockout delayed free agency talks that offseason. Conforto started the 2022 season as a free agent. His agent, Scott Boras, later released a statement saying that an offseason shoulder injury suffered in January 2022 during a workout resulted in Conforto not starting the season with a contract.[53][54][55] In April, Boras said that Conforto underwent right shoulder surgery and would not play at all in 2022.[56][57] Because he didn't sign with a team before the 2022 MLB draft, the Mets did not receive a compensation draft pick for Conforto rejecting their qualifying offer.
San Francisco Giants (2023–2024)
On January 6, 2023, Conforto signed a two-year contract worth $36 million with the San Francisco Giants, containing an opt-out clause after the first season.[58] After the 2023 season, Conforto opted in for the 2024 season at $18 million.[59] In his two seasons with the Giants, Conforto compiled 35 home runs, a .238 batting average, .740 OPS, and 108 OPS+ in 255 games played.[40]
Los Angeles Dodgers
On December 10, 2024, Conforto signed a one year, $17 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers.[60]
Conforto got engaged to longtime girlfriend Cabernet Burns in January 2021.[64] The couple married in December the same year.[65] Their first child, a son named Camden, was born in December 2023.[59]