Olson was drafted by the Athletics in the first round of the
2012 MLB draft, and made his MLB debut with them in 2016. After six seasons with the Athletics, he was traded to the Braves prior to the 2022 season and signed an eight-year contract extension. Olson has won two
Gold Glove Awards, a
Silver Slugger Award, three
Fielding Bible Awards, and was an
MLB All-Star in 2021 and 2023.
Early life
Olson is the second son of Scott and Lee Olson.[1] Scott Olson served as his sons' youth baseball coach,[2] until high school.[3] Matt Olson's older brother, Zack, later pitched for the
Harvard Crimson.[3] Matt Olson attended
Parkview High School in
Lilburn, Georgia, where he played first base and pitched for the Parkview Panthers, leading them to back-to-back state championships in 2011 and 2012.[4] Olson finished his high school career with a .431
batting average, 44
doubles, 45
home runs, 168
runs batted in (RBIs), and a
fielding percentage over 0.980. He holds the Parkview High School and Gwinnett County records for wins and RBIs. His
uniform number, No. 21, was retired by Parkview High School in February 2019.[5] After graduating from high school with honors in 2012, Olson was drafted by the
Oakland Athletics in the first round of the
2012 Major League Baseball draft.[6][7] He had committed to play
college baseball at
Vanderbilt University, but ultimately decided to forgo his commitment to the
Commodores and signed with Oakland.[8]
Professional career
Minor leagues
Olson made his professional debut that season with the
Arizona League Athletics and also played for the
Vermont Lake Monsters that first season. In total, he played in 50 games and hit .282/.352/.521 with nine home runs and 45 RBIs.
In 2013, Olson played with the
Beloit Snappers.[9] In 134 games he hit .225/.326/.435 though still hit 23 home runs while driving in 93 RBIs.
Olson played the 2014 season with the
Stockton Ports.[10] Throughout the season he was among the home run leaders in
Minor League Baseball, as during the season he batted .262/.404/.543 with 37 home runs and 97 RBIs in 138 games, leading all minor leaguers with 500 or more plate appearances with a walk percentage of 18.5%.[11][12] He played the 2015 season with the
Midland RockHounds where he hit .249 with 17 home runs and 75 RBIs in 133 games. Olson played the entire 2016 minor league season with the
Nashville Sounds. In 131 games, he batted .235 with 17 home runs and 60 RBIs.
Oakland Athletics
The Athletics purchased Olson's contract on September 12, 2016, and he was called up to the major-league club.[13] He played in 11 games for Oakland. In 2017, Olson split time between Nashville and Oakland. In 79 games for Nashville, he batted .272 with 23 home runs and 60 RBIs,[14] and in 59 games for Oakland, he hit .259 with 24 home runs and 45 RBIs. With Oakland, he hit 13 in the month of September (a rookie record) and one in five straight games. It was tied for third-most home runs in a player's first 65 career games in MLB history.[15]
Olson spent all of 2018 with Oakland, playing all 162 games. On April 18, Olson hit his first career walk-off, an RBI single to secure a 12–11 comeback win over the
Chicago White Sox.[16] His first walk-off home run came in a game against the
Houston Astros on August 17.[17] On September 26, he hit his first career grand slam in a 9–3 victory over the
Seattle Mariners.[18][19] Olson finished his 2018 campaign batting .247 with 29 home runs and 84 RBIs.[20] He also won his first
Gold Glove Award, leading all AL first basemen with 14
defensive runs saved and an 11.6
ultimate zone rating.[21]
Olson played in both games of the 2019 Opening Series in
Tokyo, Japan. During the second game on March 21, he was removed from the game after he felt pain in his right hand. The next day, he underwent successful surgery to remove the
hamate bone from the hand, returning to the lineup on May 7.[22] He batted .267/.351/.545 for the 2019 season. On defense, he had a 13
Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) rating, best among first basemen.[23] He received his second consecutive Gold Glove Award for his defensive performance.[24]
On July 24, 2020, Olson hit the first Opening Day walk-off grand slam since 1986.[25] Olson struggled in the 2020 season shortened by the
COVID-19 pandemic, batting .195, although he led the Oakland A's in games played (60), home runs (14), and RBIs (42).[26]
On March 14, 2022, the Athletics traded Olson to the
Atlanta Braves in exchange for
Cristian Pache,
Shea Langeliers,
Joey Estes, and
Ryan Cusick.[32][33] The next day, Olson signed an 8-year contract extension worth $168 million.[34] At the time it was announced, the extension was the largest contract in team history, surpassing an eight-year deal worth $135 million signed by
Freddie Freeman in 2014.[35] Its length and total value were exceeded by a contract given to teammate
Austin Riley later that season. Olson primarily wore the number 28 jersey with the Oakland Athletics,[36] and used the same number upon signing with the Braves.[37] Olson started wearing number 28 upon his 2017 major league promotion to Oakland because his preferred number (21), which he wore to honor
Jeff Francoeur, was then being used by
Stephen Vogt.[38] Olson was one of two players in Major League Baseball to appear in all 162 games of the 2022 season, alongside teammate
Dansby Swanson, who made 162 starts.[39]
At the midseason of the 2023 season, Olson was again nominated as a reserve infielder for the National League in the
2023 Major League Baseball All-Star Game.[40] In hitting his 40th home run of the 2023 season on August 10, Olson set a franchise record for the quickest 40-homer season.[41] On September 11, he hit his fiftieth home run to become the second-ever member of the
50 home run club from the Braves, following
Andruw Jones in 2005.[42][43] Olson tied, then broke, Jones's franchise record for home runs in a season on September 12 and 16, respectively.[44][45] On September 28, Olson hit his 54th home run of the season and set the
live-ball era franchise single-season record for runs batted in, which had been held by
Eddie Mathews.[46] After the 2023 season, Olson was named the winner of the National League
Silver Slugger Award for first basemen.[47][48]
^Newberry, Paul (March 15, 2022).
"Braves sign new 1B Olson to $168 million, 8-year contract". Greenwich Time. Associated Press. Retrieved March 15, 2022. One day after cutting ties with Freddie Freeman, the Atlanta Braves signed new first baseman Matt Olson to a $168 million, eight-year contract on Tuesday...The payout is the largest in Braves' history, surpassing the $135 million, eight-year deal that Freeman signed after the 2013 season.