Antonio Rafael Armas Machado is a Venezuelan former professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as an outfielder from 1976 to 1989. He is the father of pitcher Tony Armas Jr. and the older brother of outfielder Marcos Armas. Armas Sr. was one of the top power hitters in the American League in the early 1980s. Twice he led the American League in home runs, and topped all of Major League Baseball in runs batted in during the season. He was, however, prone to injuries that affected his career. In his major league career, Armas went to the disabled list twelve times, missing 302 games.
Armas was the opening day right fielder for the A's in 1977, though by the end of the season, he was starting in center and saw most of his action there. Armas' inability to stay healthy limited him to just 91 games in and 80 in. For, Armas became a full-time right fielder, and finally played a full season, batting.279 with 35 home runs and 109 runs batted in in 158 games. In the strike shortened season, Armas tied for the league lead in home runs and games played to be named the American League Player of the Year by The Sporting News. In he set a pair of major league records with eleven putouts and twelve total chances in right field in a single game against the Toronto Blue Jays. Following the season he was traded, along with Jeff Newman, to the Boston Red Sox for Carney Lansford, Garry Hancock and minor leaguer Jerry King.
In Boston, Armas became the center fielder, sharing the outfield with Jim Rice and Dwight Evans. Although he was booed by fans for his low batting average, he placed second in the AL with 36 home runs and seventh with 107 RBI. Armas had a monster, batting.268 and leading the AL with 43 HR, 123 RBI, 77 extra-base hits, and 339 total bases. He was named to The Sporting News and UPI postseason AL All-Star teams, was Boston's co-MVP, and placed seventh in AL MVP balloting. From 1980 to, Armas hit more homers than any other AL player. His next two seasons were ruined by recurring leg injuries and Boston's acquisition of Dave Henderson. Armas was released after batting just once in the 1986 World Series. In the following years, he became a valuable role player for the Angels, and he retired after the season. Twice he finished in the top ten in AL Most Valuable Player award balloting.
California Angels
Armas was signed as a free agent by the California Angels In July 1987, and played 3 seasons with them to finish out his Major League career. For his career playing in 1,432 games over 14 seasons, Armas tallied 251 home runs, 614 runs, 204 doubles, 39 triples, 815 RBI, and 1,302 hits.
Family ties
Tony is one of 13 children, His younger brother, outfielder Marcos Armas, had a brief stint with the Athletics in the 1993 season, while his son Tony Jr. pitched from 1999 through 2008 for the Montreal Expos/Washington Nationals, Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Mets.