Baseball Career
While attending Wichita State University, Hill compiled a .355 batting average and 186 RBI primarily as a third baseman.
In 1999, Hill played as the second baseman for Team USA. In the games, he totaled a .284 batting average, 3 home runs, and 21 RBI.
Hill made his long awaited debut in the Majors in 2003 with the Los Angeles Dodgers. However, at the time, all-star catcher Paul Lo Duca was cemented as the Dodgers catcher, making Hill expendable. On July 31, 2004, Hill was one of the most prominent names in a trade, going from the Dodgers to the Arizona Diamondbacks for veteran Steve Finley. He would go on to hit .250 with 1 home run and 6 RBI in 2004 before breaking his ankle in a collision at home plate.
In 2005, Hill began the season as the starting catcher for the Diamondbacks. His offense, however, did not perform at the level expected, as he would spend the majority of the year platooning with backup catcher Chris Snyder. Hill played in only 34 games in 2005, and many in the MLB community felt as though Diamondbacks manager Bob Melvin did not give Hill ample time to develop.
Koyie entered the Diamondbacks 2006 spring training locked in a battle with Snyder for the backup role to Johnny Estrada, a major off-season acquisition of the Diamondbacks. Although Hill compiled an impressive spring camp (15-30 for a .500 batting average), on April 2, Hill was designated for assignment. On April 6, the Yankees picked him up on waivers, only to designate him for assignment on April 14, 2006. On April 17, he accepted an assignment to the Yankees' Triple-A team, the Columbus Clippers. Once the 2006 season concluded, Hill was released from the Yankees organization. On November 16, 2006, Hill signed a minor league contract with the Chicago Cubs.
On June 1, 2007, Hill was called up to replace the injured Henry Blanco. Hill saw action later that day as he was put in to the game in the top of the sixth inning after Michael Barrett was taken out of the game after Barrett scuffled with teammate Carlos Zambrano.
On August 20, 2007, Hill was designated for assignment. The Cubs signed Hill to a minor league contract in the 2007 off-season so he could compete with Henry Blanco for the backup catcher role in spring training.
On September 1, 2008, Hill's contract was purchased by the Chicago Cubs and he was called up to the expanded 40-man roster.
On March 30, 2009, the Cubs released veteran backstop Paul Bako, making Hill the Cubs' backup catcher.
Following an injury to Geovany Soto on July 7, 2009, Hill became the Cubs' starting catcher; as of August 1, he caught all but two-thirds of an inning of the Cubs' 21 games during that period.
On December 12, 2011, Hill was non-tendered and will become a free agent, possibly because of other backups to Soto within their farm system.
On January 10, 2012, Hill signed a minor league deal with the St. Louis Cardinals that included an invitation to Spring Training.
He was released on March 25, 2012. On April 29, he signed a minor league contract with the Cincinnati Reds and was assigned to their Double-A affiliate, the Pensacola Blue Wahoos.
Hill was hitting .195 in 14 games with Pensacola when, on May 19, he was reacquired by the Cubs. This happened after 3 of their catchers, Steve Clevenger, Geovany Soto and Welington Castillo, all went down with injury in a span of 24 days.
On June 17, 2012, Hill did not accept his outright to Triple-A Iowa, and became a free agent.
On June 19, 2012, he signed a minor league contract with the Washington Nationals. He was released in August. He signed a minor league contract with the Texas Rangers on August 14.
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