David Bush
(Redirected from Dave Bush)
David Thomas Bush
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 6' 2", Weight 212 lb.
- School Wake Forest University
- High School Conestoga High School
- Debut July 2, 2004
- Final Game April 7, 2013
- Born November 9, 1979 in Pittsburgh, PA USA
Biographical Information[edit]
On August 11, 2010, David Bush set a major league record by giving up four consecutive home runs to the Arizona Diamondbacks. The four gopher balls in an inning also tied a National League record.
Bush was a solid contributor to the Milwaukee Brewers rotation in the mid-2000s, obtained from the Toronto Blue Jays before the 2006 season in a deal involving first baseman Lyle Overbay. He was a 12 game winner in back-to-back seasons (2006 and 2007) becoming a free agent after the his ill-timed gopher ball game season of 2010. Following 17 adequate offerings with the Texas Rangers in 2011, he spent 2012 in Triple A Lehigh Valley of the Philadelphia Phillies organization. He returned to where it all began, Toronto, a week into the 2013 season when future Brewer Jeremy Jeffress was DFAed. In a lone outing, relieving knuckleballer R.A. Dickey with an 8-0 deficit on April 7, he was bombed for 5 runs and 5 hits (4 homers) in 3 innings. He kicked around in Triple A for the remainder of the season, his last.
After a year away from baseball Bush returned in a coaching role on both the local and international levels. He was an assistant coach for the Bridgton Academy in 2015-2016. In these same years he worked with MLB International to grow the sport of baseball in other countries. Bush coached for the South African national team in the 2017 WBC Qualifiers and for the Chinese national team in the 2017 World Baseball Classic.
Also in 2017, the Boston Red Sox hired Bush as a pitching development analyst, a job he continued in 2018. The following year his title changed to Pitching Coordinator for Performance, but it is not clear how much, if any, his responsibilities changed. The Red Sox promoted Bush to pitching coach for the major league team in 2020. He stayed in the role until the end of the 2023 season, after which he was let go.
Notable Achievements[edit]
- 200 Innings Pitched Seasons: 1 (2006)
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