Gary Burnham

From BR Bullpen

Gary Robert Burnham Jr.

BR Minors page

Biographical Information[edit]

Gary Burnham played AAA baseball in four different organizations before taking his bat to Asia. His brother Brett Burnham also played in the minor leagues with the San Diego Padres after an outstanding collegiate career at Auburn University and University of Connecticut.

Amateur Career[edit]

Burnham was picked in the 22nd round of the 1993 amateur draft out of high school by the Chicago Cubs. He opted for college instead and would play for four seasons for Clemson. In 1994, he hit .277 in 47 AB for the #4 team in NCAA Division I. In 1995, the sophomore outfielder batted .344 with a team-high 27 doubles for the #6 team in NCAA Division I; he had a better average than teammate Matt LeCroy and was named 3rd-team All-American by the BBWA. During the 1996 campaign, Gary hit .290 with a team-high 24 doubles and 62 runs, tied for the club lead, as Clemson finished 5th. The Oakland A's chose Burnham in the 40th round of the 1996 amateur draft; again, he did not sign. During his summer months, Burnham played in the Cape Cod Baseball League for Orleans in '95 and Falmouth in '96. He made the all star team both years and was awarded MVP of the 95 all star game. Returning for a senior season, the South Windsor native batted .391, tied for 5th in the Atlantic Coast Conference. He had 23 doubles, 15 home runs, 83 runs and 82 RBI. He failed to make All-ACC despite his fine hitting. He was chosen by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 22nd round of the 1997 amateur draft and signed.

Phillies System[edit]

Burnham made his pro debut with the Batavia Clippers and batted .325/~.389/.481 with 22 doubles in 289 AB. He was second in the New York-Penn League in batting average and 5th in doubles. He made the league All-Star team at DH. Gary was promoted to the Clearwater Phillies for 1998 and hit .296/~.373/.446 with 33 doubles, 10 triples and 93 runs. He led Florida State League first basemen with a .994 fielding percentage. He led his team in runs and triples.

In 1999, the left-handed hitter took his cuts for the Reading Phillies, resulting in a .249/~.340/.407 in 116 games, splitting time between first base and the outfield. The next season, Burnham batted .268/.363/.456 with 28 doubles for Reading. During 2001, Gary had a third season with Reading and hit .318/.385/.518 with 25 doubles and 15 homers. He had the best average in the Phillies farm system. Burnham was third in the Eastern League in average behind Dustan Mohr and Marcus Thames and right ahead of teammate Marlon Byrd. He also led the EL with 9 sacrifice flies. Eric Munson beat him out for EL All-Star honors at first base.

Jays System[edit]

Burnham was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays during spring training 2002. They gave the 27-year-old his first look at AAA with the 2002 Syracuse SkyChiefs; he hit .281/.363/.443 with 34 doubles, 17 home runs and 88 RBI. He was awarded team MVP. He led Syracuse in RBI and tied Simon Pond for the most RBI in the Toronto farm chain. He also led Jays minor leaguers in total bases (238). He was third in the International League in RBI, behind Kevin Witt and David Doster and led league first basemen with 91 assists. He ground into 19 double plays, tying Johnny Estrada for the high (or low, depending on your meaning) mark in the circuit. He hit 6th in the 2002 AAA All-Star Game, going 0 for 2 for the IL before exiting in a 5-0 loss.

In 2003, Burnham remained in the wings in case anything happened to Carlos Delgado. He hit .269/.328/.424 for Syracuse with just 9 home runs in an off-year.

Reds, Cardinals, Indy ball[edit]

Burnham split 2004 between the St. Louis Cardinals' Memphis Redbirds affiliate (.292/.351/.449 in 35 games) and the Cincinnati Reds' Louisville Bats club (.261/.327/.396 in 69 games).

In 2005, the 30-year-old Clemson alumnus played for the independent Bridgeport Bluefish, hitting .320 and slugging .523 with 84 RBI. He led his team in runs (75), doubles (32), home runs (18) and RBI. He finished second in the circuit in average, .009 behind Carlos Hernandez. That earned him All-Star outfield honors and team MVP award.

Phillies chain redux[edit]

After starting 2006 well with Bridgeport, Burnham returned to the Phillies system on May 23, 2006. He hit .341/.412/.576 in 80 games for Reading, with 16 homers and 60 RBI and batted .391/.429/.565 with 9 runs and 8 RBI in 10 games for the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons. He still did not get a look from the majors, though Philadelphia had a pretty impressive first baseman in MVP Ryan Howard (58 HR, 149 RBI). Despite missing most of the first 2 months Burnham led Phillies farmhands in average (.343), home runs (17), and RBI (68) and set the Reading franchise record by hitting his 54th for them. He was recognized as a Topps national player of the month for his 10 homers in the month of August. Reading awarded him team MVP.

Burnham played DH, 1B and outfield for the 2007 Ottawa Lynx, hitting .292/.391/.436 with 35 doubles and 84 RBI despite only homering 12 times. His 84 RBI tied Shane Spencer for most RBIs ever recorded by an Ottawa Lynx in franchise history. He still led the team in doubles, homers and RBI and drew an IL-high 9 intentional walks. He led the 2007 International League in OBP, tied Joey Votto for 4th in the IL in walks (70), was only 6 doubles behind leader Brandon Moss. For his fine hitting the Ottawa Lynx named him their team MVP.

In 2010 the Reading Phillies named Gary Burnham to their All-Decade team as an outfielder.

Taiwan[edit]

After two AAA team MVP awards, and the all time home run record for AA Phillies Burnham decided to take his bat to Asia and signed with the La New Bears of Taiwan. He batted .323/.397/.523, missing the top five in average in the 2008 CPBL but certainly putting together a solid season. Burnham set a new record for longest hitting streak by a foreigner in the Chinese Professional Baseball League, as his 23 games were one more than Luis de los Santos had achieved in 1996. His record lasted only one year before Wilton Veras surpassed him.

Japan[edit]

In December 2008, Burnham inked a deal with the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan. He was also put on Italy's preliminary roster for the 2009 World Baseball Classic but did not make the final cut choosing to stay in Japan for spring training. He debuted in Japan on April 4, going 0 for 2 after replacing Benny Agbayani at DH. He hit only .218/.348/.361 in 73 games in 2009.

Europe[edit]

Burnham signed with the Godo Knights in Italy for 2010. He debuted on April 1, going 0 for 3 with a walk against Jesus Matos and Victor Moreno in a Godo loss to Bologna. Burnham finished the season leading the team in all major offensive categories and was in the top 10 in the league. He finished by hitting .329/.435/.490. He tied Luis Perez for 5th in the Italian Baseball League in average, was 6th in OBP (between Laidel Chapelli and Ramon Tavarez), placed 4th in slugging (after Carlos Duran, Olmo Rosario and Carlos Villalobos), tied for 5th with 11 doubles (even with former major leaguer Eddy Garabito and two others) and tied Jhonny Carvajal for 7th in home runs (4).

He retired upon his return to the US.

Sources[edit]