Greg Bargar

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Greg Robert Bargar

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Biographical Information[edit]

Greg Bargar was a key member of the University of Arizona baseball team which won the 1980 College World Series. He was selected by the Montreal Expos in the 3rd round of the 1980 amateur draft, two rounds after college teammate Terry Francona was also drafted by the Expos. He started his professional career straight at the Double A level with the Memphis Chicks of the Southern League. After a fast start in 1981, he was promoted to the Triple A Denver Bears, but this began a nasty cycle of pitching very well in Double A, only to be pummeled in Triple A, as his 6.03 ERA with 51 walks in 91 innings demonstrates. He started the 1982 season with the Triple A Wichita Aeros, but had to be sent back down to Double A when his ERA stood at an ungodly 11.20 after 8 starts. He was back at Memphis for the start of the 1983 season, then earned a promotion to Wichita on May 20, where at least he was winning ball games even if his ERA ballooned once again in the hitter-friendly park. His record stood at a combined 10-6 when the Expos called him up on July 14.

Bargar had a memorable Major League debut on July 17 at Atlanta [1], pitching seven scoreless innings against the defending NL West champs to earn his first victory, stopping a six-game losing skid in the process. At that point, the Expos were desperate for a fifth starter to compete in the wide open pennant race, and the hype surrounding Bargar's solid debut was very loud. He got knocked around in his next two starts, but still earned another win, and then, inexplicably, manager Bill Virdon decided that he had seen enough: Bargar would not start another game all year, only pitching five games in relief over the last two months of the season. With Virdon still at the helm in 1984, Greg returned to Triple A, this time with the Indianapolis Indians, and was their workhorse on the mound as they finished on top of the American Association, starting 29 games with a 9-8, 4.64 record and 121 strikeouts in 180 1/3 innings. He was recalled to Montreal on September 10, after Virdon had been fired, and was asked to make an emergency start the next day when Charlie Lea was sidelined with a back injury. He lost that game, and was only used for two more meaningless relief appearances the rest of the year. He returned to Indianapolis in 1985, but his season was disastrous, with a 5-17 record even though his peripherals remained decent. He was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals for catcher Randy Hunt at the beginning of spring training in 1986. He made the team out of spring training and got his first real chance to show his stuff, but was tagged for 36 hits in 27 innings over 22 games before the Cardinals soured on him, putting an end to his career as a big leaguer.

Greg Bargar always had good stuff and looked the part of a big league pitcher; he threw an above average fastball that he could mix with a slider and an occasional forkball, but his control was always his Achilles' heel: he gave up 25 walks in a little over 55 innings in the majors, and his walk rates in the minors were always on the high side, even when he was successful.

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