Julio Borbón
(Redirected from Julio Borbon)
Note: This page discusses 2000s and 2010s outfielder Julio Borbon. For the 1959 Panamanian national team pitcher of the same name, click here.
Julio Alberto Borbón
- Bats Left, Throws Left
- Height 6' 1", Weight 180 lb.
- School University of Tennessee
- High School Colegio Dominicano De La Salle
- Debut June 29, 2009
- Final Game August 27, 2016
- Born February 20, 1986 in Starkville, MS USA
Biographical Information[edit]
Julio Borbón made his major league debut with the Texas Rangers in 2009. He played parts of five big league seasons.
College career[edit]
Borbón was born in Mississippi, while his father (also named Julio) was teaching at Mississippi State, but grew up in the Dominican Republic. He came to the US for college and hit .350/.386/.450 for Tennessee as a freshman. He did not win SEC Freshman of the Year honors as those went to J.P. Arencibia. Tennessee made it to the 2005 College World Series. In the summer, Julio hit .205/.307/.273 for the Cotuit Kettleers of the Cape Cod League. As a sophomore, Borbón batted .366/.412/.481 and stole 19 bases in 25 attempts. The center fielder led Tennessee in average, runs scored (45), hits (86), triples (5) and stolen bases. Julio joined Team USA for the latter half of 2006. He hit .345, second on the club to Pedro Alvarez, over the course of the summer, and led the team in runs scored (35) and triples (4). His 14 steals tied Jemile Weeks for the most. Borbón helped the US win Gold at the 2006 World University Championship; he led the event in average and made the All-Tournament team but Arencibia beat him out for MVP. A broken ankle sidelined Borbón for part of 2007. He hit .345/.370/.506 and led the Volunteers in average once again. He was second team All-SEC and finished his Tennessee career third in school history in triples (13). Scouted by Jeff Wood, the Texas Rangers picked him 35th overall in the 2007 amateur draft and he signed.
Minors[edit]
Borbón hit .189/.250/.216 in 9 games in the minors in 2007, seeing limited time due to his late signing. In 2008, he hit .306/.346/.395 for the Bakersfield Blaze and .337/.380/.459 for the Frisco RoughRiders. He laced 175 hits, scored 87 runs and stole 53 bases in 71 tries in a great first full year in Organized Baseball. Borbón started 2009 strong with the Oklahoma RedHawks, hitting .298/.365/.387, scoring 53 runs and stealing 19 bases in 23 tries after 71 games. He was called up to Texas when Willie Eyre was optioned to Triple A.
Majors[edit]
In his debut on June 29, 2009, against the Angels, Borbón hit 6th and played DH. He struck out against fellow rookie Sean O'Sullivan with the bases loaded and two outs in the first, fanned in the third and popped out in the sixth; Hank Blalock pinch-hit for him in the 8th. He collected his first major league hit and RBI in his next game, on July 1. He ended his first season with a solid .312 average and 19 stolen bases in 46 games; he was hitting .485 after his first 10 games, but then fell back to earth. In 2010, he got into 137 games as the Rangers' starting center fielder, and hit .276. However, he had fewer homers and stolen bases than in limited playing time the previous season, and hit only 18 extra-base hits in 438 at-bats. The Rangers won the AL West title, but in the postseason, he was largely a backup, getting only 1 hit in 9 at-bats as the Rangers made it to the World Series for the first time in franchise history.
Borbón began the 2011 season in the Rangers' lineup and starting in center field, but after hitting .270/.305/.348 over his first 32 games, he strained a hamstring and was placed on the disabled list. He began a rehabilitation assignment in AA at the end of the month, but after only one game, the Rangers decided to option him to AAA, being satisfied with the play of Endy Chavez in his absence. He sprained his ankle while playing for the Round Rock Express, where he was hitting .298 in 32 games, and underwent surgery on July 18th, keeping him away from the field for another six weeks. In the end, he did not play again for the Rangers that season. He was 2 for 14 with 3 walks for the Leones del Escogido in the 2012 Caribbean Series and spent all of 2012 with Round Rock, where he hit .304 in 126 games, with 23 doubles, 8 triples and 10 homers; he stole 20 bases in 26 tries. He started 2013 with the Rangers but played only one game before being placed on waivers. He was picked up by the Chicago Cubs, where he hit .202/.284/.279 in 72 games but only 104 at-bats. The Cubs sent him down to the Triple A Iowa Cubs in early August, where he finished the year hitting .260 in 24 games. The Baltimore Orioles selected him in the Triple A phase of the annual Rule V Draft and kept him in the minors the next two years before a brief trip back to the bigs in 2016. He spent 2017 and 2018 in the Mexican League before announcing his retirement on March 1, 2019, to join the New York Yankees organization as a minor league coach.
Post-Playing Career[edit]
Borbon announced his retirement in early 2019 and immediately moved into the coaching ranks. He served as a defensive coach with the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders in 2019 with a focus upon outfield, baserunning, and bunting instruction. In 2020 Borbon was scheduled to be a GCL Yankees East defensive coach before COVID-19 forced the cancellation of the minor league season. Borbon was a coach for the FCL Yankees in 2021.
Sources[edit]
- 2008 Rangers Media Guide
- 2006-2008 Baseball Almanacs
- Cape Cod League
- University of Tennessee bio
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