Rick Burleson
{{short description|American baseball player (born 1951)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{BLP sources|date=April 2017}}
{{Infobox baseball biography
|name=Rick Burleson
|position=Shortstop
|image=Rick Burleson 1976.jpg
|bats=Right
|throws=Right
|birth_date={{Birth date and age|1951|4|29}}
|birth_place=Lynwood, California, U.S.
|debutleague = MLB
|debutdate=May 4
|debutyear=1974
|debutteam=Boston Red Sox
|finalleague = MLB
|finaldate=July 8
|finalyear=1987
|finalteam=Baltimore Orioles
|statleague = MLB
|stat1label=Batting average
|stat1value=.273
|stat2label=Home runs
|stat2value=50
|stat3label=Runs batted in
|stat3value=449
|teams=
As player
- Boston Red Sox ({{mlby|1974}}–{{mlby|1980}})
- California Angels ({{mlby|1981}}–{{mlby|1984}}, {{mlby|1986}})
- Baltimore Orioles ({{mlby|1987}})
As coach
- Oakland Athletics ({{mlby|1991}})
- Boston Red Sox ({{mlby|1992}}–{{mlby|1993}})
- California Angels ({{mlby|1995}}–{{mlby|1996}})
|highlights=
- 4× All-Star (1977–1979, 1981)
- Gold Glove Award (1979)
- Silver Slugger Award (1981)
- Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame
}}
Richard Paul Burleson (born April 29, 1951), nicknamed "Rooster", is an American former Major League Baseball shortstop. Burleson, who played for three American League teams over 13 seasons, was an intense ballplayer. Former Boston Red Sox teammate Bill Lee once said of Burleson, "Some guys didn't like to lose, but Rick got angry if the score was even tied."{{cite web|url=http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&v=l&pid=1851&bid=1301|title=Rick Burleson|publisher=The Baseball Biography Project|author=Ray Birch|access-date=2010-02-06}}
Early life, family and education
Burleson graduated from Warren High School, in Downey, California. He attended Cerritos Junior College for one year.
Minor leagues
Burleson was drafted by the Minnesota Twins in the 1970 Major League Baseball Draft upon graduation from high school, but he did not sign. After a year of junior college, the Boston Red Sox selected Burleson #5 overall during the January secondary phase of the 1970 Major League Baseball Draft.
Burleson spent his first professional season with the Winter Haven Red Sox of the Florida State League. He batted only .220, and committed 38 errors at short. In {{baseball year|1972}}, Burleson was named an Eastern League All-Star while assigned to the Pawtucket Red Sox. Following Luis Aparicio's retirement, he battled Mario Guerrero for the starting shortstop job in spring training {{baseball year|1974}}.
Boston Red Sox
Though Guerrero won the job, Burleson still managed to earn a call to the major leagues by May. On May 4, Burleson tied a major league record by committing three errors in his major league debut, and was replaced by Guerrero at short by the end of the game.{{cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/BOS/BOS197405040.shtml|title=Texas Rangers 1, Boston Red Sox 0|date=1974-05-04}} Despite the inauspicious start to his career, he would eventually end up being considered among the best defensive shortstops of his generation, earning a Gold Glove Award in {{baseball year|1979}}.
Burleson was batting .298 with one home run, 28 runs batted in and 45 runs scored to be elected the starting American League shortstop at the 1977 Major League Baseball All-Star Game.{{cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/ALS/ALS197707190.shtml|title=1977 Major League Baseball All-Star Game|date=1977-07-19}} For the season, Burleson batted .293 with three home runs, 52 RBIs and 80 runs scored, and was second to Jim Rice among team hit leaders with 194 base hits.
Burleson received All-Star nods in {{baseball year|1978}} and {{baseball year|1979}} as well. In 1979, Burleson batted .278, scored 90 runs and earned the AL's Gold Glove Award at short to earn his first of two consecutive Thomas A. Yawkey Awards as the Most Valuable Player of the Boston Red Sox. He batted .278 with a career high eight home runs and 89 runs scored, and set a major league record for double plays by a shortstop in a single season with 147 en route to winning the award the following season. From {{baseball year|1975}} to {{baseball year|1980}}, he played in at least 145 games and got at least 140 hits each season.
California Angels
Burleson was traded along with Butch Hobson from the Red Sox to the Angels for Carney Lansford, Rick Miller and Mark Clear on December 10, 1980.[https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1980/12/11/sox-trade-burleson-hobson-for-lansford/#:~:text=The%20Boston%20Red%20Sox%20traded,games%20with%20California%20during%201980. "Sox Trade Burleson, Hobson For Lansford, Clear, Miller," The Harvard Crimson (Harvard University), Thursday, December 11, 1980.] Retrieved November 25, 2022. His first season with the Angels, he batted .293 with 33 RBIs and 53 runs scored while playing 109 of the Angels' 110 games during the strike shortened season. He won the Silver Slugger Award as the best hitting shortstop in the American League and the Gene Autry Award as the MVP of the California Angels.
A year later he injured his throwing arm, appearing in only 51 games over the next three seasons, and missing the entire {{baseball year|1985}} season. He returned in {{baseball year|1986}} to bat .284 with five home runs, 29 RBIs and 35 runs scored in 93 games for the American League Western division winning Angels. Along with backing up Dick Schofield at short, he appeared in 38 games as a designated hitter, and played second and third base for the first time since his rookie season.
Following the season, he signed as a free agent with the Baltimore Orioles. He batted .209 in 55 games as a second baseman for the Orioles in {{baseball year|1987}} before he was released during the All-Star break.
Coaching and managerial career
Following his playing career, shortstop Rick Burleson was an Oakland Athletics Minor league infield instructor in {{baseball year|1989}} and scout in {{baseball year|1990}}. He was an A's coach in {{baseball year|1991}} and a member of the Boston Red Sox staff the next two seasons, ({{baseball year|1992}}–{{baseball year|1993}}). He was a California Angels Minor league Baserunning Instructor in {{baseball year|1994}} and a coach for the California Angels ({{baseball year|1995}}–{{baseball year|1996}}).
Since the {{baseball year|1997}} season, he has managed in the minors for the Lancaster JetHawks (1997-{{baseball year|1998}}), San Bernardino Stampede ({{baseball year|1999}}), where he won the California League championship, San Antonio Missions ({{baseball year|2000}}), Billings Mustangs ({{baseball year|2001}}-{{baseball year|2003}}), where he won Pioneer League championships in {{baseball year|2001}} and {{baseball year|2003}}, and Louisville Bats ({{baseball year|2003}}-{{baseball year|2004}}), before returning to Billings for two seasons ({{baseball year|2005}}-{{baseball year|2006}}). In {{baseball year|2007}}, he replaced Pat Kelly as manager of the GCL Reds, after Kelly was named bench coach by the Cincinnati Reds.
In {{baseball year|2008}}, Burleson switched to the Arizona Diamondbacks system and worked as a coach for the Visalia Oaks. From 2009 to 2012, Burleson served as hitting coach and first base coach for the Reno Aces of the Pacific Coast League, the triple-A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Personal life
Burleson is the father of three sons, Tyler, Chad and Kyle, and a daughter, Lauren.
See also
{{Portal|Biography|Baseball}}
References
{{reflist}}
- The ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia – Gary Gillette, Peter Gammons, Pete Palmer. Publisher: Sterling Publishing, 2005. Format: Paperback, 1824pp. Language: English. {{ISBN|1-4027-4771-3}}
External links
{{baseballstats |mlb=111737 |espn=47 | br=b/burleri01 | fangraphs=1001696 |brm=burles001ric}}
- [https://www.baseball-almanac.com/players/player.php?p=burleri01 Rick Burleson] at Baseball Almanac
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20110208102748/http://rickburleson.com/ Rick Burleson Baseball]
{{S-start}}
{{succession box | title=Thomas A. Yawkey Memorial Most Valuable Player Award| before=Jim Rice | years=1979, 1980 | after= Dwight Evans}}
{{succession box | title=Boston Red Sox Hitting Coach | before=Richie Hebner | years=1992 | after=Mike Easler}}
{{succession box | title=Boston Red Sox Third-Base Coach | before=Don Zimmer | years=1992–1993 | after= Gary Allenson}}
{{S-end}}
{{AL SS Silver Slugger Award}}
{{AL SS Gold Glove Award}}
{{Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Burleson, Rick}}
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