American baseball player (born 1981)
Baseball player
Ryan Garko
|
---|
Garko with the Cleveland Indians
|
First baseman
|
Born:
(
1981-01-02
)
January 2, 1981
(age 43)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
, U.S.
|
Batted:
Right
Threw:
Right
|
|
MLB:
September 18, 2005, for the Cleveland Indians
|
KBO:
April 2, 2011, for the Samsung Lions
|
|
MLB:
May 13, 2010, for the Texas Rangers
|
KBO:
June 12, 2011, for the Samsung Lions
|
|
Batting average
| .275
|
---|
Home runs
| 55
|
---|
Runs batted in
| 250
|
---|
|
Batting average
| .243
|
---|
Home runs
| 1
|
---|
Runs batted in
| 28
|
---|
|
---|
|
|
|
Ryan Francis Garko
(born January 2, 1981) is an American former
professional baseball
outfielder
,
first baseman
, and
designated hitter
. In college, he was a
catcher
. He played in
Major League Baseball
(MLB) for the
Cleveland Indians
,
San Francisco Giants
, and
Texas Rangers
, as well as in the
KBO League
for the
Samsung Lions
. Garko was seen by former
ESPN
reporter
John Sickels
as a good hitter who hit to all parts of the field, but with poor defensive instincts.
[1]
Through 2010, he had a .275 career average, 427 hits, 55 home runs, and 250 RBI in 463 games.
When he attended
Stanford University
, Garko won the
Johnny Bench Award
and was named the Pac-10 Co-Player of the Year his
senior
year. He was also voted onto the
College World Series
Legends Team, featuring 28 of the best College World Series players as voted upon by fans, writers, and
head coaches
. During his time in the Cleveland Indians' organization, Garko was converted into a first baseman. In 2006,
Baseball America
ranked him as the fifth best prospect in the Indians organization, including being the best at hitting for
average
.
Garko debuted in 2006 for the Indians, eventually taking over their first base position. In 2007, he hit a career-high 21 home runs in the regular season and batted over .300 for the Indians in the playoffs. Questions about Garko's ability to hit caused him to lose some playing time in 2008, although he managed to have 90 RBI. In 2009, Garko was traded to the
San Francisco Giants
to become their first baseman, but he slumped and ended the season as a backup. He signed with the
Seattle Mariners
in 2010 but was claimed off waivers at the end of spring training by the
Texas Rangers
. After just 15 games, he was sent to the minors, where he spent the rest of the year. He played for the
Samsung Lions
of the
Korea Baseball Organization
in 2011 and played in the minor leagues in the United States in 2012. He has not played in 2013, although he attended spring training with the
Colorado Rockies
.
He was hired as an assistant coach at
Stanford
prior to the
2014 college baseball season
.
[2]
Garko spent the 2016 and 2017 seasons as manager of the
Tulsa Drillers
, a minor league affiliate of the
Los Angeles Dodgers
, before being named the head baseball coach at
University of the Pacific
on July 23, 2017.
Amateur career
[
edit
]
Early life and high school
[
edit
]
Garko was born in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
. At the age of three, his family moved to southern
California
. He attended Saint Angela Merici Parish School in
Brea, California
, where his mother was a teacher, and attended high school at
Servite High School
.
[3]
He graduated from Servite in 1999 alongside future major league players
Ben Francisco
and
Brian Wolfe
.
[4]
[5]
Also in 1999, Garko played for the
USA Baseball Junior National Team
.
[4]
He holds numerous records at Servite High School, including the single-season records in,
triples
(6),
home runs
(8),
RBIs
(52), and the career records in, games played (101),
at-bats
(314), hits (149), triples (19), home runs (24), RBIs (121), and
walks
(80).
[6]
He was also the starting
quarterback
on the
football
team for two years.
[7]
In the classroom, Garko had a 4.2 GPA.
[6]
College
[
edit
]
Garko attended
Stanford University
on a scholarship from 1999-03.
[6]
He led the
Stanford Cardinal baseball
team in
batting average
in his
sophomore
season (2001) with a .398 clip, and was named their Most Improved Player. He helped Stanford reach the
College World Series
and hit .583 in the CWS.
[8]
That summer, he played with the
Hyannis Mets
in the
Cape Cod League
, an
amateur
summer league, and batted .233 with 14 runs, 28 hits, 3 home runs, and 19 RBIs while being named a league all-star.
[9]
Next season, in his
junior
year, Garko was named a
Johnny Bench Award
semifinalist.
[8]
[10]
During his
senior
year in 2003, he won the award and was named a First Team All-American.
[11]
He also shared the
Pac-10
Conference Baseball of the Year Award with
Dustin Pedroia
, and was named the NCAA Regional Most Outstanding Player and Stanford's Most Valuable Player.
[8]
In his time at Stanford, Garko batted .350 with 60 doubles, 39 home runs, 191 RBIs in 218 games played. He is as of 2013 fifth all-time in doubles at Stanford, seventh in RBIs, and ninth in batting average and home runs.
[8]
His only problem at Stanford was that he had trouble with controlling his weight.
[1]
On May 6, 2010, Garko was voted on to a 28-member College World Series Legends Team as a part of a commemoration of the final College World Series in
Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium
.
[12]
The team was voted upon by college baseball fans, college baseball writers, and
Division I
head coaches.
[12]
Professional career
[
edit
]
Cleveland Indians
[
edit
]
2003?2004
[
edit
]
Garko was selected as a catcher by the Cleveland Indians in the third round (78th overall) of the
2003 Major League Baseball draft
. On July 8, 2003, he signed a contract with the Indians and was assigned to the
Mahoning Valley Scrappers
of the
New York?Penn League
.
[13]
In his first professional season, Garko batted .273 with four home runs and 16 RBIs in 45 games. The next season,
2004
, he split time between the Class-A Advanced
Kinston Indians
, the Double-A
Akron Aeros
, and the Triple-A
Buffalo Bisons
. During April, he was named the "Player of the Month" in the
Carolina League
.
[14]
He was also named the 13th best prospect in the Carolina League by
Baseball America
.
[15]
He batted a combined .330 with 33 doubles, 22 home runs, and 99 RBIs in 113 games with all three leagues. Garko was third in the Carolina League in batting average with a .328 clip, and sixth in home runs with 16.
[16]
At the end of the season, he was named the Cleveland Indians' minor league player of the year by
USA Today
.
[17]
Garko participated in the
Arizona Fall League
(AFL) at the end of the 2004 season. With the
Peoria Javelinas
in the AFL, he batted .348 with 40 hits, 5 home runs, and 30 RBIs in 30 games.
[9]
He was named to the AFL Raising Stars team, an all-star team voted upon by managers and coaches.
[18]
2005 season
[
edit
]
In 2005, Garko spent
spring training
with the Indians, but he was returned to the minor leagues before the regular season.
[19]
He spent most of the season with the Triple-A Buffalo Bisons. He hit .303 with 19 home runs, and 77 RBIs in 127 games. Halfway through the 2005 season, Garko was selected to the International League all-star team.
[20]
He was also selected to the
All-Star Futures Game
in
Detroit
.
[21]
On September 18, 2005, Garko made his major league debut against the
Kansas City Royals
,
pinch-hitting
for
Travis Hafner
in the eighth inning and
striking out
against
Chris Demaria
.
[22]
That was his only major league appearance of the year.
[23]
For the second straight season, Garko played in the Arizona Fall League at the end of the season,
[24]
this time with the
Mesa Solar Sox
. He batted .314 with 27 hits, 5 home runs, and 27 RBIs in 23 games.
[9]
2006 season
[
edit
]
Entering the 2006 season,
Baseball America
ranked Garko as the fifth best prospect in the Indians' organization and the best at hitting for average.
[25]
Garko attended spring training with the Indians in 2006. He was sent to Triple-A before the start of the season and began his season with the Buffalo Bisons. He injured his left wrist on April 21, but was not placed on the
disabled list
after x-rays turned up negative.
[26]
Garko hit .247 with 15 home runs, and 59 RBIs in 127 games at the Triple-A level. Garko was tied for second in bases on balls (45), and was tied for third in home runs and RBIs on the Bisons' roster at the end of the season.
[27]
He was called up by the Indians on June 30, after Cleveland traded first baseman
Eduardo Perez
to the Seattle Mariners.
[28]
His first major league hit, a double, came on July 1, against the
Cincinnati Reds
.
[29]
He hit his first home run a little over a month later, on August 10, against the
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
.
[30]
Although Garko favored his traditional position of catcher, the Indians moved him to first base so he would have a better chance of competing for a major league roster spot.
[31]
By September, he was the starting everyday first baseman for the Indians after
Ben Broussard
was traded to Seattle.
[32]
Garko finished the season with a .292 batting average, 12 doubles, seven home runs, and 45 RBIs in 50 games at the major league level.
2007 season
[
edit
]
Going into 2007, Anthony Castrovince of
MLB.com
reported that Garko would have to improve on the defensive end to make the
25-man roster
because the Indians already had a first baseman in
Casey Blake
.
[33]
Towards the end of spring training, Indians'
manager
Eric Wedge
noted that Garko had made improvements on defense.
[34]
He made the 2007 roster out of spring training for the first time in his career. On April 22, Garko hit a game-winning three-run home run in the top of the ninth inning against the
Tampa Bay Rays
.
[35]
He became the everyday starting first baseman early in the season after
Casey Blake
moved to
third base
because of an injury to
Andy Marte
.
[36]
He began to dislike
interleague play
because during it,
designated hitter
Travis Hafner
was moved to first base, which forced Garko to the bench.
[37]
On July 18, Garko hit a two-run home run in the ninth inning against
Chicago White Sox
'
pitcher
Bobby Jenks
to tie the score at 5?5, and then drove in an RBI run for the win in the eleventh inning.
[38]
During the regular season, Garko batted .289 with 29 doubles, one triple, 21 home runs and 61 RBIs in 138 games. He was third in the league with 20
hit by pitches
(an Indians single-season record).
[4]
In the postseason, he hit .314 with two doubles, one home run, and five RBIs in nine games. The Indians defeated the
New York Yankees
in four games in the
American League Division Series
before losing the
American League Championship Series
in seven games to the
Boston Red Sox
.
[39]
[40]
2008 season
[
edit
]
Going into the 2008 season, there were questions surrounding Garko's ability to improve as a hitter.
[41]
During the early part of the season,
Michael Aubrey
was playing more than Garko because Garko was having trouble hitting right-handed pitching.
[42]
Garko was moved down the
batting order
because of his struggles.
[43]
In August, Garko stated that he was watching videotape in an attempt to pick up his hitting.
[44]
On August 6, he was benched for three games by manager Eric Wedge for failing to run on a
ground ball
he hit.
[45]
On September 27, Garko hit two home runs, including a
grand slam
against the
Chicago White Sox
.
[46]
At the end of the season, Garko hit .273 with 21 doubles, one triple, 14 home runs and 90 RBIs in 141 games. His 90 RBI tied
Grady Sizemore
for the team lead.
[47]
2009 season
[
edit
]
Before spring training in 2009, there was speculation that if Garko did not perform well, he might lose his starting first base job.
[48]
Garko began practicing the
outfield
position for the upcoming season.
[49]
Eric Wedge stated that Garko would in fact be playing the outfield in spring training.
[50]
On June 21, Garko was held out of the game because of a sprained left wrist.
[51]
San Francisco Giants
[
edit
]
On July 27, 2009, Garko was traded to the
San Francisco Giants
for left-handed pitcher
Scott Barnes
.
[52]
[53]
He hit a game-winning double on August 18, against the
Cincinnati Reds
in the top of the tenth inning.
[54]
He was acquired to be a full-time first baseman; however, during his tenure in San Francisco, he was third on the
depth chart
(behind
Pablo Sandoval
and
Travis Ishikawa
) after he got off to a sluggish start.
[55]
With the Giants, Garko batted .235 with 3 doubles, a triple, 2 home runs and 12 RBIs and 9 walks in 40 games. Combined with his time in the Indians and Giants organization, Garko batted .268 with 13 doubles, 13 home runs and 51 RBIs in 118 games. On December 12, 2009, Garko was non-tendered by the Giants, making him a free agent.
[56]
Seattle Mariners
[
edit
]
Garko signed a one-year, $550,000 contract with the
Seattle Mariners
on February 1, 2010.
[57]
Garko said that the reason he was signed by Seattle was because he has success against left-handed pitching.
[58]
He added about signing with the Mariners:
Going through the process and studying what teams were doing, and what
Jack [Zduriencik]
is doing in Seattle, I realized how much I wanted to be there.
However, in the spring, Garko batted only .220 with a home run and four RBIs.
[59]
On March 30, he was placed on waivers by the Mariners to make room for
Mike Sweeney
of the 25-man roster.
[60]
Geoff Baker, reporter for
The Seattle Times
, stated that the reason for Garko being placed on waivers was because of Sweeney's
clubhouse
presence and the fact that the Mariners had stated that, due to his defensive abilities,
Casey Kotchman
, whom Garko was expected to split playing time with, was going to play the majority of the games at first base leaving the back-up designated hitter spot for Garko.
[61]
The final decision, Baker stated, was that the Mariners had their organization full with back-up first basemen and designated hitters like Sweeney and
Tommy Everidge
.
[61]
Texas Rangers
[
edit
]
On April 1, Garko was claimed by the
Texas Rangers
.
[59]
As a result of his signing, the Rangers optioned
Max Ramirez
to the Triple-A
Oklahoma City RedHawks
to make room for Garko on the 25-man roster.
[59]
The Rangers had shown interest in Garko at the trade deadline in 2009, however, no transaction ever formed and he was sent to the San Francisco Giants.
[62]
On May 13,
The Dallas Morning News
reporter Evan Grant reported that the Rangers intended to option Garko to the minor leagues and later place him on outright waivers when outfielder
Nelson Cruz
was activated from the disabled list, although no transaction was official at the time of the report.
[63]
Later that day, the Rangers officially optioned Garko to Triple-A Oklahoma City and placed him on waivers after Cruz was activated from the disabled list.
[64]
On May 13, he cleared waivers and was outrighted to Triple-A Oklahoma City, which removed him from the Rangers' 40-man roster.
[65]
Garko hit his first home run of the season, a grand slam, with the RedHawks against the Triple-A
Portland Beavers
on May 21.
[66]
However, with Oklahoma City in 2010, Garko batted only .235 with twelve home runs. He became a free agent at the end of the season.
[67]
Samsung Lions
[
edit
]
On December 10, Garko signed a one-year deal with the
Samsung Lions
of the
Korea Baseball Organization
.
[68]
Due to injury, he was released on July 12.
[69]
Later career
[
edit
]
Garko signed with the
Long Island Ducks
of the independent
Atlantic League of Professional Baseball
in March 2012.
[
citation needed
]
He led the league in
OPS
and placing among the league leaders in batting average before getting signed to a minor league contract by the
Tampa Bay Rays
on May 14.
[70]
Garko spent the rest of the season playing for the Double-A
Montgomery Biscuits
of the
Southern League
, batting .297 with 68 hits, eight home runs, and 40 RBI in 61 games.
[71]
On November 3, he became a free agent.
[67]
On January 30, 2013, Garko signed a minor league contract with the
Colorado Rockies
. He was released before the season on March 23.
[67]
Coaching career
[
edit
]
After his playing career ended, he joined the coaching staff at
Stanford University
, a position he held through the 2014 season.
Garko was named as the manager of the Double-A
Tulsa Drillers
of the
Texas League
, a
Los Angeles Dodgers
affiliate for the 2016 season.
[72]
On July 23, 2017, Garko resigned from the Drillers to take on a new job as head baseball coach at
University of the Pacific
.
[73]
On January 8, 2020, Garko stepped down as the head coach at Pacific to join the
Los Angeles Angels
coaching staff.
[74]
Garko spent two seasons with the Angels, working as a coaching assistant and instant replay coordinator.
Front office career
[
edit
]
On September 23, 2021 it was announced that the
Detroit Tigers
had hired Garko as their new Vice President of Player Development, replacing
Dave Littlefield
.
[75]
On May 24, 2024, Garko was promoted to the position of assistant general manager.
[76]
Head coaching record
[
edit
]
Statistics overview
Season
|
Team
|
Overall
|
Conference
|
Standing
|
Postseason
|
Pacific Tigers
(
West Coast Conference
)
(2018?2019)
|
2018
|
Pacific
|
22?29
|
11?16
|
9th
|
|
2019
|
Pacific
|
23?26
|
10?16
|
8th
|
|
Pacific:
|
45?55
|
21?32
|
|
Total:
|
45?55
|
|
National champion
Postseason invitational champion
Conference regular season champion
Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
Division regular season champion
Division regular season and conference tournament champion
Conference tournament champion
|
Personal
[
edit
]
Garko resides in
Scottsdale, Arizona
, with his spouse Christie, whom he met in 2004.
[4]
They were on their honeymoon when Garko found out that the Giants had made him a free agent after the 2009 season.
[77]
He is a fan of the
Los Angeles Lakers
and the
Notre Dame Fighting Irish
.
[78]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
John Sickels (September 27, 2004).
"Indians prospect Ryan Garko"
.
ESPN.com
. sports.espn.go.com
. Retrieved
February 5,
2010
.
- ^
Janie McCauley (March 29, 2014).
"Ryan Garko goes from MLB player to coach at alma mater Stanford"
. Associated Press
. Retrieved
April 21,
2014
.
- ^
Ryan Garko (February 22, 2009).
"Unpacking the bags in Winter Haven"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Ryan Garko Stats, Bio, Photos, Highlights ? MLB.com"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
May 20,
2010
.
- ^
"Brian Wolfe Statistics, Video Highlights, Photos, Bio"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
August 12,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
Smith, Marcia C. (May 10, 2007).
"A hard-won journey home for Indians' Garko"
.
Orange County Register
. Retrieved
August 12,
2013
.
- ^
"Ryan Garko Stats, Bio, Photos, Highlights ? The Official Site of Minor League Baseball"
.
milb.com
. Minor League Baseball
. Retrieved
May 20,
2010
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Ryan Garko"
.
Stanford
. Retrieved
August 12,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Ryan Garko Batting Statistics"
.
The Baseball Cube
. Retrieved
May 20,
2010
.
- ^
"West Division All Stars"
. capecodbaseball.org
. Retrieved
May 6,
2020
.
- ^
"Ryan Garko Wins Johnny Bench Award"
.
Stanford Athletics
. gostanford.com. June 24, 2003. Archived from
the original
on February 19, 2012
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
a
b
"Garko becomes a college baseball Legend"
.
Palo Alto
. Palo Alto Online. May 6, 2010
. Retrieved
May 12,
2010
.
- ^
Justice B. Hill (July 8, 2003).
"Notes: Spencer for hire"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Dustin Gouker (May 12, 2004).
"Kinston Catcher Garko Is Making a Bench-Mark at the Plate"
.
The Washington Post
. washingtonpost.com
. Retrieved
February 5,
2010
.
- ^
Chris Kline (September 30, 2004).
"2004 Top 20 Prospects: California League"
.
Baseball America
. baseballamerica.com
. Retrieved
February 5,
2010
.
- ^
"2004 Carolina League Batting Leaders"
.
Baseball-Reference (Minors)
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Rod Beaton (September 21, 2004).
"Minor league players of the year"
.
USA Today
. usatoday.com
. Retrieved
February 5,
2010
.
- ^
"Arizona Fall League championship game notes"
.
Arizona Fall League
. OurSports Central. November 20, 2004
. Retrieved
May 20,
2010
.
- ^
Justice B. Hill (March 20, 2005).
"Notes: Garko optioned to minors"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
"Buffalo Bisons game notes"
.
International League
. OurSports Central. June 22, 2005
. Retrieved
May 13,
2010
.
- ^
"Garko, Carmona Will Play In Futures Game"
.
Akron Beacon Journal
. Ohio.com. June 23, 2005
. Retrieved
May 13,
2010
.
- ^
"September 18, 2005 Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians"
.
Baseball-Reference
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
"Ryan Garko 2005 Batting Gamelogs"
.
Baseball-Reference
. Retrieved
August 13,
2013
.
- ^
Justice B. Hill (September 17, 2005).
"Notes: Belliard's style works"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 5,
2010
.
- ^
Kline, Chris (January 23, 2006).
"Top Ten Prospects: Cleveland Indians"
. Baseball America
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Anthony Castrovince (April 21, 2006).
"Notes: Injuries thin Tribe bullpen"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
"2006 Buffalo Bisons"
.
Baseball-Reference
. Retrieved
May 20,
2010
.
- ^
Yakawiak, Jeff (June 30, 2006).
"Indians Trade Eduardo Perez to Mariners"
. WKYC
. Retrieved
December 5,
2010
.
- ^
"July 1, 2006 Cleveland Indians at Cincinnati Reds"
.
Baseball-Reference
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
"August 10, 2006 Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Cleveland Indians"
.
Baseball-Reference
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Andrew Bare (June 30, 2006).
"Caught in a bind, Garko goes to first"
.
Major League Baseball
. cleveland.indians.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Mark Polishuk (September 1, 2006).
"Notes: Garko a stabilizing force at first"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Anthony Castrovince (February 22, 2007).
"Garko must get defensive to make club"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Anthony Castrovince (March 27, 2007).
"Notes: Garko improving at first base"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Dawn Klemish (April 22, 2007).
"Garko's homer caps Tribe's big rally"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Anthony Castrovince (April 30, 2007).
"Garko clutch in unexpected role"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Anthony Castrovince (June 9, 2007).
"Notes: Garko dislikes Interleague Play"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Scott Priestle (July 18, 2007).
"Garko delivers in pinch, wins game"
.
The Columbus Dispatch
. dispatch.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
2010
.
- ^
Castrovince, Anthony (October 9, 2007).
"Byrd's uplifting outing clinches ALDS"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
August 18,
2013
.
- ^
Castrovince, Anthony (October 22, 2007).
"Game 7 slips away from Indians late"
.
Major League Baseball
. mlb.mlb.com
. Retrieved
August 18,
2013
.
- ^
Christopher Harris (March 7, 2008).
"Can Ryan Garko take the next step?"
.
ESPN.com
. sports.espn.go.com
. Retrieved
February 1,
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External links
[
edit
]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Ryan Garko
.
Awards and achievements
|
Preceded by
|
Indians' Minor League Player of the Year
(the
Lou Boudreau
Award)
2004
|
Succeeded by
|