Bubba Crosby

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Bubba Crosby
Cincinnati Reds – No. 16
Outfield
Bats: Left
Throws: Left
debut
May 29, 2003, for the Los Angeles Dodgers
Career statistics
(through 2006)
Batting average.216
Home runs4
RBI20
Teams

Richard Stephen "Bubba" Crosby (born August 11, 1976, in Bellaire, Texas) is a Major League Baseball outfielder who plays for the Seattle Mariners.

High school & college

Crosby was a star at baseball powerhouse Bellaire High School (Bellaire, Texas) 1991-95, where he won a Texas 5-A sports state high school championship.

At Rice University from 1996-98, he earned all-America honors in 1997 and 1998. In 1998 he hit 25 home runs and drove in 91 runs in only 221 at bats, and batted .394 with a .504 on base percentage and a .828 slugging percentage. He also had a 30-game hitting streak. He is the all-time Rice leader with 20 career triples, and 2nd with 59 home runs, 243 RBIs, 499 total bases, and a .737 slugging percentage, trailing only Lance Berkman in each category.

Professional career

Minor leagues

Crosby was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers of the National League in the 1st round (23rd overall) of the 1998 amateur entry draft.

His best seasons in the minors were 1999 (.296 with 19 stolen bases in A+ ball), 2000 (27 stolen bases in A+ ball), 2001 (.302 with 22 stolen bases in AA), and 2003 (.361 in AAA).

Bubba was finally called up by the Dodgers in 2003, while he was batting .361 with a .410 obp and .635 slugging percentage.

Crosby was back in AAA with the Louisville Bats in 2007; through June 22nd he had played only 13 games and was batting .128.

Dodgers (2003)

Following a dozen at bats in LA, he was traded to the Yankees on July 31, 2003, with Scott Proctor for Robin Ventura.

Yankees (2004-06)

Crosby played primarily as a back-up outfielder (mostly in RF--where he has never made an error in the major leagues--and CF) and pinch-runner for the Yankees.

While he liked to run, he hesitated to do so with the Yankees. "Sometimes I'd get the green light, but I'd get the stare from Joe (Torre) that said I better be sure. Then you hesitate and just wait for (Hideki) Matsui to hit a two-run homer."[1]

In early 2004, he hit two home runs and played impressive defense after starting a game against the White Sox. During the season, as Bubba was being sent back and forth to Columbus and New York numerous times, Manager Joe Torre jokingly called the process of calling-up from the Minors as the "Bubba." He batted .153 for the season, but .400 with runners in scoring position, and showed hustle and proved to be a reliable backup.

In 2005 Crosby hit .320 in spring training, and began the season playing for the former Yankees AAA affiliate, the Columbus Clippers, but he was called up by the Yankees on June 16, 2005. He was optioned down to the Clippers on July 8, 2005, but returned to the Yankees on July 18th. Crosby returned to the Yankees wearing jersey number 18 because his previous number, 19, had been assigned to the newly acquired Al Leiter. September 19, 2005 he hit his first walk-off homer, against Eric DuBose of the Baltimore Orioles, leading off the bottom of the 9th inning by sending a breaking ball over the right-center fence.

On October 10, 2005, Crosby was involved in a collision in Game 5 of the 2005 ALDS against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. With the Yankees up 2-1, the Angels had runners on first and second with two outs when Adam Kennedy hit a pitch off Mike Mussina deep to right-center. Crosby and Gary Sheffield collided while trying to catch the ball, allowing two runs to score to give the Angels a 3-2 lead. The Angels would go on to win the game 5-3.

On August 4, 2006, Crosby was designated for assignment by the New York Yankees. He cleared waivers on August 9, however, and reported back to the Clippers, remaining in the Yankee organization. He became a 6-year Minor League free agent after the season.

Reds (2007-present)

On November 10, 2006, the Cincinnati Reds signed Crosby for the 2007 season. Crosby agreed to a 1-year contract that pays $400,000 while he is in the majors, and $75,000 in the minors [2]. By signing him to a Major League deal, Cincinnati protected Crosby on its 40-man roster. But he was not assured a 25-man roster spot for Opening Day 2007, and went to spring training competing for a job as a reserve outfielder. "We're getting a guy that's been on winning teams, that plays the game the right way, that always plays it hard and can play all three outfield positions," Reds general manager Wayne Krivsky said. "We're happy to have him." [3]

Crosby hit .276 in 16 games in spring training with 1 homer and 7 RBIs. The Reds sent Crosby outright to Triple-A Louisville on March 24, 2007. Crosby accepted the demotion, and began the season in AAA. [4] "We just felt he was behind a couple of other guys for that spot," Krivsky said.[5] Louisville placed Crosby on the disabled list after 13 games. The diagnosis was left shoulder tendinitis. Conservative treatment was unsuccessful, and on July 20, in Cincinnati, he had season-ending surgery on his shoulder. He is expected to be fully recovered before spring training next year.

The Reds granted Crosby free agency in October 2007.

Awards

  • 1996 - Freshman 1st-Team All-American OF
  • 1997 - Summer League 1st-Team All-American OF
  • 1997 - Western Athletic Conference All-Star OF
  • 1998 - 1st-Team College All-American OF
  • 1998 - Western Athletic Conference All-Star OF
  • 2001 - Southern League All-Star OF
  • 2003 - Pacific Coast League Player of the Month, May
  • 2003 - Pacific Coast League All-Star OF
  • 2004 - James Dawson Award (given to the top rookie at the Yankees spring training camp)

Miscellaneous

  • He became Bubba when his 15-month-old sister, Charmin, couldn't say brother, and it stuck. He said, "I tried to change it in school, call myself Richard, but kids would call for me and ask for Richard, and my parents would burst out laughing and say, 'You mean Bubba?'"
  • Bubba Crosby frequently returns to Bellaire High School to visit current players and motivate the team.