- Daniel Bard
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Daniel Bard Boston Red Sox — No. 51 Pitcher Born: June 25, 1985
Houston, TexasBats: Right Throws: Right MLB debut May 13, 2009 for the Boston Red Sox Career statistics
(through 2011)Win-Loss 5-13 ERA 2.88 Strikeouts 213 Saves 5 Teams - Boston Red Sox (2009–present)
Medal record Men’s baseball Competitor for United States World University Championship Gold 2004 Tainan Team Daniel Paul Bard (born June 25, 1985) is an American professional baseball pitcher with the Boston Red Sox of Major League Baseball. Bard made his debut with the Red Sox in May 2009.
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Collegiate career
At the midpoint of the 2004 season, Baseball America named Bard the top freshman pitcher in the U.S. and gave him Freshman All-America honors. For the entire season, Bard was named to Baseball America's All-Freshman second team and was named as Freshman All-America by Collegiate Baseball. He was Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Freshman of the Year and earned first-team all-conference honors. In 16 games pitched, Bard was 8–4 with a 3.88 ERA; his eight wins tied the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill freshman record.
2005
For the 2005 season, Bard was named preseason first-team All-America by Baseball America and was named preseason third-team All-America by Collegiate Baseball and by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association. Bard went 7–5 with a 4.22 ERA in 16 starts and was third in the ACC in opponents' batting average at .219. He was named to the Roger Clemens Award Watch List.
Bard was a second-team summer All-American selection in 2005 Cape Cod League after a successful summer with the Wareham Gatemen, where he led the league in innings pitched and strikeouts while finishing 3rd in ERA. Bard and fellow North Carolina left-hander Andrew Miller were rated the top two prospects in the Cape Cod League.
2006
Bard and Miller lead the UNC to the College World Series, but lost to Oregon State, two games to one.[1] He finished his junior year with a 9–4 record and a 3.64 ERA in 17 starts. He earned ACC pitcher of the week honors twice during the 2006 season.
Pro career
On June 6, 2006, Bard was selected in the first round (28th overall) of the 2006 Major League Baseball Draft by the Boston Red Sox. On September 4, Bard signed with the team. Bard admitted that he had enrolled in classes at UNC as a backup plan in case a deal with the Red Sox was not finalized in time.[2][3] Bard had been previously selected in the 20th round with the 604th overall selection out of high school by the New York Yankees in the 2003 Major League Baseball Draft, but did not sign.
2007
Drafted as a starting pitcher, Bard spent the 2007 season in the same role starting all 22 of his appearances in 2007 with the Greenville Drive and Lancaster Jethawks. Unfortunately for Bard, the results were disastrous: He posted a 7.05 ERA between the two levels, and walked 78 batters in 75⅓ innings pitched.
Because of the poor success starting, at the end of the 2007 season Bard was moved into the bullpen to pitch as a reliever.[4] While pitching out of the bullpen in winter ball in Hawaii, Bard put up a 1.08 ERA in 16 appearances. While control was still an issue, there was still a large improvement.
2008
Remaining in the bullpen, Bard split time between the Greenville Drive and Portland Sea Dogs. He posted a 1.51 ERA and had 107 strikeouts in 77⅔ innings of work, and was named the Boston Red Sox 2008 Minor League Pitcher of the Year.
2009
Bard began the season at AAA Pawtucket. He faced 58 batters in 16 innings this season giving up six hits and striking out 29. Of those six hits, two were home runs.
On May 10, 2009, the Red Sox designated pitcher Javier López for assignment, and called up Bard from the Triple-A Pawtucket Red Sox.[5] On May 13, 2009, he made his major-league debut against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim pitching 2 scoreless innings in a 8-4 loss.
Bard made his debut at Fenway Park on May 20, against the Toronto Blue Jays in the 8th inning. He gave up two hits on the first two pitches thrown, eventually giving up a run. He pitched ⅔ of an inning being replaced by the left-hander Hideki Okajima after the second out, leaving two runners on base.
Bard recorded his first career save in the 13th inning of a 5-2 victory against the Philadelphia Phillies. Although he gave up a walk, and hit a batter with a pitch, Bard managed to strike out the side to clinch the save.
Bard recorded his first major league win on August 26, against the Chicago White Sox after pitching a scoreless inning and a third in the eight and ninth followed by a walk off home run by David Ortiz.
Bard was a post-season correspondent for ESPN.[6]
2010
Bard was the primary setup man in the bullpen once again. He appeared in 73 games, posted a great 1.93 ERA and 1.00 WHIP on the season with 76 strikeouts.
2011
Bard set the club record with 21 scoreless appearance. The previous record was held by Ugueth Urbina.
References
- ^ ESPN: Underdog Oregon State wins College World Series
- ^ The Official Site of The Boston Red Sox: Official Info: Red Sox sign right-hander Daniel Bard, team's second overall pick in 2006 First-Year Player Draft
- ^ The Official Site of The Boston Red Sox: News: First-round pick Bard signs with Sox
- ^ Boston Globe: Bard pens a comeback story
- ^ The Official Site of The Boston Red Sox: Official Info: Red Sox select right-handed pitcher Daniel Bard to active roster
- ^ [1] Red Sox reliever Daniel Bard chronicles his playoff preparations - ESPN Boston
External links
- Career statistics and player information from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube, or Baseball-Reference (Minors)
- Daniel Bard at soxprospects.com
- UNC profile of Bard
Boston Red Sox current roster Active roster 2 Jacoby Ellsbury | 10 Marco Scutaro | 11 Clay Buchholz | 12 Jed Lowrie | 13 Carl Crawford | 15 Dustin Pedroia | 16 Josh Reddick | 18 Daisuke Matsuzaka | 19 Josh Beckett | 20 Kevin Youkilis | 28 Adrian Gonzalez | 30 Andrew Miller | 31 Jon Lester | 32 Matt Albers | 33 Jason Varitek | 36 Conor Jackson | 39 Jarrod Saltalamacchia | 41 John Lackey | 46 Franklin Morales | 48 Scott Atchison | 49 Tim Wakefield | 51 Daniel Bard | 52 Bobby Jenks | 53 Rich Hill | 54 Darnell McDonald | 55 Ryan Kalish 56 Trever Miller | 59 Luis Exposito | 60 Ryan Lavarnway | 61 Félix Doubront | 62 Lars Anderson | 63 Junichi Tazawa | 64 Michael Bowden | 70 Kyle Weiland | 74 Stolmy Pimentel | 76 José Iglesias | 84 Óscar Tejeda | 91 Alfredo Aceves | -- Drake Britton | -- Che-Hsuan Lin | -- Will Middlebrooks
Coaching Staff Manager -- Vacant | Bench Coach 22 DeMarlo Hale | 1st Base Coach 50 Ron Johnson | 3rd Base Coach 17 Tim Bogar | Hitting Coach 29 Dave Magadan | Pitching Coach -- Vacant | Bullpen Coach 57 Gary Tuck
Categories:- North Carolina Tar Heels baseball players
- Lancaster JetHawks players
- Greenville Drive players
- Portland Sea Dogs players
- Pawtucket Red Sox players
- Boston Red Sox players
- 1985 births
- Living people
- People from Houston, Texas
- Major League Baseball pitchers
- Baseball players from Texas
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