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Edwar Ramírez

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Edwar Ramírez
File:Edwar.jpg
New York Yankees – No. 36
Relief Pitcher
Bats: Right
Throws: Right
debut
July 3, 2007, for the New York Yankees
Career statistics
(through July 29, 2008)
Win-Loss3-1
Earned Run Average4.40
Strikeouts75
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams

Edwar E. Ramírez (born March 28, 1981, in El Cercado, Dominican Republic) is a relief pitcher for the New York Yankees.

Minor Leagues

The Angels: 2002-2005

Ramírez was in the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim system from 2002-2003 when he was released without advancing past the Single A level. He did not play professional baseball in 2004.

In early 2005 he was re-signed by the Angels, but he was quickly released by the club for the second time in his short career after playing in one game for the AAA affiliate, the Salt Lake Bees.[1]

Independent Leagues: 2005-2006

Ramírez played Independent baseball for the Pensacola Pelicans and the Edinburg Coyotes in 2005 and 2006 before signing with the Yankees on July 9, 2006. [2][3]

In 43 games with Pensacola, Ramírez had a 1.45 ERA, struck out 93 batters and walked only 15 and finished with a record of 2-2 with 11 saves over 62 innings of work. With Edinburg, he threw 25.1 innings of relief over 25 games, finishing with a 1-1 record and 16 saves. He also had 46 strikeouts, 10 walks and a 1.07 ERA. [4]

The Yankees

International League baseball autographed by Ramírez

Ramírez pitched for the Single A Tampa Yankees for the remainder of the 2006 season. He pitched 32.2 innings, compiled a record of 4-1, an ERA of 1.17 and struck out 47.

He began the 2007 season with the Yankees' AA affiliate, the Trenton Thunder. In 9 relief appearances he had a record of 3-0 and 1 save, and allowed only 1 run in 16.2 innings, for an ERA of 0.54. He compiled 33 strikeouts and 8 walks. He was promoted to the AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees, where he pitched 26.2 innings of relief in 15 games, allowing on 2 runs over that span (0.67 ERA). He tallied 47 strikeouts and 9 walks in that time. [5]

Ramírez was called up to the Major League club for the first time on July 1, 2007.[6] He remained with the club for nearly three weeks, and was optioned back to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on July 21.

In his first appearance following his demotion, Ramírez picked up where he left off, striking out two in 1.1 hitless innings, helping Joba Chamberlain hold onto his first career Triple A victory.[7]

On October 10, 2007, Ramírez was named the Minor League Baseball Reliever of the Year.[8].

Major League Career

In his major league debut on July 3, 2007, against the Minnesota Twins, Ramírez pitched the ninth inning for the Yankees and struck out all three batters he faced, including reigning AL MVP Justin Morneau, securing an 8-0 win for the Yankees. The last Yankee to strike out the side in his debut was Stan Bahnsen in 1966.[9]

On July 6, against his former club, the Angels, he gave up 1 run on 2 hits in 1.1 innings; as the pitcher of record, he was awarded his first career win in the 14-9 Yankees victory.[10]

In his final relief appearance in his first stint with the major league club, he faced the Tampa Bay Devil Rays on July 20 he walked four and gave up a grand slam to Dioner Navarro without recording an out, with only 2 of his 19 pitches resulting in strikes. After the game, he was so shaken by his performance that he had to cut short his comments to reporters, and was seen crying at his locker.[11] He was optioned back to AAA the following day.

On August 15, Ramírez was recalled by the Yankees, striking out three Baltimore Orioles in 2.1 scoreless innings in his return[12].

On August 19, 2007 Ramírez earned his first Major League save against the Detroit Tigers with two hitless innings, striking out the side in the 8th.

On April 18, 2008 he was recalled from AAA and was sent down a day later. He was then called up again on April 29, 2008 and is currently a reliever in their bullpen.[13] He did not give up a run at any level of baseball through May 31.

Yankees closer Mariano Rivera has taken Ramírez and fellow reliever José Veras under his wing, and is often seen mentoring the two in the Yankee bullpen during games[14].

Pitching Style

Ramírez primarily throws a 89-91 MPH fastball with slight lateral movement. His primary strikeout pitch is a low 80s circle changeup that has similar movement to a palmball, and is particularly effective against left-handed batters. He taught himself the change-up during his year-long hiatus from professional baseball in 2004. [15]

Nickname

"Chocolate Rain".

References