Riccardo Ingram

Riccardo Benay Ingram (September 10, 1966 – March 31, 2015) was a professional baseball player. He played for the Detroit Tigers and the Minnesota Twins of Major League Baseball. At the time of his death, Ingram was serving as a roving instructor in the Twins Minor League system.[1]

Riccardo Ingram
Outfielder
Born: (1966-09-10)September 10, 1966
Douglas, Georgia
Died: March 31, 2015(2015-03-31) (aged 48)
Lilburn, Georgia
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
June 26, 1994, for the Detroit Tigers
Last MLB appearance
July 30, 1995, for the Minnesota Twins
MLB statistics
Batting average.194
Home runs0
Hits6
Runs batted in3
Teams

Career

His career is profiled in the book, "Journeymen: 24 Bittersweet Tales of Short Major League Sports Careers."

Ingram played baseball and football at Georgia Tech where he stood out in both sports winning the McKelvin Award as the ACC athlete of the year, the first Yellow Jacket to win that award.

Upon leaving Georgia Tech, Ingram was drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the 4th Round (105th overall) of the 1987 Major League Baseball draft. He made his debut with the Tigers in 1994 getting 5 hits in 23 at bats in only 12 games played. After the 1994 season he was granted free agency. On January 26, 1995 he signed a free agent contract with the Minnesota Twins. He played in 4 games in 1995 gathering 1 hit in 8 at-bats. After the season, he signed another free agent contract with the San Diego Padres but did not play in any regular season games for them.

In the minor leagues Ingram compiled a .276 batting average, with 74 home runs and 428 RBI over 9 seasons. In 1995, he won the Triple A batting crown with the Salt Lake Buzz with a .348 average.

After his playing career was over Ingram became a coach in the Twins minor league system. He coached in Ft. Wayne (1998), Quad City (1999), Ft. Myers (2000 to 2002), and New Britain (2003 to 2007 (serving as the team's manager in 2006 and 2007)) before being promoted to Rochester as the Red Wing's new hitting coach.

In 2009, Ingram was diagnosed with brain cancer and returned to coaching following six weeks of radiation therapy. The cancer returned in 2014 and Ingram died on March 31, 2015 at the age of 48.

gollark: The problem is that "people using psychedelics feel god-related things" is entirely consistent with "god(s) exist" and "god(s) don't exist, but drugs can push god-related buttons in the brain".
gollark: That makes me less convinced, really.
gollark: What of it? Human brains are very glitchy.
gollark: I have ominous "oh bee a thing is behind me" feelings sometimes. However, this is not actually *true*.
gollark: It's evidence, sure, but weak.

References


Preceded by
Stan Cliburn
New Britain Rock Cats manager
2006–2007
Succeeded by
Bobby Cuellar
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