References
ESPN player card on ESPN.com
Biography and Career Highlights on Reds.com
Rick White Statistics on Baseball-Reference.com
ESPN player card on ESPN.com
Biography and Career Highlights on Reds.com
Rick White Statistics on Baseball-Reference.com
ESPN player card on ESPN.com
Biography and Career Highlights on Reds.com
Rick White Statistics on Baseball-Reference.com
Richard Allen White was born in Springfield, Ohio on December 23, 1968 where he’s lived his entire life. Rick and his wife Corrie have three children: Alexis (2/25/97), Dakota (8/27/99), and Hunter (8/13/02).
White graduated from Kenton Ridge High School in 1987 and Paducah Community College, where he got a degree in Applied Science.
Lots of people think Rick White resembles David Wells. Not long after Bronson Arroyo was traded to the Reds in during spring training, White appeared on the field without a name on his shirt and caused quite a stir among the people I was sitting near in the stands of Ed Smith stadium. Apparently they thought it might have been a package deal.
Richard Allen White was born in Springfield, Ohio on December 23, 1968 where he's lived his entire life. Rick and his wife Corrie have three children: Alexis (2/25/97), Dakota (8/27/99), and Hunter (8/13/02).
White graduated from Kenton Ridge High School in 1987 and Paducah Community College, where he got a degree in Applied Science.
Lots of people think Rick White resembles David Wells. Not long after Bronson Arroyo was traded to the Reds in during spring training, White appeared on the field without a name on his shirt and caused quite a stir among the people I was sitting near in the stands of Ed Smith stadium. Apparently they thought it might have been a package deal.
Rick White is a right-handed reliever for the Cincinnati Reds. He was signed by pre-Krivsky interim general manager Brad Kullman to a one-year, $600,000 contract with a potential $300,000 in performance bonuses.
In 2005, the Reds benefitted greatly from the wisdom and experience of veterans David Weathers and Kent Mercker. They apparently thought that if two veterans were good, four would be twice as good, and so signed Chris Hammond and White for 2006. I don’t know whether their wisdom and experience is helping the team any, but they’ve certainly made some of the young guys look pretty good by comparison.
White has pitched for ten different teams in his ten years of major league experience:
Last season with Pittsburgh, White made 71 appearances, going 4-7 with a 3.72 ERA. That looks OK, but he’s got a rep for allowing inherited runners to score.
Check out his hard-core statistical analysis over on JinAZ’s site.