Glenn Borgmann

Catcher, Baseball Player

1950 –

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Who is Glenn Borgmann?

Glenn Dennis Borgmann is a retired Major League Baseball player who spent nine seasons in the major leagues, from 1972 until 1980, primarily as a catcher. He played for the Minnesota Twins and later the Chicago White Sox.

Borgmann was drafted out of the University of South Alabama by the Minnesota Twins in the first round of the secondary phase of the 1971 Major League Baseball Draft. A little over a year later, he made his major league debut for the Twins. He became the team's starting catcher during the second half of 1972, replacing the platoon of Phil Roof and George Mitterwald.

After spending most of 1973 in the minor leagues, Borgmann was back in the majors for good in 1974. That season, he took over as the club's starting catcher, batting .252 in 128 games while leading all American League catchers with a .997 fielding percentage. After seeing his average slip to .207 in 1975, Borgmann lost the starting job to rookie Butch Wynegar in 1976. He spent four seasons as Wynegar's backup, then became a free agent.

Borgmann signed with the Chicago White Sox in 1980. After starting the season in the minors, Borgmann was called up in August to replace Ricky Seilheimer as the main backup to starting catcher Bruce Kimm. In September, he split time behind the plate with Marv Foley. Borgmann became a free agent again after the season.

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Born
May 25, 1950
Paterson
Profession
Education
  • University of South Alabama
Lived in
  • Paterson

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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