Jump to content
Brewer Fanatic
Brewer Fanatic Contributor
Posted

Manuel Alex Parra was born in 1982 in Carmichael, California. He graduated from Casa Roble High School in nearby Orangevale, both suburbs of Sacramento. The left-hander was selected in the 26th round of the 2001 MLB Amateur Draft by the Brewers as a ‘draft-and-follow’ player. Parra attended American River College in Sacramento for two years and elected to sign with the Brewers in May 2002 for a $1.25 million signing bonus. Parra was named the national Junior College Player of the Year by Baseball America.

About signing with the Brewers, Parra said, “…I can move up quickly in that organization. They definitely need pitching.” That didn’t quite happen as it took Parra six years to reach the majors. He moved from Double-A Huntsville to Triple-A Nashville in 2007, pitching a perfect game in his second start with Nashville. A month later he was called up to Milwaukee, where he would make nine appearances (two starts) before suffering a broken thumb in late August. He finished the season on the disabled list and ended with a record of 0-1, an ERA+ of 120, and a FIP of 3.35 across 26 innings pitched.

In 2008, Parra spent the whole season with the Brewers and won 10 games and compiled a slightly-below average ERA+ (96) and a FIP of 4.16 across 29 starts and three relief appearances. He did lead the National League in one category: wild pitches. His 17 errant offerings tied for first with Tim “Big Time Timmy Jim” Lincecum, who led the NL three times.

Parra started the 2009 season in Milwaukee but was sent down to Nashville to work on ‘control issues.’ After four starts in the minors, Parra was recalled and finished the season with the Brewers. He won a career-high 11 games, but had a sub-par ERA+ of 65, a FIP of 4.88, and an astronomical ERA of 6.36 across 140 innings and 27 starts.

Spring training 2010 saw Parra battling with Jeff Suppan, Dave Bush, and Chris Narveson for the final two starting spots. Bush and Narveson got the spots while Parra started the year in the pen. Parra pitched well in relief the first two months and then got pressed into a starting role when Doug Davis was lost due to injury. Parra made 15 starts between late May and late August, but struggled, losing seven of nine decisions while giving up 16 gopher balls in just 77 innings, a rate of 1.87/nine IP. He also walked 44 batters, a BB rate of 11.7%. For the season, Parra compiled an ERA+ of 80 and a 4.51 FIP across 42 appearances (16 starts).

Parra’s 2011 season was a total trainwreck, as he went on the DL in spring training, made a handful of rehab appearances in the minors, and missed the rest of the season with a back injury and elbow surgery.

The southpaw pitched strictly in relief for Milwaukee in 2012, making 62 appearances. He once again struggled with his command, walking batters at a rate of 12.8%. The once promising prospect had become a middle reliever and after the season was granted free agency. The Cincinnati Reds signed him in February 2013.

Parra spent three years with the Reds, making 150 relief appearances. Despite solid numbers, including an ERA+ of 98, a FIP of 3.45, and a reduced BB rate (8.1%), he was granted free agency after the 2015 season. The Chicago Cubs signed him to a minor league contract but missed the whole season after undergoing Tommy John surgery in April. Parra would never pitch in the majors again.

Over the next several seasons, Parra pitched in the minors for the Cubs and the San Francisco Giants. He also pitched a few games in the independent Atlantic League and one final season in the Mexican League. Parra retired from professional baseball in February 2022.

Over eight major league seasons, Parra had a record of 29-41, and ERA of 4.90, and an ERA+ of 84 and FIP of 4.17.


View full player

Recommended Posts

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund
The Brewer Fanatic Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Brewers community on the internet. Included with caretaking is ad-free browsing of Brewer Fanatic.

×
×
  • Create New...