PDA

View Full Version : Brannan goes from Marines to Padres



thedrifter
03-05-07, 05:58 AM
Brannan goes from Marines to Padres

By GREGG BELL, AP Sports Writer
Sun Mar 4, 9:00 PM ET

One by one, more than 80 players seated on a back field of the Padres' spring training complex stood and gave their names and where they were last season.

"Jesus Lopez. Fort Wayne. Eugene."

Class-A teammates laughed and teased.

"Michael Johnson. Pittsburgh Pirates. Indianapolis."

The group welcomed Johnson into the organization.

Then a tall, broad-shouldered and tanned No. 40 stood.

"Cooper Brannan. United States Marine Corps."

No one said a word.

No one had to. They all knew the story of the player unlike any other in camp. Or in baseball this spring. Brannan, a 22-year-old Marine infantryman home from a second tour of duty in Iraq because he lost a finger to a grenade, is trying to win a minor league pitching job with San Diego.

"It's not every day a guy coming out of the Marine Corps gets to do this, you know?" a beaming Corporal Brannan said as he walked through the Padres clubhouse after a bullpen session.

"It was great!"

Earlier, the 6-foot-4, 235-pound squad leader who grew up in nearby Gilbert, Ariz., threw his fastballs, two versions of a changeup and a splitter he wants to keep quiet.

He didn't show much of the curveball the Padres say is impressive — even though the only time Brannan has used it since high school four years ago was last summer with the All-Marine Corps team against semipro squads.

Bob Cluck, the former pitching coach for Detroit, Houston and Oakland and now San Diego's minor league pitching consultant, watched closely behind Brannan.

After Sunday's bullpen session — Cluck told the broad-shouldered Brannan he liked what he saw. Brannan asked "What's your name again?"

"Bob," Cluck answered.

"Nice to meet you, Bob," Brannan said.

There was no salute — or an incoming mortar round or sniper — to be found.

"Coming to this, it's just amazing," he said. "From calling your higher-ups 'Yes, sir' and 'No, sir' to calling your coaches by first name? It's a pretty big difference."

So is Brannan's lifestyle.

"Yeah, it's definitely a huge culture shock," he said, inside a carpeted clubhouse with televisions, whirlpools. "You go from living from the Bible times to coming back living in civilization, pretty much. You really know what you've taken for granted. You appreciate the smaller things in life."

Such as?

"Being able to walk outside your house without feeling like a bomb is going to go off on your frickin' street," he said, chuckling. "Being able to watch TV. Being able to use a toilet."

Brannan had all those things when he graduated from high school in May 2003, as a three-year letterman in football and baseball. He wasn't fully sure he wanted to commit to baseball career. But he was sure he wanted to commit to his country.

So he enlisted in the Marine Corps. He graduated from basic training as a platoon honor man, completed infantry school and was deployed to Hitt, Iraq, in February 2004.

He said he knew when he signed up that he'd be in a war almost immediately.

"I went to the Marine Corps for a lot of different reasons," he said. "No. 1, 9-11. And No. 2, I thought it could help me out with self-respect and the core values: honor, courage, commitment. I was able to achieve that in the Marine Corps."

His first eight-month tour in Iraq ended and he returned to his duty station in Twenty-nine Palms, Calif. Eleven months later, in September 2005, he was back with his unit in Fallujah, Iraq, for a second tour.

In November, Brannan was conducting pre-combat inspections of his 12-man squad before a patrol. One of his youngest, least-experienced squad members didn't have a flash-bang grenade. So Brannan reached into the left-side pocket of his flak jacket to give him his. It malfunctioned and exploded while still in Brannan's left hand.

While drifting in and out of consciousness, he thought his entire hand was blown off. But he had lost only his pinky. While he was in a morphine haze, doctors amputated what remained of the finger and the medial part of his hand, well below the outside knuckle.

After being evacuated to the Naval Medical Center in San Diego for three follow-up surgeries, Brannan got married to Lindsay Marie Wagener. They now have a 3-week-old daughter, Brooke, and the family is staying two blocks from the Padres camp.

During his recovery, he began working on rekindling his love for baseball, a love he had sustained by having his parents mail gloves and baseballs to Iraq. He'd play catch with fellow Marines between shifts of three days patrolling, three days guarding and three days as the quick reaction force, ready to aid patrols under fire.

"It's a challenge," he said. "There was nothing really sugarcoated about my job."

He is currently stationed at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego and on full recovery duty status. He cannot sign a Padres contract until after May 31, the last day of his Marines commitment.

Until then, he is fulfilling the most amazing military order he can imagine.

"Once I got the offer to come out here, they gave me orders to come play baseball. Pretty good deal, huh?" Brannan said, beaming again. "It was awesome."

He's definitely welcomed here. Padres chief executive officer Sandy Alderson served four years as an officer in the Marines, including a tour in Vietnam. The team plays some home games each season in Marine camouflage jerseys, to honor the thousands of Navy and Marine personnel stationed around San Diego.

The Padres insist this is not a feel-good publicity stunt, that Brannan is a good prospect with an above-average curveball to go with his far-above-average life experiences.

Grady Fuson, San Diego's vice president for scouting and player development, called Brannan "a young and athletic Marine with a solid build, a promising arm and a great breaking ball.

"The Padres love taking chances on athletic players and we are excited about having Cooper in the organization."

Brannan doesn't want to be a celebrity here, just a baseball player who has a good story to tell, if asked.

"I did a job," he said. "And I did what I was supposed to do, what I was asked to do. And I followed through and I did it. Mission complete."

Ellie

thedrifter
03-05-07, 06:01 AM
From Marines in Iraq to Padres in spring training, minus a finger


PEORIA, Ariz. A Marine who lost a finger to a grenade in Iraq is trying to win a minor league pitching job with the San Diego Padres.
Twenty-two-year-old Cooper Brannan came home from his second tour of duty in Iraq after he lost the pinky of his left hand when his grenade malfunctioned in November.The Marine infantryman is at Padres camp in Peoria, Arizona, where he is showing off what the team calls an above-average curveball.Brannan is an Arizona native with a 3-week-old daughter.The only baseball he has played in the four years since high school was on a Marines team.He is stationed at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego and is in full recovery status. He can't sign with the Padres until his military commitments end on May 31st.

Ellie

thedrifter
03-05-07, 06:16 AM
March 5, 2007 <br />
Proud Marine Tries on a Different Uniform as Padres Prospect <br />
By PAUL GIBLIN <br />
<br />
PEORIA, Ariz., March 4 — Cooper Brannan, a San Diego Padres pitching prospect, arrived at the team’s...

thedrifter
03-05-07, 06:47 AM
Marine combat veteran prefers Arizona's desert to Iraq's
By Tom Krasovic
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

March 5, 2007

PEORIA, Ariz. – When Padres minor leaguer Cooper Brannan spoke yesterday of his dream come true, it wasn't another can of corn being warmed in the spring-training cliché pot.

The 22-year-old pitcher was grateful simply for the TV and the toilet in his Peoria digs, for a sane world outside his window.

How beautiful it is, he said, to be “able to walk outside your house without feeling a bomb is going to go off on your street.”

Among ballplayers whose last stretch was in the minor league bushes, Brannan is different because he spent the bulk of the past two years in Iraq as a Marine infantryman.

“You appreciate the smaller things in life,” he said.

At 6 feet 4 inches and 235 pounds, Brannan looked every bit the ballplayer yesterday as he joined fellow minor leaguers for his first baseball workouts since the club signed him to a minor league contract last month.

He donned a blue Padres cap and a blue pullover, rather than a military helmet and a flak jacket.

He grabbed a glove, rather than his M16A4 service rifle.

He showed reporters how he wears the glove, leaving the index slot open because he has only three fingers on his left hand, minus a pinky that was claimed by a flash-bang grenade.

He moved lightly, unburdened by the some 65 pounds of military gear that was his constant companion in Fallujah and Hitt.

Courtesy of the Marines, he brought with him a keen appreciation of honor, courage and commitment, he said. And the strength of a plowhorse.

“I have a lot more strength than I had in high school,” he said. “The Marine Corps gave that to me. They work you every day. They work you hard.”

At his high school in Gilbert, Ariz., he was a varsity performer in baseball and football, and three months after graduation he joined the Marines, foremost, he said, because of the events of 9/11 but also because he craved a more disciplined life.

Baseball kept its grip on him, though. The apple he picked up as a Marine made him think of holding a baseball, Brannan said, adding that when he grasped his rifle, it sometimes reminded him of holding a bat.

He kept his arm in shape the best he could, pitching with the All-Marine Corps team and USA Military Stars. Respites on the front line allowed him to play catch with platoon mates. Wearing a flak jacket was more than worth the effort, even if it wasn't conducive to proper pitching form.

Talk about bad mechanics,” he said.

After the grenade incident in November 2005, when a faulty flash-bang went off in his left hand, it took three surgeries to get his hand back in order, followed by rehabilitation at San Diego Naval Medical Center. He considers it a small price that he occasionally struggles to hold onto objects with his left hand. Some of his friends returned from Iraq in body bags.

“It really doesn't bother me that I lost (the pinky),” said Brannan, who wears his wedding band on his right hand.

Assured a return to civilian life for the summer ahead, Brannan began his transition this past winter, getting married and retooling a pitching delivery that he since has improved.

Told about Brannan by Marines in San Diego, the Padres gave him a workout, and he showed enough for scout Brendan Hause to get him a minor league contract.

Brannan will pitch in minor league games this month, said Padres Vice President of Scouting and Development Grady Fuson. How he shows will determine whether he remains with other minor leaguers in extended spring training or gets a spot in the lower minors.

Brannan, whose fastball exceeds 90 mph, said he expects to reach the majors.

Don't expect him to refer to ballgames as “battles,” home runs as “bombs” or line drives as “bullets.”

“There was nothing sugarcoated about my job,” he said.

Tom Krasovic: (619) 293-2207; tom.krasovic@uniontrib.com

COOPER BRANNAN: FROM THE MARINES TO THE PADRES

In high school in Gilbert, Ariz., Brannan played varsity baseball and football. Three months after graduation he joined the Marines.

While a Marine he tried to keep his arm in shape by pitching with the All-Marine Corps team and USA Military Stars.

In November 2005, a faulty grenade went off in his left hand, claiming his pinky. It took three surgeries to get his hand back in order.

Ellie