It was a career spent entirely in the minor leagues. Talking to The Daily News about what went wrong, Brown pointed directly at himself.
"Nobody got in Adam Brown's way but Adam Brown," Brown told The Daily News. "When I first signed, I was young and felt invincible. I played hurt all of 1986 and had to have Tommy John surgery. I sat out all of 1987."
Brown returned to hit AA San Antonio in 1988 and get his first brief look at AAA Albuquerque in 1990. But Brown never got his look at the majors, his career ending that year in 1995 playing at AA.
Brown's career began in 1986, taken by the Dodgers in the fourth round out of Georgia Perimeter College. At Georgia Perimeter that year, Brown had won National Junior College All-American honors.
With the Dodgers, Brown started at rookie Great Falls. The catcher hit .301, with eight home runs in 64 games. Then he lost all of 1987.
Returning to the field in 1988, Brown played much of the year at single-A Bakersfield. In 92 games, he hit a smoking .352. He also earned a 30-game promotion to AA San Antonio and he continued his hitting, hitting .296.
He returned to San Antonio for 1989, but got into just 42 games on the year. In 1990, he got five games at AAA Albuquerque, but again played just 48 games on the season. He played the rest back at San Antonio.
In 1991, Brown played much of the year back at high-A Vero Beach. There, Brown hit .284 in 58 games. He also made the All-Star team. He also played 15 more games at San Antonio.
Brown returned to the Dodgers organization for one more season, in 1992. He played 37 games between AA and AAA. For 1993, Brown moved to the Cubs system and 38 more games. Thirty-six of those were back in the Florida State League at Daytona.
Brown returned for one last look at AAA in 1994, 60 games at Iowa. He also started with 11 games at AA Orlando, helping tie one April game with a double.
Then came 1995. The occasion for Brown's interview with The Daily News was the strike. Brown signed a minor league contract with the Reds. And he refused to be a replacement player.
Instead, he returned to the minors, at AA Chattanooga. He played 77 games there, hitting .266, ending his career without making the majors.
- Dayton Daily News, March 5, 1995: Catcher declines short cut to Reds (search headline)
Cards Featured: 587/880 - 66.7%
Players/Coaches Featured: 598
Made the Majors: 401 - 67%
Never Made the Majors:197-33%
5+ Seasons in the Majors: 171
10+ Seasons in the Minors: 127
More 1990 Minor Leaguers:
- Mario Brito threw shutout in AA playoffs, saw 13 pro seasons, 2/14/11
- Grant Brittain saw 3 seasons, then signed players as scout, 11/24/16
- Grant Brittain saw 3 seasons, then signed players as scout, 11/24/16
- Doug Brocail saw 15 major league campaigns, later coached, 11/15/20
- Don Brock took college line drive off thigh, saw 3 seasons, 1/30/13
- Don Brock took college line drive off thigh, saw 3 seasons, 1/30/13
- Rico Brogna saw 9 ML seasons, felt he belonged with Mets, 10/13/13
- Jeff Brohm turned to football, made NFL, college FB coach, 3/17/15
- Jerry Brooks received minors praise, then saw 17 ML games, 10/27/18
- Monte Brooks played 4 seasons, then turned college coach, 7/20/14
- Ramy Brooks grew up in college, saw 9 pro seasons, AAA, 8/24/18
- Jeff Brohm turned to football, made NFL, college FB coach, 3/17/15
- Jerry Brooks received minors praise, then saw 17 ML games, 10/27/18
- Monte Brooks played 4 seasons, then turned college coach, 7/20/14
- Ramy Brooks grew up in college, saw 9 pro seasons, AAA, 8/24/18
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