Scott Davison

Biography

Scotty Ray Davison (born October 16, 1970) is an American former professional baseball pitcher for the Seattle Mariners of Major League Baseball (MLB) (1995–1996) and Chiba Lotte Marines of Nippon Professional Baseball in 1998. Davison attended Redondo Union High School, in Redondo Beach, California, graduating in 1988. That year, he was named the South Bay Player of the Year by the Los Angeles Times after batting .437 and pitching to a 18–1 win–loss record. He was inducted into the school's athletics hall of fame in 2013. The Montreal Expos drafted Davison in the fourth round of the 1988 MLB draft as a shortstop, and he signed for a $50,000 signing bonus, forgoing a commitment to play college baseball for the USC Trojans. By 1990, he said he wanted to switch back to pitching, but Dan Duquette, the Expos assistant general manager, said the organization wanted him to improve as a hitter. After batting .168 with the 1991 West Palm Beach Expos, Montreal released him. After working as an assistant coach at West Torrance High School and driving a UPS truck, the Mariners signed Davison as a pitcher in May 1994 following a try out in Long Beach, California. That year, he pitched at three minor league levels, earning seven saves in 13 games with the Bellingham Mariners, pitching four games with the Appleton Foxes, then posting a 6.14 earned run average (ERA) with the Triple-A Calgary Cannons. He also pitched in the Arizona Instructional League and Puerto Rican winter league that offseason. Bellingham pitching coach Bryan Price said Davison had a good fastball but poor command on his slider. After pitching primarily in Double-A in 1995, Davidson was a September call-up and made his major league debut with the Mariners on September 4, pitching in three games as a reliever, with a 6.23 ERA. He did not pitch for the team in the postseason. He pitched in five more games for Seattle in May 1996, with a 9.00 ERA in his second and final MLB season. He went on the disabled list with

Bio from Wikipedia

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Credited work

22 releases · 10 albums · active 1985–2018

  • Performance · 23
  • Other credits · 8

Studios: Reflection Sound Studios · Drive-In Studio · Videofonics · TGS Studios

Frequent collaborators

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