COLUMBUS, Ohio – After a rough pitching outing earlier this season, Tanner Burns called his dad back home in Decatur, Alabama, for some fatherly wisdom.
Like his son, Mike Burns played minor league baseball.
“’You’re one phone call away,’” Tanner recalls his dad telling him. “’You’re literally knocking on the door.’
“That really hasn’t hit me because I’m usually thinking, ‘What do I have to do today to get better? Or ‘What did I do yesterday that I can make better today?’ But I really am one phone call away from fulfilling my childhood dream.”
In his fourth professional season, Burns plays for the Columbus Clippers, Cleveland’s top minor league affiliate, 142 miles – and one phone call – from pitching at Progressive Field in the big leagues.
“I do think about it,” Burns said. “I think that’s what makes me want to work harder every day so I can have that conversation with (Columbus manager Andy) Tracy as soon as I can.
“I’m trying to be where my feet are, not trying to play GM. I’m a professional baseball player, I’m not a general manager. But I do look forward to that day, and the people I love are also looking forward to that.”
A full-time reliever for the first time in his career, Burns made the switch to the bullpen late last season, convinced that it was his quickest path to the majors.
“I’m available every night,” he said. “When I come to the field, I don’t know if I’m going to throw tonight, so I better be ready. I like knowing that.”