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Bruce Gardner
Edmonton 1958, Regina 1959

The sad tale of Bruce Clark Gardner is
presented brilliantly in "An American Tragedy"
by Ira Kerkow and Murray Olderman, Inside Sports, August 31,
1980. A star college hurler with the storied University of
Southern California Trojans, he had a stunning first full pro
season (20-4, 2.82) before arm trouble curtailed his career.
Suicide ended his life in 1971, on the ball diamond at USC.
W L IP H BB SO ERA
1958 Edmonton 5-4 75 69 34 57 3.84
1959 Regina 5-6 110 106 54 101 3.60
In a series on the best minor league teams
of all time, Bill Weiss & Marshall Wright touched on the Bruce
Gardner story in an item on the Reno Silver Sox of 1961 :
Over the full season, the pitching star was the ill-fated Bruce Gardner
(20-4), who led the league in wins, ERA (2.82), percentage (.833)
and complete games (18). Gardner, a 22-year-old left-hander, was
in his second pro season. He never reached the majors, but made
headlines ten years later when he committed suicide on the
baseball field of his alma mater, the University of Southern
California. His body was found 15 feet from the pitcher’s mound.
Nearby was his All-America plaque. In his right hand was his USC
diploma. Gripped in his left hand was a .38 caliber revolver. One
bullet hole was in his left temple.
Gardner was a star at Fairfax High, student body president and was chosen
“student mayor for a day” of Los Angeles. It was reported that
the White Sox offered him a $50,000 bonus, a lot of money in 1956,
but his mother refused to sign the
contract because she wanted him
to go to college. He went to USC where he had a 50-5 record. When
Gardner graduated in 1960, the Dodgers signed him, but for a bonus
smaller than his earlier offer. He went directly to AAA Montreal
(International) where he was 0-1, 3.97 in 16 games. After the 1961
season, he went into the Army for six months under the reserve
training plan and while at Ford Ord he suffered an injury to his
pitching arm. Gardner was never the same pitcher again.
In 1962 he was 1-5, 6.00 at Spokane and in 1963 1-2, 9.00 at Salem
(Northwest) and 10-4, 4.07 at Great Falls (Pioneer). During spring
training in 1964 he broke his ankle practicing sliding and after
going 2-2, 5.40 at Salem that season he was released. After
baseball, Gardner tried other things. An accomplished pianist, he
performed at clubs in several cities. There were jam sessions at
parties in Los Angeles with, among others, two high school friends
who had become famous in the music business, Herb Alpert and Phil
Spector. Gardner was restless. He worked in the brokerage business
and was apparently successful, but quit to become a substitute
teacher. In 1971 he became JV baseball coach at Dorsey High in Los
Angeles and led his team to a league championship, but on June 7,
Gardner decided to end his life. Friends said he always was bitter
about not having been permitted to sign when he was 17. (MiLB.com)

Gardner (right) and USC teammate Pat Gillick arrive in Edmonton
for the 1958 season. Courtesy of the Edmonton
Archives EA 52461
Pat Gillick on Bruce Gardner :
He
was my roommate. It didn't surprise me. I can recall the
day. I was in New York City that day and I came down to breakfast
somebody said, "Did you hear about Bruce Gardner?" I said no
and he told me what had happened and it didn't surprise me because for
Bruce it really weighed on his mind. He had an opportunity to sign
with the Chicago White Sox out of high school and didn't take that
opportunity and went to USC and I think that probably, that thing weighed
on his mind more than anything I had ever run into. It really,
really, really bothered him that he didn't sign out of high school as
opposed to going to school and then signing.
He was very intense. Absolutely. And, yes he sure had
the talent to make it as a major leaguer. I just wasn't surprised
to hear it because he just really couldn't get away from this thing at
all.


The caption on the
Edmonton Journal photo was "BUT CAN HE
COOK?".
Bruce Gardner, with another standout mound performance
in the playoffs, helped at the plate with a run-scoring triple. The
Lloydminster third baseman is Suge Carter. (Edmonton
Journal, August 20, 1958)
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