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Tyler Green

Background

Tyler Green graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School (Denver, Colorado) in 1988. He was named Gatorade National Player of the Year along with Dr. Pepper Colorado Athlete of the Year. The Cincinnati Reds drafted Tyler as their 2nd pick out of high school but he opted to attend Division I baseball powerhouse Wichita State with legendary coaches Gene Stephenson and Brent Kemnitz. As a freshman starter, Green helped the Shockers (68-16) to a NCAA Division I Championship. Earlier that year he was a member of the gold-medal winning Team USA and was the MVP beating Cuba 8-1 with a complete game 1-hitter and at one point retired 17 straight Cuba batters in the 1988 Jr. Olympics in Sydney Australia. His sophomore campaign was highlighted by a 9 inning no-hitter against New Mexico which carried into the Cape Cod Summer League where Tyler received the "Top Pro Prospect" award given by the coaches and pro scouts. As a junior, he earned First Team All Missouri Valley Conference. He earned All-Tournament recognition and was named Most Outstanding Player of the 1991 MVC Classic. He ranked 7th in the nation with 134 strikeouts and 17th with an average of 10.4 strikeouts per 9 innings pitched. On June 7th 1991, the day of the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft, Tyler was chosen as the 10th pick in the first round by the Philadelphia Phillies. Later that night in Omaha Nebraska at the College World Series, he stuck out 14 and combined with teammate Jamie Bluma to beat hometown favorite Creighton University 3-2 in a 12-inning dual which is still touted as one of the best College World Series games in history. After a short stint in the minor leagues which included a no-hitter vs. Ottawa on July 4th, Tyler made his Major League debut as a member of the 1993 National League Champion Phillies, where he joined a pitching staff made up of Curt Schilling, Terry Mulholland and Mitch Williams. "Macho Row" members Lenny Dykstra, Darren Daulton and John Kruk also led that team. Green's best season was in 1995, where he was in the running for Rookie of the Year along with Hideo Nomo and after back to back complete game shutouts against the Dodgers and a clutch performance beating John Smoltz and the Atlanta Braves, Tyler was selected to represent the Phillies and the National League in the All-Star Game in Arlington Texas. After battling through 4 shoulder and 2 elbow surgeries, Tyler ended his 10 year career as a member of the Kansas City Royals and Cleveland Indian organizations in 2000.

Upon retiring from Major League Baseball, Mr. Green briefly joined a major national bank in sales and marketing before leaving to run the Sports and Entertainment Division of an International Consulting Firm headquartered outside of Philadelphia. In the process of developing a post career transition program for athletes, the principles of Cambridge Sports LLC were brought together.

Mr. Green remains active in the Philadelphia area occasionally appearing locally on Comcast Sports Net's Phillies Post game Live and on CN8's Lou Tilley's Sports Connection. He has also made guest appearances on local radio stations, including the popular 610 WIP Sports talk show. He continues his affiliation with the Phillies, coaches High School Baseball at Germantown Academy, writes and produces music for his publishing company KnuckleCurv Music and is involved with numerous charitable organizations including his long standing relationship with the Philadelphia Chapter of the ALS Association (Lou Gehrig's disease).

Tyler and his wife Lynne reside just outside of Philadelphia and have three young children, Amanda (6), Abigail (4) and Emma (2).