⸻ A Live Conversation

Bret Boone

"What I learned growing up a Boone."

Date

Tue, June 23
2026

Time

7:00 PM ET
4:00 PM PT

Runtime

60 minutes
incl. Q&A

Limited seats available · Replay access included

 

14

MLB Seasons

252

Home Runs

1,021

RBI

.266

Career AVG

22.8

Career WAR

⸻ About the Speaker

Bret Boone

14 seasons. Three-year run as one of the best second basemen alive (2001 to 2003). Author. Podcast host. Recent interim hitting coach for the Texas Rangers.

His father caught nineteen seasons. His grandfather played thirteen. His brother manages the Yankees. His son is in the Nationals organization.

Bret Boone played 14 seasons in the major leagues, beginning with the Seattle Mariners in 1992 and ending with stops in Seattle and Minnesota in 2005. He was a three-time All-Star, won four Gold Gloves at second base, took home two Silver Sluggers, and finished third in the 2001 American League MVP race on a Seattle team that won 116 games and never reached the World Series. Across his career he hit .266, drove in 1,021 runs, and posted 22.8 WAR. Most of that production was crammed into the three-season run from 2001 to 2003, when by the numbers he was one of the best second basemen in the game.

He was also the first third-generation major leaguer the game had ever seen. His grandfather Ray Boone played thirteen seasons (1948 to 1960) for the Indians, Tigers, and four other teams. His father Bob caught nineteen seasons for the Phillies, Angels, and Royals, and won seven Gold Gloves of his own. His younger brother Aaron arrived in the majors in 1997 with the Reds, hit one of the most famous home runs in postseason history off Tim Wakefield in Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS, and has managed the Yankees since 2018. The Boone name was a craft, an expectation, and a long shadow before Bret ever stepped into the Kingdome at twenty-three.

Today, Bret lives in Southern California and hosts The Bret Boone Podcast. He served as the Texas Rangers’ interim hitting coach for the 2025 season, his first major-league coaching role. In 2016 he published Home Game with Kevin Cook, a memoir about what the family name actually cost, what it gave, and what it took him a long time to figure out. Closer to home, he mentors his own children in the game. His son Jake was drafted by the Washington Nationals out of Torrey Pines High School in 2017, played college baseball at Princeton, and is now in the Nationals organization. If Jake reaches the majors, he will become the first fourth-generation player in baseball history.

⸻ The Conversation

What You Might Hear

A real, honest conversation about the successes, the struggles, and the role parents and coaches played along the way to the Big Leagues.

Take Away · 01
A family name can be a gift and a weight at the same time. A kid does not get to pick which one shows up at the field on any given day.
Take Away · 02
The three-season peak everyone remembers almost never looks, from the inside, like the storybook version on the back of the card.
Take Away · 03
What the game asks of you while you are playing is often less interesting, and harder to talk about, than what it asks of you once it stops asking.

⸻ Some of the Questions You May Hear

Some of the questions from this session include:

The session runs about 30 minutes of moderated conversation followed by audience Q&A. The conversation goes where it wants to go.

⸻ Career Profile

By the numbers.

Position
Second baseman (primary), also some third base and shortstop
MLB Years
1992 to 2005 · 14 seasons
Teams
Seattle Mariners (1992-1993, 2001-2005), Cincinnati Reds (1994-1998), Atlanta Braves (1999), San Diego Padres (2000), Minnesota Twins (2005)
Honors
3x All-Star (1998, 2001, 2003) · 4x Gold Glove (1998, 2002, 2003, 2004) · 2x Silver Slugger (2001, 2003) · 3rd in 2001 AL MVP voting
Family
First third-generation MLB player. Reached the 1999 World Series with Atlanta.
Games
1,780
Slash Line
.266 / .325 / .442 · .767 OPS
H · HR
1,775 hits · 252 home runs
RBI · K
1,021 RBI · 1,295 K
2B · 3B · SB
366 doubles · 28 triples · 94 stolen bases

⸻ What we are not

Sit in with your kid for this conversation.

Not a clinic. Not a meet and greet. A real conversation about the bigger thing baseball actually teaches, with one of the few people in the game who can speak to it from three generations of evidence.