He played college baseball at Florida State University from 2009 to 2012 for head coach Mike Martin.
Ramsey spent the 2012 season with the Palm Beach Cardinals, where he played in 56 games, batting .229 with one home run and 14 RBI.
He started 2013 with Palm Beach, and after batting .361/.481/.557 with one home run, seven RBI, and five doubles in 18 games, he was promoted to the Springfield Cardinals of the Double-A Texas League[13] and finished the season there, compiling a .251 batting average with 15 home runs and 44 RBI in 93 games.
Ramsey began the 2014 season with Springfield, and was selected to play in the 2014 All-Star Futures Game at Target Field in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
[14] On July 30, 2014, the Cardinals traded Ramsey to the Cleveland Indians in exchange for starting pitcher Justin Masterson.
[18] On April 10, 2016, the Indians traded Ramsey and Zach Walters to the Los Angeles Dodgers in exchange for cash.
[21] Ramsey was traded to the Seattle Mariners on August 4, 2016[22] and subsequently assigned to the Triple-A Tacoma Rainiers.
[25] Ramsey’s approach to hitting and his ability to convey strategy and technique succeeded quickly with Georgia Tech hitters.
[26] Seven players went on to hit better than .299, including designated hitter Michael Guldberg, who led the team at .355 and catcher Kyle McCann, who launched 23 home runs with 70 RBI.
After the 2020 season was shortened due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Yellow Jackets once again showed dominance at the plate in 2021, leading the ACC with a .300 average in 36 league games.
[28] In the expanded conference slate, Georgia Tech paced the ACC in runs (251), hits (384), doubles (91), triples (10), RBI (230) and on-base percentage (.383).
Under Ramsey’s offensive instruction, Tech boasted four .300 hitters – Kevin Parada (.318), Luke Waddell (.309), Justyn-Henry Malloy (.308) and Andrew Jenkins (.302) – while Drew Compton hit .294 with 13 home runs.