After being drafted, Ebert played in the Braves'
minor league system for five seasons before making his
major league debut on April 6, 1999, against the
Philadelphia Phillies. He made two more appearances in April before being sent down to the
Triple-A Richmond Braves. Ebert returned to Atlanta in September where he made two last MLB appearances. He ended the season, his lone year in the big leagues, with an 0–1
win–loss record, one save, four strikeouts, and a 5.63
earned run average in five games. Ebert was granted free agency after the 2000 season, which he had spent with Triple-A Richmond. He next signed with the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays, but was released during 2001's
spring training. He then played in the minor league organizations of the
Boston Red Sox (2001) and
Milwaukee Brewers (2002). He signed with but was released by the
Anaheim Angels before the start of the 2003 season. He subsequently signed on with the
Chicago Cubs organization, playing for the Triple-A
Iowa Cubs, before being traded to the
Arizona Diamondbacks for
Chris Donnels on May 29. He was released by Arizona in mid-July, and then re-signed with the Milwaukee Brewers on a minor league contract. He was released after the 2003 season, missed the 2004 campaign, but played in the
Kansas City Royals organization in 2005 before retiring. ==Coaching career==