Tuesday, February 10, 2026

February 10

Horace Wilson (1845)
Jim Keenan (1858)
Curt Welch (1862)
Billy Evans (1884)
Herb Pennock (1894)
Jake Stephens (1900)
Henry Kimbro (1912)
Bill Adair (1913)
Allie Reynolds (1917)
George Sobek (1920)
Randy Jackson (1926)
Billy O'Dell (1933)
Dick Bogard (1937)
Jim Barr (1948)
Larry McWilliams (1954)
Lenny Dykstra (1963)
Lenny Webster (1965)
Jayhawk Owens (1969)
Alberto Castillo (1970)
Bobby Jones (1970)
Kevin Sefcik (1971)
Lance Berkman (1976)
Cesar Izturis (1980)
Alex Gordon (1984)
Duke Welker (1986)
Jeanmar Gomez (1988)
Travis d'Arnaud (1989)
Liam Hendriks (1989)
Omar Narvaez (1992)
Max Kepler (1993)
Jorge Lopez (1993)

Horace Wilson was an American professor English at Tokyo University.  He is credited with introducing baseball to Japan in either 1872 or 1873.

Billy Evans was the youngest umpire in major league history, starting his career at age 22.  He was an American League umpire from 1906-1027.  He would later become general manager of the Cleveland Indians and the Detroit Tigers, and was president of the Southern Association from 1942-1946.

Bill Adair was a long-time minor league player (1935-1956) and manager (1949-1973).  He also was the scout credited with signing Andre Dawson and Tim Raines.

George Sobek was a long-time scout for the White Sox, credited with signing Denny McLain, Steve Trout, and Mike Squires.  He also played in the NBA and was a long-time college basketball referee.

Another long-time scout, Dick Bogard played in the minors for six years, managed for three, and was a scout for nearly thirty years, mostly for Houston and Oakland.  He is credited with signing Walt Weiss, Jason Giambi, and Ben Grieve.

Jim Barr was drafted six different times before finally signing.  Minnesota drafted him in the sixth round of the January Secondary draft in 1970, but he did not sign.

Catcher Leonard Irell Webster played for the Twins in 1989-1993 and had a longer career than you may realize.  He was born in New Orleans, went to high school in Lutcher, Louisiana, and then attended Grambling State University.  The Twins drafted him in the 21st round in 1985.  Webster really didn't do a whole lot in the minors--his best year was probably 1988, when he hit .288 with 11 homers in his second full year at Class A Kenosha.  He got September callups every year from 1989 through 1991, also spending a couple of weeks in June with the Twins in 1991.  He had two full seasons with Minnesota, 1992 and 1993, as the backup catcher to Brian Harper.  He had a little over 100 at-bats each season and showed the vagaries of small sample size, hitting .280 in 1992 and .198 in 1993.  Montreal acquired him from the Twins in March of 1994 in what is described as a "conditional deal."  Webster then spent a few years bouncing around:  he was the backup catcher for the Expos in 1994, the backup for Philadelphia in 1995, back to being the backup in Montreal in 1996, and then on to Baltimore for 1997.  He stayed a little while in Baltimore, reaching part-time status and getting over 300 at-bats for the only time in his career in 1998.  He was released at mid-season in 1999, however, finished out the season in Boston, and went back to Montreal for the 2000 season.  He ended his playing career after that.  As a Twin, Lenny Webster hit .254/.324/.370 in 284 at-bats.  At last report, he was a youth baseball coach with Perfect Game Baseball, located in Snellville, Georgia.

Catcher Claude Jayhawk Owens did not play for Minnesota, but was drafted by them.  He was born in Cincinnati and went to high school there.  He then attended Middle Tennessee State before being drafted by the Twins in the second round in 1990.  He put up fairly pedestrian numbers in three years in their minor league system, which led to Owens being left unprotected in the expansion draft.  Colorado took him, and after he hit .310 in 174 at-bats in Colorado Springs in 1993 they brought him to the big leagues.  He played sparingly, however, hit .209 in only 86 at-bats, and spent most of 1994 and 1995 back in Colorado Springs.  He continued to be pretty average, but in 1996 he was called up to the majors in late April and spent the rest of the season with the Rockies as the right-handed part of a platoon with Jeff Reed.  He again failed to hit and never got back to the majors again.  Owens was in Colorado Springs all of 1997, came back to the Twins' organization for the start of 1998, hit .205 in AAA Salt Lake, finished the season in the Cincinnati organization, stayed in the Reds' chain for 1999, and then his career came to an end.  After that, he was a minor league manager and coach, mostly in the Cincinnati organization, a career that came to an end in 2007.  He was inducted into the Middle Tennessee Blue Raider Hall of Fame in 2012.  At last report, Jayhawk Owens was living in the Denver area and was a project manager for Baker Concrete, one of the largest sub-contractors of concrete in the nation.

Right-hander Matthew Scott "Duke" Welker did not play for the Twins, but was part of their organization for about six weeks in 2013.  He was born in Kirkland, Washington, went to high school in Woodinville, Washington, attended Seminole State College in Seminole, Oklahoma and the University of Arkansas, and was drafted by Pittsburgh in the second round in 2007.  He pitched well in seven starts in rookie ball in 2007, then struggled in the Sally League in for three years.  The Pirates never gave up on him, though, moving him to the bullpen in 2010, and in 2011 he had a fine year for Class A Bradenton, although he did so at age twenty-five.  He followed that up with a good 2012 split between AA and AAA.  He had a good season in AAA in 2013 and made his major league debut that season, making two appearances for Pittsburgh in late June and retiring all four batters he faced.  In early October of 2013, he was sent to Minnesota as the player to be named later in the deal that also sent Alex Presley to Minnesota for Justin Morneau.  In mid-November of that year, however, he was traded back to Pittsburgh for Kris Johnson.  He was in AAA in 2014, but pitched poorly and was eventually found to need Tommy John surgery, which he had in June.  The Pirates released him in July and it appeared that his playing career had come to an end, but he signed with the Giants and spent the summer of 2016 with AAA Sacramento.  He had an ERA of 3.86 in 31 games, but he gave up 49 hits in 35 innings and had a WHIP of 1.86.  That really was the end of his playing career.  At last report, Duke Welker was a sales representative for A1A Inc., representing DuPuy Orthopedics, and was based in Bellingham, Washington.

Right-hander Liam Johnson Hendriks was with the Twins from 2011-2013.  He was born in Perth, Australia and signed with Minnesota as a free agent in 2007.  He pitched well in the GCL in 2007, missed all of 2008, but came back to pitch well in 2009 and ever since.  His best year as a minor league was 2010, when he went a combined 8-4, 1.74, 0.84 WHIP with 105 strikeouts in 108.2 innings for Beloit and Ft. Myers at age 21.  He began 2011 in New Britain and pitched very well, earning a promotion to Rochester.  His ERA in nine starts there was an unimpressive 4.56, but his WHIP was 1.12.  He made four starts in Minnesota in 2011 and did not look ready, but did not totally embarrass himself, either,  going 0-2, 6.17, 1.50 WHIP with 16 strikeouts in 23.1 innings.  He spent about half of 2012 in Rochester, despite the fact that he had nothing to learn there, and half of it in Minnesota, where he struggled.  He began 2013 with Minnesota but was shipped out after only two starts, one of which was fairly good.  He struggled with injury in Rochester and came back to Minnesota in August, not doing very well.  The Twins gave up on him after the season, placing him on waivers.  He was selected by the Cubs in mid-December but was waived again ten days later, this time being claimed by Baltimore.  Baltimore waived him early in spring training in 2014 and he was again claimed, this time by Toronto.  He pitched very well for AAA Buffalo and got three starts for the Blue Jays, with two of them very good and one of them very bad.  He was traded to Kansas City in late July with Erik Kratz for ex-Twin Danny Valencia.  He again pitched very well in AAA but had mixed results in six appearances for the Royals.  He was traded back to Toronto after the 2014 season.  The Blue Jays moved him to the bullpen in 2015 and he had an outstanding year, going 5-0, 2.92, 1.08 WHIP in 64.2 innings (58 games).  He was then traded to Oakland, and while he was not as good as in 2015 he put in a couple of solid years for them as a reliever.  He struggled in 2018, however, and split the year between AAA and the majors.  In 2019, however, he put together a tremendous year, going 4-4, 1.80, 0.97 WHIP.  He took over the closer role in late June and did not let it go, compiling 25 saves.  He had another excellent year as the Athletics' closer in 2020, then became a free agent and signed with the White Sox.  He had two excellent seasons for them, but then was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma.  He appears to have beaten it, and made five appearances in 2023, but then was injured and required Tommy John surgery.  He signed with Boston after that season, but missed all of 2024.  He tried to come back in 2025, but it didn't go well for him.  As a Twin, Liam Hendriks was 2-13, 6.06, 1.59 WHIP in 156 innings.  On the one hand, you can say the Twins didn't give him much of a chance, but on the other hand you can say he didn't do much with the chances he got.  The Twins never tried him in the bullpen, though, and in hindsight it certainly looks like they should have.  He turns thirty-seven today and is a free agent.  If he can get and stay healthy, it's certainly possible that someone will give him another chance.  It's also possible, though, that it's time for Liam Hendriks to move on to the next phase of his life.

Outfielder Maximilian Kepler played with the Twins from 2015-2024.  Born and raised in Berlin, Germany, he was signed by Minnesota as a free agent in 2009 at the age of sixteen.  He was okay, but nothing special, in his first couple of minor league seasons, although one should say that he did quite well for his age.  He had an outstanding year in 2012 in Elizabethton at age nineteen.  He was in Cedar Rapids in 2013 and Fort Myers in 2014, again not doing badly but not being particularly impressive, either.  Impressive came in 2015, when he hit .322/.416/.531 for AA Chattanooga and got a September call-up.  He appeared in three games, two as a pinch-hitter, and went 1-for-7.  He started 2016 with Minnesota but didn't play much and went down to Rochester in late April.  He came back on June 1 and was with the Twins the rest of the season.  He didn't hit for a high average, but he showed good power and drew a good number of walks, batting .235/.309/.424 despite a poor September.  The Twins spent the next two years hoping ever since that he would take a step forward, but his numbers in 2017 and 2018 were very similar to that 2016 campaign.  In 2019 the step forward finally came.  Batting out of the leadoff spot, he batted .252/.336/.519 with 36 home runs.  In 2020, however, he took a step backward again, and his OPS went into a steady decline, from .855 in 2019 to .760, to .719, and to .666 in 2022.  He bounced back some in 2023, but slid back again in 2024.  He became a free agent and signed with Philadelphia for 2025, but had a poor year.  A free agent, he will serve an eighty-game suspension for performance enhancing drugs if he signs with anyone.  As a Twin, Max Kepler batted .237/.318/.429 in 3761 at-bats.  He turns thirty-three today.  He's been pretty average for most of his career, and has been below average the last two seasons.  We wish him well, but given the suspension he's facing, it's entirely possible that his playing career is over.

Right-handed reliever Jorge Yabiel Lopez appeared in twenty-three games for the Twins in 2022.  Born and raised in Caguas, Puerto Rico, he was drafted by Milwaukee in the second round in 2011.  He was a starter throughout his minor league career and for a little while in the majors, not switching to the bullpen until 2017.  He struggled early in his minor league career but had an excellent 2015 at AA, getting a September call-up and making two starts that season.  He struggled in AAA in 2016, however, and made the transition to the bullpen in 2017.  It didn't seem to help a whole lot, and he was traded to Kansas City at the July deadline.  The Royals put him back in the starting rotation and he came back up to make seven starts in the majors.  He both started and relieved in 2019-2021, and even though he stayed in the majors it did not go well for him at all.  The Royals waived him in August of 2020 and he was claimed by Baltimore.  Things did not go any better for him there until 2022.  He became the Orioles closer and made the all-star team, posting a 1.68 ERA and a 0.97 WHIP while striking out 10.1 per nine innings.  He was traded with cash to the Twins in early August of 2022 for Juan Nunez, Cade Povich, and Yennier Cano.  Installed as the Twins' closer, he did not come close to matching his Orioles numbers.  He was worse in 2023, and was traded at the July deadline to Miami for Dylan Floro.  As a Twin, he was 4-3, 7 saves, 4.81, 1.41 WHIP.  He was waived in early September and was claimed by Baltimore.  The Mets signed him for 2024 and he didn't pitch badly for them, but after a meltdown in early June they released him.  The Cubs signed him a week later and he pitched very well for them.  He signed with Washington for 2025, pitched poorly, and was released in early June.  Teams are always looking for pitching, so he may get another chance.  But it may be that Jorge Lopez' playing career is over. 

Monday, February 9, 2026

February 9

Harry Pulliam (1864)
Heinie Zimmerman (1887)
Specs Toporcer (1899)
Bill Veeck (1914)
Jodie Phipps (1918)
Vic Wertz (1925)
Erv Palica (1928)
Clete Boyer (1937)
Eddie Solomon (1951)
Mookie Wilson (1956)
Pete O'Brien (1958)
John Kruk (1961)
Doug Linton (1965)
Todd Pratt (1967)
Vladimir Guerrero (1975)
Dioner Navarro (1984)
Vidal Brujan (1998)

Harry Pulliam was president of the National League from 1903-1909.

Bill Veeck was the owner of the Cleveland Indians (1946-49), St. Louis Browns (1951-53), and Chicago White Sox (1958-61, 1975-81).

Pitcher Jodie Phipps played in the minors from 1939-1957, winning 275 games.  He also managed in the minors for seven seasons.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to LBR.

Outfielder/first baseman Victor Woodrow Wertz appeared in 44 games for Minnesota in 1963 at the end of his long major league career.  He was born in York, Pennsylvania, went to high school in Reading, Pennsylvania, and signed with Detroit as a free agent in 1942.  He had a poor year as a seventeen-year-old at Class B Winston-Salem, played briefly for AA Buffalo in 1943 and then went into the military, not returning to baseball until 1946.  When he did, he hit .301 with 19 homers for then AAA Buffalo and was in the majors to stay at the start of the 1947 campaign.  He was a semi-regular his first two years, becoming a regular in 1949.  He made the first of four all-star teams that season and also had the first of four top ten MVP finishes.  He was again in the top ten in MVP balloting in 1950 and made the all-star team again in 1951 and 1952.  In August of 1952, however, he was traded to the St. Louis Browns as part of an eight-player trade.  He moved to Baltimore with the club in 1954, but got off to a bad start there and was traded to Cleveland on June 1.  The Indians moved him from the outfield to first base, and Wertz had three solid seasons in Cleveland, finishing in the top ten in MVP voting in 1956 and 1957 and making the all-star team in 1957.  He was injured for most of 1958, however, and was on the move again after the season, traded to Boston.  Now in his mid-thirties, he became a part-time player for the Red Sox, with his most at-bats there 443 in 1960.  He still did well when he played, finishing fourteenth in MVP voting in 1960.  He was still playing decently in 1961, but the Red Sox waived him in September and he was claimed by Detroit.  Primarily a pinch-hitter with the Tigers, he had an excellent year in 1962, hitting .324 in 105 at-bats.  Despite that, he was released in May of 1963 after only five at-bats.  The Twins signed him on June 18 and he finished the season and his career in Minnesota.  It did not go well—he hit .136/.240/.341 with three homers in 44 at-bats, and his playing career came to an end.  It was a pretty good career, though; in 17 seasons and 6,099 at-bats, he hit .277/.364/.469 with 266 home runs.  His best season was probably 1950, when he hit .308 with 27 homers and 123 RBIs for Detroit, but that season was not particularly out of line with several others.  He is occasionally remembered today as the man who hit the drive on which Willie Mays made his famous catch in the 1954 World Series.  After his playing career ended, he returned to Detroit, where he owned a beer distributorship.  Vic Wertz passed away from a heart attack on July 7, 1983 at the age of 58.

Right-hander Douglas Warren Linton did not play for the Twins, but he was in their farm system in 1998.  He was born in Santa Ana, California, attended Cal—Irvine, and was drafted by Toronto in the 43rd round in 1986.  He had a couple of tremendous years in Class A, posting ERAs below two and WHIPs right around one.  He did well when moved up to AA in 1989 and reached AAA in 1990.  He made his major league debut with the Blue Jays in 1992, appearing in eight games.  He never did get a full year in the majors, constantly bouncing back and forth from AAA.  He was waived in June of 1993 and claimed by California.  The Angels released him in mid September and he signed with the Mets for 1994.  He appeared in the most games of his career that season, 32, going 6-2, 4.47, but with a WHIP of 1.87 in 50.1 innings.  He moved on to Kansas City for 1995 and was actually a member of their rotation for a while in 1996, when he pitched the most innings of his career, 104.  He went 7-9, 5.02, 1.32 WHIP that season.  He was released in March of 1997 and missed the entire season.  The Yankees signed him for 1998 but released him in March.  He was again out of baseball for two months when the Twins signed him in late May.  He went to AAA Salt Lake, where he appeared in eighteen games, fourteen of them starts.  He went 4-4, 5.99, 1.51 WHIP in 79.2 innings.  He moved on to Baltimore for 1999 and got back to the majors, making eight starts and fourteen appearances.  He was with Colorado in 2000, the Dodgers, the Mets, and a Korean team in 2001, Atlanta in 2002, and Toronto in 2003.  He actually made it back to the big leagues again with the Blue Jays, making seven appearances and going 0-0, 3.00, 1.22 WHIP in nine innings.  He moved on again in 2004, however, going to Kansas City.  He pitched poorly in AAA for the Royals, and his playing career came to an end.  He didn’t do badly for a 43rd round draft pick, though; his numbers aren’t pretty, but he pitched in six major league seasons and appeared in 112 major league games, and there are not a lot of guys who can say that.  He was a pitching coach or coordinator with the Colorado Rockies beginning in 2006, but was let go after the 2025 season.  He does not appear to have been hired by anyone for 2026, but with his experience we assume he can get another job in baseball if he wants one.

Utility player Vidal Brujan Esteva was a member of the Twins for about eight days in 2026.  He was born in San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic, and signed with Tampa Bay as a free agent in 2014.  He batted quite well in the low minors, reached AA in 2019, missed the 2020 COVID season, reached AAA in 2021, and made his major league debut in July of 2021, staying for about two weeks.  He split 2022 between AAA and the majors, batting well in AAA but not for the Rays.  2023 was similar, and he was traded to Miami after the season with ex-Twin Calvin Faucher.  He had his first (almost) full season in the majors in 2024, playing 102 games but getting just 248 at-bats.  He did not hit in a utility role and was traded to the Cubs after the season.  He did not hit in a utility role for the Cubs, either and was waived in early August.  Baltimore claimed him, and he got one at-bat for them before being waived again after five days.  Atlanta claimed him this time and he did hit better there for the rest of the season, but still not anything special.  He was waived by Atlanta and claimed by Minnesota on January 14, 2026.  He was then sold to the Mets on January 22.  He turns twenty-eight today.  He's hit well in AAA--.273/.356/.450 in 905 at-bats--but other than a couple of months in 2022 has never been allowed to be more than a part-time utility player in the majors.  He has not excelled in that role, batting .199/.267/.276 in 584 at-bats.  It would be interesting to see if he could turn his AAA numbers into major league numbers with a regular job, but it seems unlikely that it will ever happen.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

February 8

Bug Holliday (1867)
Bob Cobb (1899)
Don Heffner (1911)
Danny Carnevale (1918)
Buddy Blattner (1920)
Dewey Soriano (1920)
Hoot Evers (1921)
Willard Marshall (1921)
Joe Black (1924)
Larry Dolan (1931)
Fritz Peterson (1942)
Bob Oliver (1943)
Aaron Cook (1979)

Bob Cobb was the president of the AAA Hollywood Stars from 1938-1957. He later was involved in bringing an American League expansion team to Los Angeles. In addition, he opened the famous Brown Derby restaurant in Los Angeles in 1928.

Danny Carnevale was a minor league player (1937-1953) and manager (1947-55, 1962-63, 1972; five league championships) and was also a scout for many years.

Dewey Soriano was a minor league pitcher in the 1940s. He was later co-owner and president of the Seattle Pilots.

Larry Dolan owned the Cleveland Indians/Guardians from 2000 until his death in 2025.

First baseman/outfielder Robert Lee Oliver did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system in 1968. He was born in Shreveport, Louisiana, and signed with Pittsburgh as a free agent in 1963. He put up some good, solid numbers in the minors, getting a September call-up in 1965, when he appeared in three games. He hit double-digit homers in every minor-league season but one, and hit .260 or better each season in a low-average era. He hit .285 with 17 home runs in 1967 in AA, after which he was traded to Minnesota for Ron Kline. Sent to AAA Denver, he hit .297 with 20 homers, which not only did not get him called up to the majors but resulted in his being left unprotected in the expansion draft, where he was selected by Kansas City. It appears that some bad strikeout and walk numbers may have led to the lack of enthusiasm for him on the part of the Twins; despite hitting .297, he had an OBP of only .328, drawing 24 walks while striking out 94 times. Those numbers were pretty much in line with the rest of his career. The expansion Royals gave him more-or-less regular play for three seasons, in which he did about what he would have been expected to do: walk seldom, strike out a lot, but put some balls over the fence. Traded to the California Angels in May of 1972, he did the same thing for two more seasons. He stopped hitting home runs in 1974, however, and as that was his only real skill as a player his career quickly faded. He was traded to Baltimore in September of that year, sold to the Yankees in December of 1974, and was released in mid-July of 1975 ending his major league career. He kept trying to come back; he signed with the White Sox in January of 1976, was sold to Philadelphia in April of that year, went to Pittsburgh for 1977, and was back with the White Sox for 1978 before his playing career came to an end. His career major league numbers are .256/.295/.400, with 94 home runs in 2,914 at-bats. From 1969-1973, he averaged 17 homers per season. He is the father of former major league pitcher Darren Oliver. He owned and operated the Bob Oliver Baseball Academy in Rio Linda, California, a non-profit organization that seeks to empower our youth by teaching them the fundamentals of baseball and life skills which will help them achieve as students, athletes, and adults. The academy also prides itself in helping athletes, and others, with diabetes and its related illnesses.  Bob Oliver passed away on April 19, 2020.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

February 7

Tom Daly (1866)
Pat Moran (1876)
Charlie Jamieson (1893)
Earl Whitehill (1899)
Bill Riggins (1900)
Paul Owens (1924)
Dick Wiencek (1926)
Al Smith (1928)
Juan Pizarro (1937)
Burt Hooton (1950)
Benny Ayala (1951)
Dan Quisenberry (1953)
Damaso Garcia (1957)
Carney Lansford (1957)
Ralph Citarella (1958)
Endy Chavez (1978)
Brad Hennessey (1980)
Scott Feldman (1983)

Paul Owens spent over forty years in the Phillies organization, serving at various times as a player, scout, manager, and general manager.

Dick Wiencek was a minor league infielder from 1947-1949,  He then became a scout, working at various times for Washington/Minnesota, Detroit, and Oakland.  Among the players he was responsible for signing are Jim Kaat, Graig Nettles, Bert Blyleven, Jack Morris, Alan Trammell, and Mark McGwire.

Right-hander Ralph Citarella was drafted by Minnesota in the first round of the January draft in 1978, but did not sign.

Right-hander Brad Martin Hennessey did not played for the Twins, but appeared in fourteen games for Rochester in 2010.  Born and raised in Toledo, he attended Youngstown State and was drafted by San Francisco in the first round in 2001.  He made nine solid starts in Class A that year, but then missed all of 2002 with an injury.  He came back in 2003 and had a solid year in 2004, mostly in AA.  He made his major league debut that season, making seven starts for the Giants.  He spent most of 2005 in San Francisco, making twenty-one starts, but was not particularly good.  The next year he made a transition to the bullpen and pitched better from 2006-2007.  He got off to a poor start in 2008, was sent to AAA in early May, and was converted back to starting.  He did not do particularly well but got a September call-up anyway, not doing badly in four starts.  A free agent after the season, he signed with Baltimore for 2009, but was injured and then was released on June 1.  He was out of baseball the rest of the season, but signed with Minnesota in March of 2010.  He made one start and thirteen relief appearances in Rochester, going 1-3, 7.76, 2.03 WHIP in 26.2 innings.  The Twins released him in August, and he was out of baseball until May of 2011, when he signed with Houston.  He pitched poorly in seven AAA appearances and was released again in August, ending his playing career.  In his major league career, he was 17-23, 4.69, 1.49 WHIP with 20 saves, nineteen of them in 2007.  He has appeared in 148 games, 44 of them starts, and pitched 360.2 innings.  At last report, Brad Hennessey was living in the Detroit area and was a Key Account Manager for MAHLE, an automotive parts manufacturer which does not appear to have anything to do with Tyler Mahle.

Friday, February 6, 2026

February 6

Frank LaPorte (1880)
Babe Ruth (1895)
Jake Levy (1900)
Glenn Wright (1901)
Dale Long (1926)
Smoky Burgess (1927)
Augie Garrido (1939)
Richie Zisk (1949)
Larry Young (1954)
Bob Wickman (1969)
Chad Allen (1975)
Luke Maile (1991)

Pitcher Jake Levy had a minor league career that started in 1921 and lasted until 1945.  He played under a variety of names, making it difficult to determine his true record, but he won at least two hundred games.  He was also a good hitter, and early in his career played in the field when he was not pitching.

Augie Garrido was the baseball coach at the University of Texas from 1997-2016.  He has the most coaching wins of anyone in Division I.

Larry Young was a major league umpire from 1983-2007.

You may have heard of that "Babe Ruth" fellow.

Outfielder John Chad Allen played for Minnesota from 1999-2001.  Born in Dallas, he went to high school in Duncanville, Texas, and then attended Texas A & M.  He was drafted by the Twins in the fourth round in 1996.  He played for the 1996 Olympic team, so his professional career didn't really get started until 1997.  He had a solid year in Class A in 1997, followed by an undistinguished year at AA in 1998.  Despite that, he won the starting left fielder job for the Twins in spring training in 1999.  He did okay, hitting .277 with ten homers, although his OBP was only .330.  In 2000 he lost the starting left field job to Jacque Jones and was back in the minors, although he came up to Minnesota for the month of June.  He had a fine year at AAA, hitting .311 in Salt Lake.  Allen was with the Twins for most of 2001 as a reserve outfielder/designated hitter and was not awful, but not all that good, either.  He became a free agent after that season and signed with Baltimore for 2002, but was released in mid-April.  He signed with Cleveland a month later and had another good year at AAA, but was again released after the season.  Allen moved on to Florida for 2003, to Texas for 2004 and part of 2005, to St. Louis for the end of 2005, and to Kansas City for 2006.  He made brief appearances in the majors for the Marlins and the Rangers.  In 2007 he played for Orix in the Japanese League, then his playing career ended.  As a Twin, Chad Allen hit .275/.332/.401 in just over seven hundred at-bats.  He was named in the Mitchell Report as someone who had used performance enhancing drugs.  Allen said he had taken them to recover from a knee injury, and provided the commission with information on internet drug mills.  Chad Allen was the Twins' AA batting coach, for New Britain in 2013-14 and in Chattanooga in 2015, and was the batting coach for the AAA Rochester Red Wings from 2016-2018.  He was the batting coach for the AA Tennessee Smokies (Cubs organization) from 2020-2022.  At last report, Chad Allen was a coach for Dallas Mustangs Baseball, a youth baseball organization in Dallas.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

February 5

Bill Rariden (1888)
Max Flack (1890)
Roger Peckinpaugh (1891)
Joan Payson (1903)
Matt Carlisle (1910)
Jack Murphy (1923)
Don Hoak (1928)
Al Worthington (1929)
Hank Aaron (1934)
Norm Miller (1946)
Mike Heath (1955)
Roberto Alomar (1968)
Adam Everett (1977)
Eric O'Flaherty (1985)
Mark Hamburger (1987)
Caleb Hamilton (1995)

Joan Payson was the original owner of the New York Mets.

Jack Murphy was a longtime sportswriter in San Diego who helped bring the Padres to the city.  The baseball stadium was named in his honor for many years until the naming rights were sold.

Right-handed reliever Allan Fulton “Red” Worthington was in the Minnesota bullpen from 1964-1969, serving as their closer for all but the last of those seasons.  He was born in Birmingham, Alabama, attended high school in Phillips, Alabama, and then attended the University of Alabama.  Worthington signed with the Cubs as a free agent in 1951.  He was only in the Cubs' system one year before being sent to the Giants in what is described as an "unknown transaction."   Worthington was a starter in the minors and had a decent minor league career, but nothing out of the ordinary.  Three of those minor league years, 1953-1955, were spent in Minneapolis with the Millers.  He made some appearances with the Giants in 1953-1954, pitching in a total of 30 games, 18 of them starts, and having fair-to-middling success.  He came up to the Giants for good in 1956.  He was mostly a starter that year, but after again posting mediocre numbers he was shifted primarily to the bullpen in 1957.  He did a little better there, but was still nothing special, and so he was traded to Boston in March of 1960.  Worthington started the 1960 season in Boston, but didn't stay long--after six appearances he was sent back to the minors, not returning until September, by which time he had been traded to the White Sox.  He was in the minors for all of 1961 and 1962, mostly starting and pitching quite well, but not getting another shot in the majors.  After the 1962 season, Cincinnati selected Worthington in the Rule 5 draft, and he was in the Reds bullpen for all of 1963.  He did very well, posting a 2.99 ERA in 50 appearances and getting ten saves.  He got off to a poor start in 1964, however, was sent to the minors, and then was sold to Minnesota in late June.  It was as a Twin that Worthington finally blossomed.  He posted a 1.37 ERA over the rest of 1964, pitching in 41 games (72.1 innings) and getting 14 saves, good for seventh in the league.  He was in the top six in the league in saves every year through 1968, leading the league in 1968 with 18, and posted an ERA well below three every year.  He was thirty-nine years old after that season and was going to retire, but the Twins convinced him to comeback in June.  Ron Perranoski was now the closer, but Worthington was a valuable man in the bullpen for the Twins' division winning team.  He retired again after the 1969 season, this time for good.  After his retirement, Worthington was an insurance salesman for a few years before returning to the Twins as pitching coach in 1972 and 1973.  After that, Worthington, a born-again Christian, became the baseball coach at Liberty Baptist College (now Liberty University) for 13 years.  After that, he became the school's athletic director and pitching coach until his retirement.  He wrote an autobiography in 2005, "I Played and I Won".  The baseball facility at Liberty has been named in his honor.  At last report, Al Worthington was retired and living in Sterrett, Alabama, where he was a deacon in the Baptist Church.  He is a member of the Liberty University Athletics Hall of Fame and the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame.

Shortstop Jeffrey Adam Everett played for Minnesota in 2008.  He was born in Austell, Georgia, and attended high school in Kenesaw, Georgia.  He attended both North Carolina State and South Carolina, and was drafted by Boston with the 12th pick of the 1998 draft.  He was in the Red Sox' chain for two years and did fairly well, but was traded to Houston after the 1999 season as part of a package for Carl Everett.  He spent parts of the next four years at AAA New Orleans, where he established a reputation as an excellent fielder.  He got brief trials with the Astros in 2001 and 2002, but was called up in May of 2003 and quickly become Houston's regular shortstop from that point on.  His best year at bat was 2004, when he hit .273, but his strength was always as a fielder, not as a batter.  Everett was injured in mid-June of 2007 and missed almost all the rest of the season.  He became a free agent after the season and signed with Minnesota.  He suffered through an injury-plagued season, playing only 48 games and batting just .213/.278/.323.  A free agent again after the 2008 campaign, he signed with Detroit for 2009.  He was their mostly-regular shortstop and played about the way he has played for most of his career, batting .228 but providing good defense.  It wasn’t good enough, however, as the Tigers released him in mid-June of 2010.  Out of baseball the rest of the season, he has signed with Cleveland for 2011.  He again made it through June and was released, bringing his playing career to an end.  After his retirement, Adam Everett worked for the Cleveland Indians, first as a special assistant for baseball operations and later as minor league infield coordinator.  In 2014, he moved to the Houston Astros and was their minor league infield coordinator, a job he held through 2017.  At last report, Adam Everett was the minor league infield coordinator for the Philadelphia Phillies.

Right-handed reliever Mark John Hamburger did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for most of two seasons.  He was born in St. Paul, went to high school in Arden Hills, Minnesota, attended Mesabi Range Community College (the only big leaguer that school has produced) and was signed as a free agent by Minnesota in 2007.  In almost two seasons in the low minors for the Twins, he struck out 52 batters in 51.2 innings.  He posted a 4.17 ERA in 36.1 innings at Elizabethton in 2008, however, and was traded to Texas in late August for Eddie Guardado.  Unfortunately, Everyday Eddie, while still a fan favorite, could do no more for Minnesota.  Hamburger, meanwhile, overcame a bad 2009 to pitch very well in 2010 and 2011.  He reached AAA early in 2011 and made the majors at the end of August that year.  He made five relief appearances for the Rangers, going 1-0, 4.50, 1.00 WHIP with six strikeouts in eight innings.  His future looked bright, but 2012 was a major step backward for him.  He started at AAA Round Rock, was terrible in twenty-one appearances, and was waived in late June.  San Diego claimed him, but he was no better in AAA there and was waived again a month later.  This time Houston claimed him, and in 17 AAA appearances he was better, but still not very good.  He was released in February and spent 2013 pitching for St. Paul in the American Association.  He was a starting pitcher there and did okay, but nothing special.  Still, the Twins re-signed him in September.  He had to serve a fifty-game suspension he received shortly after being released by the Astros due to a failed drug test.  He made eight appearances for New Britain and fourteen for Rochester and while he didn't blow people away he did all right.  He was again in Rochester in 2015 with a similar result.  He became a free agent and played for St. Paul in the American Association in 2016, having a fine year as a starter.  He pitched in Australia that winter and led the league in wins, ERA, strikeouts, WHIP, and innings pitched and was tied for first in complete games and shutouts.  He went back to St. Paul in 2017 and had another fine season.  He pitched for New Britain in the Atlantic League in 2018, and while he was not as good he was still a dependable starter.  That brought his playing career to an end.  No information about what Mark Hamburger has done since 2018 was readily available.

Catcher Caleb Broderick Hamilton spent about a month and a half with the Twins in 2022.  Born and raised in Woodinville, Washington, he attended Oregon State and was drafted by Minnesota in the twenty-third round in 2016.  He was a weak batter even in college:  his numbers over three seasons are .223/.326/.314.  He continued to not hit throughout his minor league career:  his minor league numbers are .213/.324/.363, and his numbers at each level are not far off from that.  He was in rookie ball in 2016, Class A in 2017, high-A in 2018, and AA in 2019, with eleven games of AAA in 2019.  He did not play during the COVID season of 2020 and was again mostly in AA in 2021, again playing eleven games of AAA that season.  He was in AAA in 2022 when the Twins called him up in mid-July.  He went back down at the end of the month, but came back in late August and stayed the rest of the season.  He appeared in twenty-two games but got just eighteen at-bats, mostly as a defensive replacement.  He batted .056/.227/.222.  He only had one hit, but to his credit it was a home run, so he has that.  The Twins waived him after the 2022 season and he was claimed by Boston.  He spent most of 2023 in AAA but got another week in the majors, going 0-for-5 with a walk.  He became a free agent after the season and signed with the Angels, for whom he spent the 2024 season in AA until his release at the end of June.  That brought his playing career to an end.  At last report, he was a defensive coach for the Yankees high-A affiliate, Hudson Valley.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

February 4

Germany Schaefer (1876)
Eddie Ainsmith (1890)
Possum Whitted (1890)
Joe Sparma (1942)
Steve Brye (1949)
Rob Picciolo (1953)
Rusty Kuntz (1955)
Chris Bando (1956)
Dan Plesac (1962)
Chris Coste (1973)
Ben Hendrickson (1981)
Doug Fister (1984)

Not to be confused with Steve Braun, outfielder Stephen Robert Brye played for the Twins from 1970-1976.  He was born in Alameda, California and went to high school in Oakland.  The Twins selected Brye in the first round in 1967.  He hit over .300 every year in the minors except 1969, when he unaccountably hit .234 for Class A Red Springs.  Brye made his major league debut as a September call-up in 1970, got another September call-up in 1971 (when he was the regular left-fielder for that month), and made the majors to stay in 1972.  He was a part-time player in 1972 and 1973, and steadily improved in his first few years in the big leagues, raising his average from .224 to .241 to .263.  His improvement was rewarded with an almost full-time center field job in 1974, and he raised his average again, to .283.  Unfortunately, it was with few walks and little power:  his line was .283/.319/.365, which the Twins did not consider good enough.  Brye went back to part-time status in 1975 and 1976, and in March of 1977 he was sold to Milwaukee.  After a year as a part-timer there he moved on to Pittsburgh for 1978, falling to reserve status.  He signed with the Padres' organization for 1979, had a mediocre year in AAA Hawaii, and his career was over.  As a Twin, Steve Brye hit .261/.311/.360 in 1,641 at-bats over seven seasons.  At last report, Steve Brye was living in Clayton, California.

Outfielder Russell Jay “Rusty” Kuntz played for Minnesota in the second half of the 1983 season.  Born in Orange, California, he attended Cal State--Stanislaus, one of only two major league players that school has ever produced (Steve Andrade).  He was drafted by the White Sox in the 11th round in 1977.  He posted unspectacular but pretty solid numbers in the minors, hitting over .290 in consecutive years in AAA (1979-1980) with a decent number of walks and moderate power.  He got a September call-up in 1979 and was with the White Sox for about two months in 1980.  Kuntz' only full season in the majors was 1981, when he hit .255 as a reserve.  He split 1982 between Chicago and AAA, and was doing the same in June of 1983 when he was traded to Minnesota for Mike Sodders.  Kuntz was immediately made the Twins' starting center fielder, a plan that lasted about a month and a half.  Unfortunately, he did not hit, was sent to the bench, and was traded to Detroit after the season for Larry Pashnick.  As a Twin, Rusty Kuntz hit .190/.274/.310 in 100 at-bats.  He had a decent year as a reserve for the Tigers in 1984, batting .286, but he sent back to the minors in late April of 1985 and never returned to the big leagues.  His playing career ended after the 1985 season, and he turned to coaching.  He has been the first base coach for Seattle, Florida, Pittsburgh, and Kansas City, for whom was the first base coach through 2017.  He was a senior advisor to the general manager in 2018, returned to coaching first base in 2019, but went back to an advisory role in 2020 due to COVID concerns.  He was again the first base coach in 2021, then became a special assistant to the general manager for quality control.  His son, Kevin Kuntz, played in the Royals minor league system for two seasons (2013-2014) and has been a minor league coach for them for the last three years before moving on the Athletics organization for 2026.

Right-hander Benjamin John Hendrickson did not play for the Twins, but was at AAA for them briefly in 2009.  He was born in St. Cloud and attended high school in Bloomington.  Hendrickson was drafted by Milwaukee in the tenth round in 1999.  He had a big year in AAA Indianapolis in 2004, going 11-3, 2.02 in 21 starts.  He made his big league debut for the Brewers that year, which unfortunately did not go so well:  1-8, 6.22 in ten appearances, nine of them starts.  He had a poor year in AAA in 2005, but bounced back in 2006, which earned him another brief call-up to Milwaukee.  Just before the 2007 season, the Brewers traded Hendrickson to Kansas City.  He was decent in AAA for the Royals, but no more, and was released after the season.  Tampa Bay picked him up for their AAA team in 2008, but he didn't do much and was released again.  The Twins picked him up for 2009 and he appeared in six games out of the Rochester bullpen, posting a 7.84 ERA in 10.1 innings.  The Twins released him in June, bringing his playing career to an end.  After his playing career ended, Ben Hendrickson worked as a property manager/accountant for Sabre Asset Management in the Twin Cities, then was accounting manager for Floors Northwest in the Twin Cities area.  Unfortunately, he was arrested in October of 2018 for embezzling $250,000 from Floors Northwest.  He eventually pled guilty and was sentenced to ninety days.  No information about what he has done since then was readily available.