Jim
Clinton (1850)
Odell Hale (1908)
Willie Wells (1908)
Taffy Wright (1911)
Buddy Lewis (1916)
Bob Porterfield (1923)
Rocky Colavito (1933)
Tom Brookens (1953)
Tim Brookens (1953)
Jerald Clark (1963)
Andy Stankiewicz (1964)
Gerald Williams (1966)
Sal Fasano (1971)
Brandon Lyon (1979)
Dan Johnson (1979)
Wilson Ramos (1987)
Odell Hale (1908)
Willie Wells (1908)
Taffy Wright (1911)
Buddy Lewis (1916)
Bob Porterfield (1923)
Rocky Colavito (1933)
Tom Brookens (1953)
Tim Brookens (1953)
Jerald Clark (1963)
Andy Stankiewicz (1964)
Gerald Williams (1966)
Sal Fasano (1971)
Brandon Lyon (1979)
Dan Johnson (1979)
Wilson Ramos (1987)
Willie
Wells is considered, along with Pop Lloyd, one of the two greatest shortstops
in the history of the Negro Leagues.
Tim
Brookens is the twin brother of Tom Brookens and played four years in the
minors, reaching AA.
Outfielder
Jerald Dwayne Clark played for the Twins in 1995. He was born in
Crockett, Texas, attended Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas, and
was drafted by San Diego in the 12th round in 1985. He hit over .300
every season in the minors, the last three of them in AAA. His best
season was 1989, when he hit .313 with 22 homers and an OPS of .926 for
AAA Las Vegas. Clark made brief appearances with the Padres in 1988-90
before sticking with the club in 1991. He spent two full years in San Diego,
playing fairly regularly in left field, but did not hit very well.
He was left unprotected and was taken by Colorado in the expansion draft.
He was a mostly-regular for the Rockies in 1993 and had his best major league
season, batting .283 with 13 homers. It was not enough for the Rockies,
however, and Clark opted to go to Japan in 1994. The Twins signed him as
a free agent, and he spent 1995 with Minnesota, appearing in 36 games. He had a
good year as a reserve outfielder, batting .339/.354/.550 in 109 at-bats. The
Twins apparently attributed it to small sample size, however, as he was let go
after the season. He played for Calgary in the Pittsburgh organization in 1996,
but did not make it back to the big leagues, and called it a career after
playing nine games for Duluth-Superior in the Northern League in 1997. After
his baseball career ended, Jerald Clark got a bachelor’s degree in
computer science and is now selling real estate in San Diego. His brother, Phil
Clark, played in the majors from 1992-96.
Catcher
Wilson Abraham (Campos) Ramos played in seven games for the Twins in
2010. He was born in Valencia, Venezuela, and signed with Minnesota as a
free agent in 2004. He hit well every year in the minors other than 2010,
hitting .317 at AA New Britain in 2009. After a good year of winter ball,
he got off to a horrible start at AAA Rochester. Still, due to an injury
to Joe Mauer, he was brought up to the Twins for a little over a week in May of
2010. He came in with a bang, getting seven hits in his first nine
at-bats bofore going 1-for-18 in his other five games. As a Twin, Wilson
Ramos hit .296/.321/.407 in 27 at-bats. Sent back to Rochester, he
struggled for a while, but got things going in July, raising his average to
.241. On July 29, 2010, he was traded to Washington with Joe Testa for
Matt Capps. He was sent to AAA Syracuse, hit well, and got a September
call-up. He was the mostly-regular catcher for the Nationals in 2011 and
had a fine year, finishing fourth in the Rookie of the Year voting.
Things then went pretty badly for him for a while, although it really
wasn’t his fault. He was kidnapped in Venezuela after the 2011 season,
and fortunately he was released unharmed. He played in only 25 games in
2012 before tearing his ACL, an injury which ended his season. He missed
a couple more months in 2013 and has missed about that same amount of time in
2014. He played a full season in 2015, but had by far the worst season of
his career. A year ago, we wrote "all the injuries of the past may
be taking their toll...It's hard to know where his career is going at this
point." Where his career was going was to the all-star game, as in
2016 he is having by far the best season of his career. He's batting .338
at this writing with an OPS of .943. He turns twenty-nine today.
Usually when a player is up and down this much the safest thing is to
predict the middle. On the other hand, it could be that Wilson Ramos is
finally healthy, and that he's going to be a star catcher for some time to
come.
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