Tuesday, January 31, 2017

January 31

Bob "Death to Flying Things" Ferguson (1845)
Zane Grey (1872)
George Burns (1893)
Pinky Hargrave (1896)
Pedro Cepeda (1906)
Don Hutson (1913)
Jackie Robinson (1919)
Ernie Banks (1931)
Hank Aguirre (1931)
Nolan Ryan (1947)
Fred Kendall (1949)
Ted Power (1955)
Ed Wade (1956)
Francisco Oliveras (1963)
Yuniesky Betancourt (1982)
Caleb Thielbar (1987)
Better known as an author of western novels, Zane Grey played outfield for two years in the low minors, batting .323 in 86 games.  He also wrote several books about baseball.
Pedro Cepeda is the father of Orlando Cepeda and is considered by some to have been a better player; he was known as the Babe Ruth of Puerto Rico.
Don Hutson, a charter member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, played in the low minors from 1936-1937, hitting .301 in 194 games.
Ed Wade was the general manager of the Philadelphia Phillies from 1998-2005 and the Houston Astros from 2007-2011.
Right-hander Francisco Javier (Noa) Oliveras made his major league debut with the Twins, pitching for them in 1989.  He was born in Santurce, Puerto Rico and signed with Baltimore as a free agent in 1980.  He played his first full season at AA in 1982 at age 19 and did quite well, posting a 3.55 ERA and a 1.21 WHIP.  He struggled after that, however, not posting another ERA below four until 1987, when he again spent most of the season at AA.  He became a minor league free agent after the 1987 season and signed with Minnesota.  Most of his time in the Twins' organization was spent in AAA, but he was in the majors for the months of May and June of 1989.  He pitched about like you'd expect someone with his track record to pitch:  in 12 games, eight of them starts, he went 3-4, 4.53 with a WHIP of 1.42 and an ERA+ of 92.  Oliveras began 1990 with AAA Portland, but was traded to San Francisco at the end of May for a player to be named later, who turned out to be Ed Gustafson.  He played for the Giants most of the rest of 1990, nearly all of 1991, and most of 1992, working primarily as a reliever.  He did a good job for them, posting an ERA in the mid-threes and WHIPs around 1.2.  He became a free agent after the 1992 season and signed with Texas.  Things did not go well for him there:  he failed to make the team, had a poor year in AAA, and was released after the season.  He showed up in 1998, playing for Nashua in the independent Atlantic League, but other than that he was done as an active player.  No information about Francisco Oliveras since then was readily available.
Left-handed reliever Caleb John Thielbar pitched for the Twins in 2013.  He was born in Northfield, Minnesota, when to high school in Randolph, MInnesota, attended South Dakota State, and was drafted by Milwaukee in the eighteenth round in 2009.  He pitched very well in rookie ball, but struggled when promoted to Class A in 2010 and was released after the season.  He spent most of 2011 with St. Paul in the American Association, but signed with Minnesota in mid-August and made three good appearances with Fort Myers before the season ended.  He started 2012 in Fort Myers but got all the way to Rochester before the season ended.  He began 2013 in Rochester, was promoted to Minnesota in May, and stayed there the rest of the season.  He showed he belonged there, going 3-2, 1.76, 0.83 WHIP in 49 appearances (46 innings).  He was often used as a LOOGY, as he faced one batter in six of his appearances and two in five others.  However, he was also effective in getting right-handed batters out when given the chance.  He didn't do as well in 2014, but as often happens to relievers, a few bad outings made his numbers look worse than they otherwise would have been.  He started 2015 in Minnesota and pitched well except for one bad outing, but he was sent back to Rochester at the end of April.  He pitched well there, too, but was waived in early August and taken by San Diego.  He became a free agent after the season.  A year ago, we wrote, "For his career, he is 5-3, 2.74, 1.12 WHIP in 98.2 innings (109 appearances).  As desperate as teams are for pitching, one has to think he'll get a chance somewhere."  Well, somewhere turned out to be the American Association, where he had an outstanding year for St. Paul.  He signed with Miami for 2017, though, so who knows.  Maybe Caleb Theilbar will yet make it back to the big leagues.

Monday, January 30, 2017

January 30

Tony Mullane (1859)
General Stafford (1868)
Walt Dropo (1923)
Sandy Amoros (1930)
Charlie Neal (1931)
Davey Johnson (1943)
Matt Alexander (1947)
Roger Cador (1952)
Joe Kerrigan (1954)
Dave Stegman (1954)
Jorge Cantu (1982)
Jeremy Hermida (1984)
Roger Cador was an outfielder in the Braves organization, reaching AAA.  He has been the head baseball coach at Southern University since 1984.   He was the first coach of a historically black university to win a game in the NCAA Division I baseball tournament, beating #2-ranked Cal State Fullerton 1-0 in 1987.
Dave Stegman was drafted by Minnesota in the tenth round in 1972, but did not sign.
There do not appear to be any other players with connections to the Minnesota Twins born on this day.


Sunday, January 29, 2017

January 29

Ray Hayworth (1904)
Pancho Coimbre (1909)
Bill Rigney (1918)
Hank Edwards (1919)
Frank Gravino (1923)
Bobby Bolin (1939)
Sergio Ferrer (1951)
Steve Sax (1960)
Mike Aldrete (1961)
John Habyan (1964)
Jason Schmidt (1973)
Pancho Coimbre was a star in the Caribbean Leagues and the Negro leagues in the 1940s.  Roberto Clemente said that Coimbre was a better player than Clemente was.  Coimbre played two full seasons in the Puerto Rican League in which he did not strike out.
Frank Gravino played in the minors from 1940-1942 and 1946-1954.  He has been called the greatest slugger in Northern League history, hitting 108 home runs in two seasons there.
William Joseph Rigney managed the Twins for approximately two and a half seasons from 1970-1972.  Born in Alameda, California, Rigney went to high school in Oakland.  He entered organized baseball in 1938, playing shortstop for various minor-league teams, mostly on the west coast.  As the farm system had not been fully developed yet, most of these teams were independent teams.  He went into the military after the 1942 season, serving in the Coast Guard, and did not return to baseball until 1946.  When he returned, it was in the majors--Rigney was a mostly regular infielder for the New York Giants, playing primarily at third base.  He spent his entire major league career with the Giants, a career which spanned eight seasons.  His best years were 1947-1949, when he averaged .271 and averaged 11 homers per season.  Rigney was primarily a second baseman the first two of those years, playing more shortstop in 1949.  He never was quite a full time player, playing between 110 and 130 games per season.  In 1950 he was replaced at shortstop by Alvin Dark, and became a reserve for the next four seasons.  After his major league career ended, he became the player-manager of the Minneapolis Millers from 1954-1955.  He became manager of the Giants in 1956, replacing Leo Durocher, and went to San Francisco with the club.  He was the first manager of the Angels, running the team from 1961-1969, and then became manager of Minnesota.  He won the division with the Twins in 1970, their second consecutive division title, but the team fell apart in 1971 and he was fired mid-way through the 1972 season.  He managed the Giants again in 1976.  Rigney also did some broadcasting for both the Giants and the Athletics, did some scouting, and worked in the Athletics' front office.  He was inducted into the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in 1994.  Bill Rigney passed away on February 20, 2001, in Walnut Creek, California.
Infielder Sergio (Marrero) Ferrer played for Minnesota briefly from 1974-1975.  He was born in Santurce, Puerto Rico, and signed with the Dodgers as a free agent in 1970.  He was quite small (5'7", 145 lbs), but hit for a good average with a pretty fair number of walks in the low minors.  His numbers dropped when he was promoted to AA in 1973 at age 22, and he was left unprotected after the season.  The Twins selected Ferrer in the Rule 5 draft.  He began 1974 as Minnesota's starting shortstop and did quite well, batting .313 for the first month of the season.  Oddly, he started only two more games after that, being replaced at shortstop first by Jerry Terrell and then by Danny Thompson.  He was still batting .281 when he was sent back to the minors in late May.  He had a good year in AAA, and was back with the Twins at the start of 1975.  He was their starting shortstop again for about three weeks and didn't do all that badly, but he again lost the job to Thompson and was back in the minors by early June.  After the season, Ferrer was traded to Philadelphia for Larry Cox.  He was in AAA for the Phillies in 1976 and was traded to the Yankees after the season, spending 1977 playing at AAA for them.  After that season he was traded to the Mets and pretty much stopped hitting.  Ferrer was in the big leagues for most of the 1978 season, but was used exclusively as a pinch runner and defensive replacement, appearing in only 37 games and getting only 33 at-bats.  He was back at AAA for 1979, getting only a September call-up.  Ferrer hung on in AAA through 1981, finishing his career in the Cincinnati organization.  As a Twin, Sergio Ferrer hit .261/.322/.326 in 138 at-bats.  He played in the Seniors League in 1989.  No further information about Sergio Ferrer's current life was readily available.

Saturday, January 28, 2017

January 28

George Wright (1847)
Ducky Holmes (1869)
Bill Doak (1891)
Lyn Lary (1906)
Bob Muncrief (1916)
Pete Runnels (1928)
Harry Dunlop (1933)
Bill White (1934)
Fredi Gonzalez (1964)
Kevin Tolar (1971)
Jermaine Dye (1974)
Magglio Ordonez (1974)
Lyle Overbay (1977)
Harry Dunlop caught in the minors for fourteen years and was a coach for seventeen years.  He caught the minor league no-hitter in which Ron Necciai struck out twenty-seven batters and the back-to-back minor league no-hitters of Bill Bell.
Fredi Gonzalez managed the Florida Marlins from 2007-2010 and managed the Atlanta Braves from 2011-2016.
Left-hander Kevin Anthony Tolar did not play for the Twins, but was in spring training with them in 2004.  Born and raised in Panama City, Florida, he was drafted by the White Sox in the ninth round in 1989.  He definitely gets points for persistence, because it would take him eleven years to reach the majors.  He was in rookie ball in 1989 and in Class A from 1990-1993 for the White Sox; they didn’t hit him very well, but he struggled due to control problems, walking from six to eight batters per nine innings.  The White Sox gave up on him and released him in April of 1994.  He was out of baseball that year, but signed with Pittsburgh in 1995.  The Pirates converted him to relief, where he didn’t exactly get pinpoint control, but he did improve.  He split 1995 between Class A and AA with the Pirates, was in AA for Cleveland in 1996, mostly in AA with the Mets in 1997, with AA for Pittsburgh and AAA in Cincinnati in 1998, and in AAA with Pittsburgh in 1999.  He pitched well in AAA in 2000 for Detroit and finally made his major league debut, getting a September call-up.  He again pitched well in AAA for Detroit in 2001, spending about a month in the majors.  He was back in AAA in 2002 for Pittsburgh.  He went to Boston in 2003 and started the season in the majors, but lasted only three weeks before going back to AAA.  He signed with Minnesota for 2004, but was released at the end of spring training.  He signed with the Cubs and played in AAA with them that season.  He split 2005 in AAA with Arizona and Toronto, split 2006 between the Mexican League and the Atlantic League, and was in the Atlantic League at the start of 2007.  He signed to play for a team in Taiwan in June of 2007, and played for Aragua in the Venezuelan Winter League from 2006-2008.  He appeared in twenty major league games, going 0-0, 6.62.  He pitched 17.2 innings, allowing 13 hits and 16 walks.  He appeared in 680 minor league games, 307 of them in AAA.  Overall, he was 70-56, 3.50 with 45 saves in the minors; in AAA, he was 31-11, 3.73 with 22 saves.  It appears that Kevin Tolar is currently an affiliate for GeneWize, a health, beauty, and wellness company which is a subsidiary of Genelink, Inc. and is located in his home town of Panama City.

Friday, January 27, 2017

January 27

Andy Lotshaw (1880)
Milt Gaston (1896)
Bibb Falk (1899)
Fred Heimach (1901)
John Lowenstein (1947)
Tom Trebelhorn (1948)
Eric Wedge (1968)
Phil Plantier (1969)
Angel Berroa (1980)
Gavin Floyd (1983)
Andy Lotshaw had a thirteen-year minor league career as an outfielder/first baseman, leading his league in triples four times and in home runs five times.  He also played professional basketball.  He then became the trainer for the Chicago Cubs from 1922-1952.
Tom Trebelhorn managed the Milwaukee Brewers from 1986-1991 and the Chicago Cubs in 1994.

There do not appear to be any players with connections to the Minnesota Twins born on this day.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

January 26

Francis Richter (1854)
Kaiser Wilhelm (1877)
Tubby Spencer (1884)
George Blaeholder (1904)
Charlie Gelbert (1906)
Bob Nieman (1927)
Ray Knoblauch (1928)
Bob Uecker (1935) 
Mike Pazik (1950)

Rick Schu (1962)
Jeff Branson (1967)
Esteban German (1978)
Andres Torres (1978) 
Ryan Rowland-Smith (1983)
Francis Richter was the editor of two  influential early baseball publications, the Sporting Life and the Reach Guide.
The father of Chuck Knoblauch, Ray Knoblauch pitched in the minors from 1948-1957, going 54-51.
Left-hander Michael Joseph Pazik appeared in 13 games for Minnesota from 1975-1977.  He was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, attended high school there, and then went to Holy Cross, the most recent major league player to come from that school.  Pazik was drafted by the Yankees in the 13th round in 1971.  He was used as a starter in the Yankees' minor league system and pitched pretty well, but did not get a chance in the majors with them.  In May of 1974, Pazik was traded along with cash to Minnesota for Dick Woodson.  He pitched pretty well at AAA Tacoma and came to the Twins for about a month in 1975, but got little chance to play, appearing in five games (three starts) and pitching 19.2 innings.  Pazik made the Twins out of spring training in 1976, but again appeared in only five games (all in relief) before going back to AAA.  In 1977, Pazik again made the Twins out of spring training and pitched very well in three starts, but then was seriously injured in an automobile accident which broke both his legs, and missed the rest of the season.  He became a free agent after the season and signed with the White Sox.  He pitched well in the minors, but was not brought back to the big leagues.  Pazik started 1979 still in the White Sox' organization, moved on to Pittsburgh, and then ended his career.  His entire major league career was with Minnesota:  he was 1-4, 5.79 in 46.2 innings.  After his career ended, Pazik went on to coaching and managing, and was the pitching coach for the White Sox from 1995 to 1998.  At last report, Mike Pazik was a scout for Kansas City and was living in the Washington, D. C. area.  His daughter, Kristen Pazik, is a model and is married to Ukrainian soccer player turned politician Andriy Shevchenko.
Outfielder Andres Vungo (Feliciano) Torres did not play for the Twins, but was in the minor league system in 2006.  He was born in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, and was drafted by Detroit in the fourth round in 1998.  He started slowly and never did show any power, but hit .296 for Class A Lakeland in 2000 and .294 for AA Erie in 2001.  He started 2002 as a platoon center fielder for the Tigers, but hit only .211 in ten games and went back to AAA, coming back in September.  He was in the majors over half of 2003 as a reserve but again didn’t hit.  There was really no reason to think he would, because he was pretty average in AAA in those years as well, hitting around .260.  He again started 2004 in the majors, but played in only three games and never batted before being released in late April.  The White Sox signed him and sent him to AAA, where he had a good season, batting .295.  A free agent after the season, he signed with Texas and got off to a good start in AAA, hitting .302 before being brought up to the majors in mid-May.  He played in only eight games as a reserve outfielder, going 3-for-19, before being release in mid-June.  The Twins signed him for 2006 and sent him to Rochester, where he hit .236/.333/.353.  He spent 2007 in AAA for Detroit and was in AAA again in 2008 with the Cubs.  He hit for a good average both years, but did not get a call to the majors, and at age 30 it appeared his career might be over.  He signed with San Francisco for 2009, and was in the majors for all but a month of the season, hitting .270 as a reserve.  In 2010, at age 32, he spent his first full season in the majors, starting 124 games at all three outfield positions, 73 in center, 38 in right, and 13 in left.  He actually hit well, batting .268/.343/.479 with 16 home runs.  He did not repeat that performance in 2011, however, batting only .221 with four home runs in 348 at-bats and starting only 78 games, all in center field.  He was traded to the Mets after the season and was their mostly-regular center fielder in 2012, starting 101 games.  Unfortunately, his batting did not improve, as he hit .230, although with a .327 OBP.  A free agent after the season, he returned to the Giants for 2013 and did about the same, raising his batting average a little but dropping his OBP.  He again became a free agent after the season and did not sign with anyone until mid-June, when the Red Sox signed him.  They sent him to AAA but he opted out of his contract six weeks later, bringing his playing career to an end.  He was diagnosed with ADHD in 2002 and has since become a spokesperson to raise awareness of ADHD.
Left-hander Ryan Benjamin Rowland-Smith never played for Minnesota, but was in spring training with them in 2005.  Born in Sydney, Austalia, he attended high school in Newcastle, Australia.  He was signed by Seattle as a free agent in 2000.  He alternated between starting and relieving through much of his early career.  Despite generally pitching well, he had not been above Class A through the 2004 season.  Following that season, Minnesota selected him in the Rule 5 draft; however, he did not make the team, and was returned to Seattle in late March.  He struggled in his AA debut in 2005, but did much better the second time around in 2006.  He split his time from 2007-2009 between Seattle and AAA Tacoma.  He was used in relief in 2007, but was converted back to starting in 2008.  He had pitched well in the majors through 2009, going 11-7, 3.62, 1.30 WHIP in 253.1 innings.  He appeared ready to be a major league starter in 2010, and was given every opportunity to be, but in 27 appearances, 20 of them starts, he went 1-10, 6.75, 1.69 WHIP.  He was, however, featured in a couple of humorous TV ads for Mariners baseball that season.  He was sent back to the minors for six starts and did not do much better there, going 2-4, 5.11.  He was a free agent after the season and signed with Houston for 2011.  He was released on April 1, but re-signed on April 4 and spent the season in the minors, where he did not pitch well.  He signed with the Cubs for 2012 and again spent the season in AAA, doing okay but nothing special.  He signed with Boston for 2013 and had a really good year in relief for AAA Pawtucket, became a free agent, and signed with Arizona for 2014.  He was released in late April, signed with Toronto, went to AAA, was released in mid-June, signed with Cincinnati a couple of weeks later, and was released again in early August.  He played with the EDA Rhinos in Taiwan in 2015.  That seemed to end his summer baseball career, but he continues to play winter ball in Australia, where it's actually summer.  He and Trent Oeltjen are co-owners of NxtGen Baseball, whose goal is to train and inspire the next generation of Australian baseball players.


Wednesday, January 25, 2017

January 25

Danny Richardson (1863)
Les Nunamaker (1889)
Kenichi Zenimura (1900)
Ernie Harwell (1918)
Bill Lucas (1936)
Jake O’Donnell (1939)
Wally Bunker (1945)
Vern Ruhle (1951)
Kerry Taylor (1971)
Dan Serafini (1974)
Kenichi Zenimura was a long-time player and manager in Japan as well as an ambassador of the game of baseball.  He helped organize Babe Ruth's tour of Japan in 1934 and is known as the Father of Japanese Baseball.
Ernie Harwell was a major league baseball broadcaster from 1948-1991 and 1993-2002, mostly for the Detroit Tigers.
Bill Lucas was the first African-American general manager, holding the position for the Atlanta Braves from 1976-1979.
Better known as an NBA referee, Jake O’Donnell was an American League umpire from 1969-1972.  He is the only person to have officiated both an NBA all-star game and a major league baseball all-star game.
Right-hander Kerry Thomas Taylor did not play for Minnesota, but he was in their organization at the beginning of his career.  He was born in Bemidji, Minnesota and went to high school in Roseau, Minnesota.  The Twins signed him as a free agent in 1989.  He pitched two years in rookie ball and two years in Class A, and did not do too badly.  The Twins did not place him on the forty-man roster, however, and he was selected by San Diego.  The Padres kept him in the majors all of 1993, giving him seven starts and 29 relief appearances, and he did about as well as you'd expect a 22-year-old who'd never pitched above Class A to do, which is to say not very well.  He went down to AAA in 1994, making one emergency start for San Diego, and did not do very well there, either.  He was doing better in 1995, but was hurt in his eighth start, missing the rest of that season and all of 1996 with Tommy John surgery.  He tried to come back, pitching at AAA for the Padres in 1997 and Detroit in 1998, in independent ball in 1999, and at AAA for the Blue Jays in 2000.  He actually had a pretty good year at Syracuse in 2000, but by then he was 29 years old and was no longer considered a prospect, so his career ended.  It appears that he then went back to school, attending North Dakota State, and at least report he was a regional sales manager for Ziegler Caterpillar in Fergus Falls, Minnesota.
Left-hander Daniel Joseph Serafini pitched for Minnesota from 1996-1998.  Born in San Francisco, he attended high school in San Mateo, California, and was drafted by the Twins in the first round in 1992.  He was a starter in his minor league career.  Serafini pitched well in the low minors, but struggled upon his promotion to AAA, not posting an ERA under 4.90 there until 1998, when he pitched well for two months.  Despite that, he made brief appearances in Minnesota in 1996 (one emergency start) and 1997 (six games, in which he actually did fairly well).  The pitching-poor Twins called him up in early June of 1998.  Serafini was mostly used in the bullpen, although he was in the starting rotation for about a month.  He was not terribly effective in either role, and at the end of spring training of 1999 he was sold to the Cubs.  As a Twin, Dan Serafini was 9-6, 5.88 in 105.2 innings.  He did no better as a Cub, and was traded after the 1999 season to San Diego.  In June of 2000 the Padres traded him to Pittsburgh, where he pitched well in AAA but no better in the majors.  2001 was quite a year:  Serafini was released by Pittsburgh, San Francisco, and the Mets, finishing the year at AAA with Milwaukee.  He signed with Anaheim in November, but was released again before the 2002 season started.  Serafini was out of baseball in 2002, but signed with St. Louis in November.  He certainly hung in there--released by the Cardinals in April of 2003, he went to Mexico, and then signed with Cincinnati in August, getting a little over a month in the majors.  Serafini was a free agent after the 2003 season, but he kept plugging away, going to Japan and helping his team win a championship in 2005.  He came back to the United States in 2007 and signed with Colorado, appearing in three more major league games for the Rockies.  After that season, Serafini was found to have tested positive for performance enhancing drugs, and was suspended for fifty games.  He pitched in Mexico for several years after that, closing out his playing career with four games early in the 2013 season in 2013.  At last report, Serafini was the owner of the Throw Like A Pro Baseball Academy in Sparks, Nevada and was also the owner of the Oak Tavern in Sparks, Nevada, which was featured in an episode of the television program "Bar Rescue" in 2015.

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

January 24

Dave Brain (1879)
Pinch Thomas (1888)
Cliff Heathcote (1898)
Flint Rhem (1901)
Jean Yawkey (1909)
Johnny Dickshot (1910)
Ray Kelly (1914)
Jack Brickhouse (1916)
Walter Haas (1916)
Dick Stigman (1936)
Sandy Valdespino (1939)
Jumbo Ozaki (1947)
Tim Stoddard (1953)
Atlee Hammaker (1958)
Neil Allen (1958)
Rob Dibble (1964)
Scott Kazmir (1984)
Franklin Morales (1986)
Jean Yawkey was the wife of Tom Yawkey and was owner of the Boston Red Sox from 1978 until her death in 1992.
Ray Kelly was a baseball writer in Philadelphia for fifty years.
Jack Brickhouse was a broadcaster for the Chicago Cubs from 1948-1981.
Walter Haas was the owner of the Oakland Athletics from 1980 until his death in 1995.
Better known as a professional golfer, Jumbo Ozaki played professional baseball in Japan for three seasons, pitching for two seasons and playing outfield for one.
Right-hander Richard Lewis Stigman pitched for Minnesota for four years, 1962-1965.  A native of Nimrod, Minnesota, he attended high school in Sebeka, Minnesota and signed with Cleveland as a free agent in 1954.  Stigman was in Class D for three years.  The first two were pretty awful, but in 1956 he went 17-9 with a 1.44 ERA in 213 innings for Class D Vidalia.  That earned him a promotion to AA, where he pitched well for two years.  He was decent in AAA in 1959 (in one game he pitched 10 2/3 hitless innings) and made the Indians out of spring training in 1960, not returning to the minors until his major league career was over.  Stigman got off to a good start in 1960, even making the all-star team as a rookie, but faded badly in the second half.  He missed the first two months of 1961, and did not pitch very well when he was available.  On April 2, 1962, Stigman was traded to Minnesota with Vic Power for Pedro Ramos.  He started 1962 in the bullpen, pitched well there, and was moved into the starting rotation in mid-July.  He continued to pitch well, leading the league in winning percentage that year.  He was in the rotation for two more years, pitching a total of 431 innings in those two years and still pitching quite well.  In spring training of 1965, he lost his spot in the starting rotation to Jim Perry and moved back to the bullpen.  He was decent, but no more, and on April 6, 1966 Stigman was traded with a player to be named later (Jose Calero) to Boston for Russ Nixon and Chuck Schilling.  The Red Sox put him in their rotation, but after seven mostly mediocre starts moved him to the bullpen, where he finished out the year.  Stigman was traded to Cincinnati in the off-season and was in AAA for 1967, where he was adequate but nothing more.  He finished the year in the Philadelphia organization, and then his playing career ended.  As a Twin, Dick Stigman was 37-37, 3.69 in 138 games, 85 of them starts.  He had a WHIP of 1.24 and an ERA+ of 101.  In 1965-66, Stigman set a record for making ten consecutive starts without a decision, a record which has since been tied but not broken.  After leaving baseball, he went into business in the Twin Cities area.  At last report, Dick Stigman was living in Burnsville and making occasional appearances at baseball-related events, including the Twins' Fantasy Camp.  A city park in Nimrod has been named in his honor.
Hilario (Borroto) "Sandy" Valdespino was a left-handed hitting outfielder who played for Minnesota from 1965-1967.  Born in San Jose De Las Lajas, Cuba, he signed with Washington as a free agent in 1957.  He was nicknamed "Sandy" by a minor league manager who thought he resembled Sandy Amaros.  Valdespino produced rather pedestrian numbers for several years, but then started to figure some things out, hitting .284 for AAA Dallas-Ft. Worth in 1963 and jumping to .337 with 16 homers for AAA Atlanta in 1964.  In 1965 Valdespino played his first full season in the majors, being used primarily as a pinch-hitter and occasional outfielder--his first 13 appearances in the big leagues were as a pinch-hitter.  He was an odd choice for the role, as he was a small man with little power.  He hit .261 that year, and did start two games of the World Series, hitting a key double in game one.  He was used in a similar role in 1966, but did not hit and was sent back to the minors in late June.  He once again hit very well in AAA and was called back to the Twins in September.  Valdespino was once again with Minnesota for a full season in 1967, but did not get any more chances to play, and did not hit well in the chances he got.  That off-season he was left off the forty-man roster and was chosen by Atlanta in the Rule 5 draft.  Apparently something was worked out, because in late June he was sent back to AAA after hitting .233 as a pinch-hitter and reserve outfielder for the Braves.  He was traded to Houston in December of 1968, traded to Seattle in August of 1969, and was sold to Kansas City in July of 1970.  Much of that time was spent in the minors, although he did log some major league time with each of those teams.  He remained in the Royals' organization through 1972, and then his playing career came to an end.  As a Twin, Sandy Valdespino hit .220/.269/.284 in 450 at-bats.  He did some coaching in the minors before leaving baseball.  At last report, Sandy Valdespino was living in Las Vegas.
Right-hander Neil Patrick Allen has been the Twins' pitching coach since 2015.  Born and raised in Kansas City, he was drafted by the Mets in the eleventh round in 1976.  He was a starter throughout his minor league career and did pretty well, although he stumbled when promoted to AAA in mid-1978.  Despite that, he made the Mets as a reliever at the start of 1979.  He became the Mets closer in 1980 and did pretty well, although he never racked up big save totals.  He had a poor start in 1983, lost the closer role to Jesse Orosco, and was traded to St. Louis in mid-June.  He never closed again, but went on to pitch several more years.  He pitched well through 1984, but did not do well in 1985 and was sold to the Yankees in mid-July.  He pitched well for them the rest of the year, but was a free agent after the season and signed with the White Sox.  He started the season in the bullpen but moved into the rotation in May and did well but got hurt in late July.  He came back to the rotation in 1987 but could not duplicate his success and was released in late August, signing with the Yankees in September.  He went back to the bullpen and was a good pitcher again, staying through the 1988 season.  He was a free agent after the season and signed with Cleveland but made only three appearances with them, spending most of the year in AAA.  That brought his playing career to an end, but he stayed in the game as a pitching coach.  He was in the minors through 2014 with the exception of 2005, when he was the bullpen coach for the Yankees.  He became the Twins' pitching coach in 2015 and remains in that position at this writing.


Monday, January 23, 2017

January 23

Ben Shibe (1838)
Red Donahue (1873)
Bobby Burke (1907)
Randy Gumpert (1918)
Chico Carrasquel (1926)
Frank Sullivan (1930)
Joe Amalfitano (1934)
Don Nottebart (1936)
Paul Ratliff (1944)
Kurt Bevacqua (1947)
Charlie Spikes (1951)
Alan Embree (1970)
Mark Wohlers (1970)
Erubiel Durazo (1974)
Brandon Duckworth (1976)
Juan Rincon (1979)
Ben Shibe was the owner of the Philadelphia Athletics from 1901 until his death in 1922.  Shibe Park was named in his honor.
Right-hander Franklin Leal Sullivan came to Minnesota in 1962 and stayed the next year.  He was at the end of a pretty fair career.  A tall man (6'7"), he was born in Hollywood and attended high school in Burbank, California.  Sullivan then signed with Boston as a free agent in 1948.  He was up and down in his early minor-league career:  a strong 1949 campaign in Class C San Jose was sandwiched by poor years in 1948 and 1950.  He then lost two years to the Korean War (where he was awarded a combat infantry badge), returning in 1953.  He had a big year for Class A Albany in 1953, mostly in the bullpen, and made his big league debut at the end of July for the Red Sox.  The next year, Sullivan moved into the Boston rotation and stayed there for several years.  His best year was probably 1955, when he led the league with 18 victories and 260 innings pitched, made his first all-star team, and received minor consideration for Most Valuable Player.  Sullivan also made the all-star team in 1956, and had another strong season in 1957, when he posted the lowest ERA of his career, 2.73, the lowest WHIP of his career, 1.06, and led the league in fewest walks per nine innings at 1.8.  He slumped in 1960, losing 16 games and posting an ERA of 5.10, was traded to Philadelphia after the season.  He got off to a decent start with the Phillies, but then declined, and was released in July of 1962.  The Twins picked him up the same day and he pitched fairly well out of the bullpen the rest of the season, pitching 33.1 innings with an ERA of 3.24.  In 1963, however, Sullivan got off to a poor start and was released in June, ending his playing career.  As a Twin, Frank Sullivan was 4-2, 3.86 in 44.1 innings.  For his career, however, he won 97 games with a 3.60 ERA, pitched 73 complete games, and had 15 shutouts.  For good measure, he also had 18 saves.  After his playing career ended, Sullivan got more serious about golf, eventually becoming a golf pro in Hawaii, where he was still living at last report.  Frank Sullivan was elected to the Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2008.  In September of that year, he published a book, "Life Is More Than Nine Innings," in which he tells stories about his playing career.  He passed away on January 19, 2016.
Catcher Paul Hawthorne Ratliff played in parts of three seasons for Minnesota, playing for them in 1963 and again from 1970-1971.  He was born in San Diego, went to high school in Pasadena, and signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1962.  Ratliff never hit much in the minors, but made his debut for the Twins in 1963 at age 19, presumably due to injuries to other catchers.  He was with Minnesota for a little over a month, predictably did not hit, and was sent back to the minors.  It would be seven years before he came back to the big leagues.  In 1969, he had a pretty good year as a 25-year-old in AA Charlotte, hitting .302 with 11 homers.  That got him a spot as a reserve catcher for the Twins in 1970, backing up George Mitterwald.  In 149 at-bats, he had easily the best year of his major league career, hitting .268 with five homers.  He started 1971 as the Twins' backup catcher again, but was seldom used, hitting .159 in only 44 at-bats when he was traded to Milwaukee in early July for Phil Roof.  He finished the season with the Brewers and started 1972 there, but continued not hitting and was traded to California in July.  Ratliff finished the season with the Angels' AAA team, and then ended his playing career.  There are more people in this world named "Paul Ratliff" than one might think; no further information about our Paul Ratliff was readily available.
First baseman/designated hitter Erubiel (Cardenas) Durazo did not play for Minnesota, but he was in their organization for about three weeks in 2006.  Born in Hermosillo, Mexico, he attended high school in Monterey.  He spent some time in the Mexican League, and then became a member of the Arizona organization in 1999.  He tore up the minors, hitting over .400 in 344 at-bats split between AA and AAA.  Durazo came up to the Diamondbacks in late July and became their regular first baseman almost immediately, hitting .329 the rest of the season.  He never hit that well again for Arizona, but consistently hit in the .260s as a platoon first baseman from 2000-2002, sharing time first with Greg Colbrunn and then with Mark Grace.  After the 2002 season, Durazo was traded to Oakland as part of a four-team deal.  The Athletics made him a regular, and while he was fairly good in 2003, he had his best year in 2004.  He hit .321 with 22 homers and an OPS of .919, getting minor consideration for Most Valuable Player.  Unfortunately, it was the last good year he would have.  Durazo got off to a poor start in 2005, was injured in late May, missed the rest of the season, and has not played in the majors since.  He became a free agent after the season and started bouncing around, signing with Texas in February of 2006, getting released near the end of spring training, re-signing with Texas just after the season started, getting released again in mid-May, signing with the Yankees, and getting released again in early July.  He signed with Minnesota on July 14 and was sent to Rochester.  He played in 17 games for the Red Wings, batting .264 with a homer and 12 walks in 65 plate appearances.  What the Twins were expecting is unclear, but they apparently weren't impressed, because they released him on August 5.  He signed with Oakland in the offseason, but was released at the end of spring training of 2007.  He signed with the Yankees in July, but was released after the season.  He spent a few season playing in Mexico and then his playing career ended.  At last report, Erubiel Durazo was living in Chandler, Arizona.
Right-handed reliever Juan Manuel Rincon pitched for the Twins for most of the past decade.  He was born in Maracaibo, Venezuela, attended high school there, and signed as a free agent with Minnesota in 1996.  Rincon was a starter for almost all of his minor league career.  He did well in the minors, but advanced slowly, perhaps due to his young age.  Rincon did not reach AA until 2000.  He had a good year in New Britain in 2001 and was brought up to Minnesota briefly, pitching in four games in June.  He was having a poor year in 2002 in AAA Edmonton when he was brought up to the Twins in late June.  Used sparingly, Rincon did not pitch very well in Minnesota that year either.  In 2003, however, Rincon made the team out of spring training and pitched substantially better.  It was the first of four consecutive years in which he was a valuable member of the Twins' bullpen.  Over that period, he was 25-19, 2.93 with a WHIP of 1.22.  It should be noted that he was suspended for ten days in 2005 for using performance enhancing drugs.  He stumbled badly in 2007, and was pitching no better in 2008 when Minnesota released him in June.  He signed with Cleveland for the rest of the season, but continued to struggle.  He signed with Detroit for 2009, was released in May, and finished the season with Colorado, spending time in the minors in both 2008 and 2009.  He was in the minors for most of 2010 and pitched poorly, although he still made two appearances in the majors.  He signed with the Dodgers in 2011, was released, and spent the summer pitching for Bridgeport in the Atlantic League.  He signed with the Angels for 2012 and did fairly well in 26 innings in AAA, but was released on June 1 and went back to Bridgeport for the rest of the season.  He was again in the Atlantic League in 2013-14 and pitched pretty well there, but apparently retired after that season.  As a Twin, Juan Rincon was 30-26, 3.29 with an ERA+ of 121 in 386 games and 441 innings.  At last report, he was the owner of and a coach for the Rincon Baseball Academy in Parkland, Florida.


Sunday, January 22, 2017

January 22

Ira Thomas (1881)
Amos Strunk (1889)
Art Ehlers (1897)
Prince Oana (1910)
Chris Pelekoudas (1918)
Dave Leonhard (1941)
Senichi Hoshino (1947)
Mike Caldwell (1949)
Leon Roberts (1951)
Jeff Treadway (1963)
Jimmy Anderson (1976)
Chone Figgins (1978)
Carlos Ruiz (1979)
Ubaldo Jimenez (1984)
Art Ehlers did not play in the majors, but he spent his life in baseball.  He owned several minor league teams at various times and was the general manager of the Philadelphia Athletics and the Baltimore Orioles.  He also was a longtime scout for the Orioles.
Prince Oana played in the minors for twenty-three years, batting .304.  He also had a pitching record of 80-54.
Chris Pelekoudas was a National League umpire from 1960-1975.  He is best remembered for his run-ins with Gaylord Perry over the latter's use of illegal substances on the baseball.
Senichi Hoshino is a long-time player, manager, and executive in Japanese baseball.
Left-hander James Drew Anderson did not play for the Twins, but was in their minor league system for two months in 2005.  He was born in Portsmouth, Virginia, went to high school in Chesapeake, Virginia, and was drafted by Pittsburgh in the ninth round in 1994.  He progressed slowly through the minors, seeming to struggle when first promoted to a higher level but doing better his second time around.  He went 11-2, 3.84 with AAA Nashville in 1999, although with a WHIP of 1.45.  He came up to the majors briefly in early July, then came back in early August, staying for the rest of the season.  He did decently enough in limited duty, going 2-1, 3.99, 1.40 WHIP in 29.1 innings.  He spent most of 2000 and all of 2001-2002 in the Pirates rotation despite going 22-41, 5.24, 1.57 WHIP.  He was remarkably consistent, at least:  his ERAs ranged only from 5.10 to 5.44, and his WHIP varied only from 1.53 to 1.64.  Pittsburgh finally gave up on him after the 2002 season and he signed with Cincinnati.  He was no better there, was released on July 1, signed with San Francisco, and was released again in mid-August.  He signed with the Cubs for 2004, was traded to Boston on July 2, was released a month later, and finished the season in AAA with the Cubs again.  He was still with the Cubs at the beginning of 2005, but was released in mid-April and signed with Minnesota.  He was in AAA for two months and didn’t do too badly there, going 4-4, 2.90 in 62 innings, although with a WHIP of 1.52.  The Twins released Anderson in mid-June and he went to AAA with Tampa Bay, was released after about two months there, and finished out the season in the Houston organization.  He started 2006 in AAA with Florida, went 2-3, 5.77 in 43.2 innings, and his playing career was over.  At last report, Jimmy Anderson was the owner of baseballclearinghouse.net, an online service providing scouting reports on the nation's top prospects based in Norfolk, Virginia, and insiderbaseball.net, "a premium service providing coverage of high school players from around the nation."  He was also a pitching instructor for McKinney Baseball of Chesapeake, Virginia.


Saturday, January 21, 2017

January 21

Mike Tiernan (1867)
Lew Fonseca (1899)
Sam Mele (1922)
Danny O'Connell (1927)
Johnny Oates (1946)
Bill Stein (1947)
Mike Krukow (1952)
Dave Smith (1955)
Mike Smithson (1955)
Jose Uribe (1959)
Andy Hawkins (1960)
Darryl Motley (1960)
Chris Hammond (1966)
Tom Urbani (1968)
Rusty Greer (1969)
Jason Ryan (1976)
Tom Urbani was drafted by Minnesota in the twenty-ninth round in 1989, but did not sign.
The nephew of infielder Tony Cuccinello, Sabath Anthony "Sam" Mele was the second manager of the Minnesota Twins.  Born in Astoria, New York, he was listed for most of his career as having been born in 1923, a fib he attributed to his uncle Tony, who advised him to cheat a year on his age in order to have a longer career.  Mele attended high school in Queens and then went to New York University.  He then entered the Navy.  He was signed by Boston as a free agent in 1946.  After a big year in Class A Scranton, Mele made the Red Sox out of spring training in 1947, eventually becoming a regular outfielder, playing all over the outfield but mostly in right.  He batted .302 that year, the only year he would hit .300.  The next year, Mele clashed with manager Joe McCarthy, who insisted that he change his batting stance, a change Mele blamed for the fact that his average declined.  He fell to part-time status and was traded to Washington in June of 1949.  He had a couple of solid years in Washington, batting .274 and leading the league in doubles in 1951.  In May of 1952, Mele was traded again, this time to the White Sox.  He hit .274 for them in 1953, but was traded again after the season, this time to Baltimore.  He got off to a poor start with the Orioles, was placed on waivers in July, and was claimed by Boston.  He hit .318 for the Red Sox for the rest of 1954, but slumped in 1955 and was on the move again, sold to Cincinnati.  He was released by the Reds after the season, played for Cleveland in 1956, and was released again in mid-April of 1957.  Mele played for the White Sox' AAA team in 1957 and part of 1958, moving on to Kansas City's AAA team for the rest of 1958 before bringing his playing career to a close.  He then became a coach for Washington, coming to Minnesota with the team in 1961.  He took over from Cookie Lavagetto as manager in June.  He remained the Twins' manager into 1967, winning the American League pennant in 1965.  He was replaced as manager by Cal Ermer fifty games into the 1967 season.  Mele never managed again, but was immediately hired as an instructor and scout for the Red Sox, for whom he worked for the next 25 years.  At last report, Sam Mele was living in Quincy, Massachusetts.  He is the oldest living manager of a pennant-winning team.
Tall (6'8") right-hander Billy Mike Smithson pitched for Minnesota from 1984-1987.  Born in Centerville, Tennessee, he attended the University of Tennessee and was drafted by Boston in the fifth round in 1976.  He struggled for two years in AA, and was converted to relieving in 1979.  He had an excellent year in AAA in 1980, and did well there again in 1981, but was traded to Texas just before the 1982 season.  The Rangers switched Smithson back to starting, and he had a decent year in AAA other than showing a tendency to give up home runs.  He got a September call-up that year and was with Texas all of the 1983 season.  He had a pretty good year for the Rangers, but was traded to Minnesota that offseason along with John Butcher for Sam Sorce and Gary Ward.  He spent most of the next four years in the Twins rotation.  Smithson started out pretty well, going 15-13 with a 3.68 ERA in 252 innings in 1984.  Unfortunately, he got a little worse every year.  He was still decent in 1985, and again pitched over 250 innings, but he had a poor 1986, and in 1987 he was sent to the minors at the end of July and left off the post-season roster.  The Twins released Smithson after the season, and he signed with Boston.  He played for the Red Sox for two more years, doing some starting and some relieving, but never had a good year for them.  He retired after the 1989 season.  As a Twin, Mike Smithson was 47-48, 4.46 in 128 games, 126 of them starts.  He had 26 complete games and five shutouts, pitching 816 innings.  He was named to the University of Tennessee's all-century team and is a member of the school's Hall of Fame.  At last report, Mike Smithson was the athletic director of Hickman County High School in his home town of Centerville, Tennessee, where the baseball field has been named after him.
Right-hander Jason Paul Ryan appeared in 24 games for Minnesota from 1999-2000.  A native of Long Branch, New Jersey, he attended high school in Sommerville, New Jersey and was drafted by the Cubs in the ninth round in 1994.  Ryan was up and down in the minors, pitching well in 1994 and 1995, but not very well in his second year at advanced Class A in 1996.  He had two more down years in advanced A and AA, but got off to a tremendous start in 1999, going 5-0, 1.41 in seven starts at AA West Tennessee.  At that point, Ryan was traded to the Twins with Kyle Lohse for Rick Aguilera and Scott Downs.  He did not pitch nearly as well at either AA New Britain or AAA Salt Lake, but was brought up to the Twins in late August anyway, going 1-4 in eight starts.  He had a better year in Salt Lake in 2000 and came back up to the Twins in late June.  His numbers that year are not as bad as they appear--over half his earned runs were given up in three outings--but they are not all that good, either.  He was released after the season, and never pitched in the majors again.  He kept trying for some time, though.  He pitched in AAA for Pittsburgh and the Dodgers in 2001, played independent ball in 2002, was in AAA with St. Louis in 2003, and split 2004 between the AAA teams of the Cardinals and Royals.  He actually had a very good year in 2003, going 8-6, 2.70 with a 1.27 WHIP, but it apparently not good enough to impress anyone who mattered.  No information about what Jason Ryan has done since his playing career ended was readily available.  However, his nephew, Ryder Ryan, is a pitcher in the Cleveland organization, playing in the Arizona League last season.


Friday, January 20, 2017

January 20

Everett Mills (1845)
C. I. Taylor (1875)
William Eckert (1909)
Jimmy Outlaw (1913)
Joe Dobson (1917)
Gene Stephens (1933)
Camilo Pascual (1934)
Dave Boswell (1945)
Cecil Espy (1963)
Ozzie Guillen (1964)
Kevin Maas (1965)
Marvin Benard (1970)
Brian Giles (1971)
David Eckstein (1975)
Matt Albers (1983)
Geovany Soto (1983)
Everett Mills holds the record for most at-bats in a season without drawing a walk (342).
 C . I. Taylor founded the first African-American professional baseball team, the Birmingham Giants, in 1904.
General William Eckert was the commissioner of baseball from 1965-1968,
Marvin Benard played in the major leagues for nine years and could never get announcers to stop calling him "Marvin Bernard".
Right-hander Camilo Alberto Pascual, known for his outstanding curveball, was the ace of the early Twins' rotation, pitching for them from their inception through 1966.  Born in Havana, Cuba, he was signed by Washington as a free agent in 1951.  He had fine years in Class B in 1952 and 1953, which was apparently all the Griffith organization needed to see, because he began 1954 in the majors and never went back.  He was in the bullpen for most of 1954 and 1955, although he did make some starts both years.  Pascual became a rotation starter in 1956 and remained one through 1969.  Given his youth, he understandably struggled in his early years, not posting an ERA below four until 1958.  Once he figured things out, though, he really figured them out.  He led the league in strikeouts per nine innings in 1958 and in complete games and shutouts in 1959.  Pascual received some minor consideration for the MVP award in 1959 and made his first all-star team that year.  He also made the all-star team in 1960.  His combined ERA from 1958-1960 was 2.90.  He came to Minnesota with the team in 1961 and had the best years of his career.  Pascual made the all-star team in 1961, 1962, and 1964; was in the top fifteen in MVP voting in 1962 and 1963;  led the league in strikeouts three years in a row (1961-1963); led in shutouts in 1961 and 1962; led in complete games in 1962 and 1963; and won over 20 games in 1962 and 1963.  Pascual continued to pitch well in 1965, although he had numerous no-decisions and also missed a little over a month with injuries.  He had a down year in 1966, however, and after the season was traded with Bernie Allen to Washington for Ron Kline.  He came back to have two of his finest years, with a combined ERA under three and a combined WHIP under 1.2.  He got off to a poor start in 1969, however, and was traded in early July to Cincinnati.  The Reds released him at the start of the 1970 season, and he was signed the same day by the Dodgers.  He was released in August, however, and was out of baseball until April of 1971, when Cleveland picked him up.  In late May, Pascual was sent to San Diego as part of a conditional deal--the Padres kept him for four days and sent him back to Cleveland.  Pascual was released in early June, and his career was over.  It was a pretty good career, though--174 victories, 2,167 strikeouts, and a career ERA of 3.63.  His combined record for the Washington/Minnesota franchise was 145-141, 3.66 in 432 games, 331 of them starts.  After his retirement, he was the Twins' pitching coach for three years (1978-1980).  At last report, Camilo Pascual was living in Miami and scouting for the Los Angeles Dodgers.  He was inducted into the Latino Baseball Hall of Fame in 2010 and the Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame in 2012.
Right-hander David Wilson Boswell had several fine years with Minnesota.  He was born in Baltimore and went to high school there.  Boswell then signed with Minnesota as a free agent in 1963.  He did not begin his professional career until 1964, and after a good year split between Class A and AA ended that season in the majors with a September call-up.  Although he was only 19, he was in the big leagues to stay.  In 1965, at age 20, Boswell began the year in the Minnesota bullpen, was placed in the rotation in mid-May, but was sent back to the bullpen in July despite not pitching badly as a starter.  The Twins had a hard rotation to break into:   Camilo Pascual, Jim Perry, Jim Kaat, and Mudcat Grant, plus Jim Merritt was there to make occasional starts as well.  In 1966, however, Boswell forced his way into the rotation, getting there in late May and staying there until the early August, when he was injured.  He was in the rotation until mid-1970 and had some very good years, consistently posting ERAs between 3.1 and 3.4.  While not necessarily his best year, his best numbers came in 1969, when Boswell won 20 games, made 38 starts, and pitched 256 innings.  1969 was also the year when Boswell had his famous fight with manager Billy Martin.  Those innings may have taken something out of him, though, because he hurt his shoulder during the ALCS and never had a good year again.  Boswell struggled through a series of poor starts in 1970 until he was finally placed on the disabled list at then end of July, staying there for the rest of the season.  Boswell was released at the end of 1971 spring training, went to Detroit (reuniting him with Martin), was released again at the end of May, was signed by Baltimore, and was released one more time before the 1972 season, finished as a player at age 27.  In his later years, Dave Boswell lived in Joppa, Maryland, helped at various fantasy camps, and enjoyed working in his garden.  Dave Boswell passed away in Joppa on June 11, 2012.
Left-handed first baseman/designated hitter Kevin Christian Maas was with Minnesota for about two months in 1995.  He was born in Castro Valley, California, attended the University of California, and was drafted by the Yankees in the 22nd round in 1986.  Maas hit pretty well throughout his minor league career, making his major league debut with the Yankees at the end of June of 1990.  He got off to a tremendous start, hitting 21 home runs in about four months and finishing second in Rookie of the Year voting to Sandy Alomar.  In 1991, his only year as a regular, he hit 23 homers, but batted only .220, although he had a .333 OBP.  He was reduced to part-time status in 1992 and 1993, going back to AAA in July of the latter year.  Maas was released by the Yankees in March of 1994, signed with San Diego, was released again in May, and finished the season with Cincinnati, although he was in the minors with all of those clubs.  Released again at the end of the season, Maas signed with Minnesota.  He played sparingly with the Twins:  in a little over two months, he appeared in 22 games, getting 64 at-bats.  He hit .193/.281/.316 with one home run, and was released in late June, his last appearance in the majors.  He continued playing for a couple more years, though.  Maas played for Columbus in the Yankees organization for the rest of 1995, went to the Brewers' AAA team in 1996 (playing briefly for Hanshin in Japan), and was in AAA for Houston and Cincinnati in 1997 before ending his playing career.  At last report, Kevin Maas was working as a vice president and financial consultant for Charles Schwab in his home town of Castro Valley, California.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

January 19

Chick Gandil (1888)
Lee Head (1899)
Rip Radcliff (1906)
Chet Trail (1944)
Jon Matlack (1950)
Rich Gale (1954)
Brad Mills (1957)
Rick Adair (1958)
Chris Sabo (1962)
Jim Morris (1964)
Orlando Palmeiro (1969)
Phil Nevin (1971)
Jeff Juden (1971)
Chris Stynes (1973)
Amaury Telemaco (1974)
Byung-Hyun Kim (1979)
James Beresford (1989)
Lee Head played in the minors for twenty-one seasons.  He batted .304, but he was best known for his ability to avoid striking out.  In 1933 he struck out three times in 468 at-bats.  In 1935 he did even better, striking out once in 402 at-bats.
Chet Trail is the only player to have been on a World Series roster who never appeared in a major league game, regular season or post-season.
Third baseman Brad Mills was drafted by Minnesota in the 16th round of the 1977 January draft, but did not sign.
Rick Adair was in baseball from 1979-2013.  Most recently, he was the pitching coach of the Baltimore Orioles.  He is the nephew of former Twins pitching coach Art Fowler.
One would not normally think of Phillip Joseph Nevin as a "utility player", but he played 483 major league games at third base, 249 at first, 128 in the outfield, and 109 behind the plate, plus another 119 at designated hitter.  He was with the Twins for the last month of the 2006 season.  Nevin was born in Fullerton, California, went to high school in Placentia, California, and then attended Cal State--Fullerton, where he was a teammate of Dan Naulty.  He was drafted by Houston with the first pick of the 1992 draft.  He played for the Olympic team that summer, so his professional career did not start until 1993.  Nevin began at AAA, was there for a little over two years, and made it to the majors in mid-June 0f 1995.  He did not hit, was sent back down after about a month, and then was traded to Houston after another month.  He got a September callup with Detroit, but was back in the minors in 1996, getting called up to the Tigers in August.  He finally spent a full season in the majors in 1997, but he was a part-time player and did not do a whole lot.  After the season, Nevin was traded to Anaheim.  Again a part-time player in 1998, Nevin continued to not do a whole lot.  Just before the 1999 season, he was traded to San Diego.  Finally given the chance to play every day, he blossomed.  In six and a half years as a Padre, he hit .288, twice hitting over .300, twice getting minor MVP consideration, and making the all-star team in 2001.  He was having a down year in 2005, and was 34 years old by then, so he was traded to Texas at the July deadline.  He did not hit as a Ranger, and in late May of 2006 he was on the move again, this time to the Cubs.  He was there for two months, and was traded to Minnesota at the end of August for a player to be named later (Adam Harben).  Nevin played in only 16 games for the Twins, getting 54 at-bats.  He hit .190/.340/.286 with one home run.  No one picked him up after the season, and his career was over.  Since then, Phil Nevin has done some work for the Padres' Radio Network and for ESPN.  He managed the Orange County Flyers of the Golden Baseball League in 2009.  In 2010 he managed the AA Erie Seawolves, from 2011-2013 he was manager of the AAA Toledo Mud Hens, and in 2014 he became the manager of the Reno Aces, which he did through 2016.  He will be the third base coach for the San Francisco Giants this season.

Infielder James Richard Beresford played ten games for the Twins in 2016.  He was born in Mount Waverly, Australia, went to high school in Melbourne, and signed with the Twins as a free agent in 2005.  He posted good batting averages and decent on-base percentages throughout his minor league career, but had almost no power, hitting only four home runs in over a thousand minor league games.  He spent two years in rookie ball, two years in low-A, and one year in high-A, reaching AA in 2012, at which time he was sill only twenty-three.  He got to AAA in mid-2013 and has stayed there, getting a September callup in 2016.  His AAA numbers are .286/.334/.342.  In his ten games with the Twins he hit .227/.261/.273.  He turns twenty-eight today and is a free agent.  Had he come up when teams had reasonably sized pitching staffs and more bench players, he might have been able to have a decent career as a utility infielder.  In today's game, though, it's going to be tough for him.  We'll be rooting for him, but there's probably a good chance that those ten games last September may be the sum and substance of James Beresford's major league career.

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

January 18

Eddie Moore (1899)
Danny Kaye (1913)
Mike Fornieles (1932)
Chuck Cottier (1936)
Satch Davidson (1936)
Curt Flood (1938)
Carl Morton (1944)
Billy Grabarkewitz (1946)
Sachio Kinugasa (1947)
Scott McGregor (1954)
Dave Geisel (1955)
Brady Anderson (1964)
Mike Lieberthal (1972)
Wandy Rodriguez (1979)
Entertainer Danny Kaye was one of the original owners of the Seattle Mariners.
Satch Davidson was a National League umpire from 1969-1984.
Sachio Kinusaga played in 2,215 games in Japan from 1970-1987.
Right-hander Jose Miguel "Mike" Fornieles made 11 relief appearances for Minnesota in 1963.  Born in Havana, he signed with Washington as a free agent in 1950.  He had two fine years in the low minors, pitching over 200 innings both years, and made his major-league debut with Washington in September of 1952.  That off-season, Fornieles was traded to the White Sox for Chuck Stobbs.  The White Sox never really settled on a role for Fornieles, sometimes making him a starter, sometimes a reliever.  He also spent some time in AAA in both 1954 and 1955, despite not pitching all that badly in the majors.  He was traded to Baltimore in May of 1956, but the Orioles didn't seem to know what to do with him, either, and traded him to Boston in June of 1957.  He was a starter for the Red Sox most of 1957, but mid-way through 1958, they moved him to the bullpen, and Fornieles finally found his niche.  His best year with Boston was 1960, when he went 10-5, 2.64 and led the league in appearances, saves, and games finished.  He also got a vote in the MVP balloting that year.  He was unable to repeat that the next season, although he made the 1961 all-star team.  He had a poor year in 1962 and was having another one in 1963 when he was sold to Minnesota in the middle of June.  He was with the Twins for about a month, pitching 22.2 innings and going 1-1, 4.76.  He was released in mid-July.  Fornieles was out of baseball for the rest of 1963, signed with Cincinnati for 1964, but was released before the season started, bringing his career to a close.  After his playing career ended, Mike Fornieles became a car salesman in Florida, a job which he held until his retirement.  Mike Fornieles passed away in St. Petersburg, Florida on February 11, 1998.


Tuesday, January 17, 2017

January 17

Louis Santop (1890)
Hank Leiber (1911)
Lum Harris (1915)
Mayo Smith (1915)
Don Zimmer (1931)
Keith Lieppman (1949)
Antonio Munoz (1949)
Pete LaCock (1952)
Darrell Porter (1952)
Mark Littell (1953)
Jerry Turner (1954)
Doug Simunic (1956)
T. R. Bryden (1959)
Chili Davis (1960)
Tyler Houston (1971)
Rob Bell (1977)
Catcher Louis Santop was a star in the Negro Leagues, hitting .349 over fifteen seasons.
Keith Lieppman has been Oakland's Director of Player Development since 1992.
Antonio Munoz was a long-time star in Cuba, winning eight home run titles and becoming the all-time leader in walks.
Doug Simunic has been the manager of the Fargo-Moorhead Redhawks since 1996.
Right-hander Thomas Ray Bryden did not play for the Twins, but was in their minor league system in 1988.  He was born in Moses Lake, Washington, went to high school in Enumclaw, Washington, and was signed by California as a free agent in 1981.  After two ineffective minor league years as a starter, he was moved to the bullpen in 1983.  He did substantially better there, reaching AA in 1984.  He worked mostly in AAA in 1985 and had a bad year, but pitched very well in spring training in 1986 and made the major league team.  Bryden made sixteen appearances with the Angels through early June, going 2-1, 6.55, 1.72 WHIP with 21 walks in 34.1 innings.  He was sent back to AAA after that and did well, but did not make it back to the major leagues.  In 1987, he was still in AAA, posting a record of 9-1 despite a 6.35 ERA and a 1.69 WHIP in 72.1 innings.  The Angels were not fooled by his won-lost record and released him after the season.  Bryden signed with Minnesota and spent 1988 in AAA Portland.  He made 30 appearances there, 13 of them starts, and went 8-8, 4.99, 1.56 WHIP in 113.2 innings.  That brought his playing career to an end.  No information about T. R. Bryden since that time was readily available.

Switch-hitting outfielder Charles Theodore "Chili" Davis was with Minnesota from 1991-1992 and was used almost exclusively as a designated hitter.  He was born in Kingston, Jamaica, one of four major league players to be born in Jamaica.  He attended high school in Los Angeles, and was drafted by San Francisco in the 11th round in 1977.  He hit well in three minor league seasons and made the Giants out of spring training in 1981, but was seldom used and was sent back to AAA in early May.  Davis had a huge year in AAA Phoenix, hitting .350 with 19 homers and an OPS over 1.000.  He was the regular center fielder for the Giants in 1982, and remained a big league regular for the rest of his long career.  He finished fourth in Rookie of the Year voting in 1982, hitting .261 with 19 homers.  His best year as a Giant was 1984, when he hit .315 with 21 home runs and an OPS of .875.  He made his first all-star team that year, making the team again in 1986.  Davis became a free agent after the 1987 season and signed with the California Angels.  He put in three solid seasons for the Angels from 1988-1990.  He received a few MVP votes in 1989, but there was nothing about that season that made it particularly better than his other Angel seasons, as they were all good.  A free agent again after the 1990 campaign, Davis signed with Minnesota.  He had started doing some DH-ing in 1990, and was the regular designated hitter for the Twins for two seasons.  He put up good numbers for the Twins in those two seasons:  he hit .282/.385/.476, with 41 home runs and 159 RBIs.  He finished 14th in MVP voting in 1991, when the Twins won the World Series.  Davis was once more a free agent after the 1992 season, and returned to the California Angels.  He was an Angel for four years this time, and after a disappointing 1993 went on to produce three of his best seasons, hitting over .300 and averaging 25 homers for those years.  He was traded to Kansas City for 1997, the only time in his career he was ever traded.  After a good year there, he became a Yankee for 1998, but was hurt early in the season and missed most of the year.  Healthy again in 1999, Davis had another solid season, hitting .269 with 19 homers at age 39.  He retired after that season.  He has been coaching for several years, three of them with the Australian national baseball team.  He was the batting coach for the Dodgers’ instructional league team in 2010, the batting coach for AAA Pawtucket in 2011, was the batting coach for the Oakland Athletics from 2012-2014, and has been the batting coach for the Boston Red Sox since 2015.

Monday, January 16, 2017

January 16

Jimmy Macullar (1855)
Art Whitney (1858)
Jimmy Collins (1870)
Ferdie Schupp (1891)
Buck Jordan (1907)
Dizzy Dean (1910)
Jim Owens (1934)
Ron Herbel (1938)
Joe Bonikowski (1941)
Tsuneo Horiuchi (1948)
Dave Stapleton (1954)
Steve Balboni (1957)
Marty Castillo (1957)
Dave Jauss (1957)
Jack McDowell (1966)
Ron Villone (1970)
Jack Cust (1979)
Albert Pujols (1980)
Matt Maloney (1984)
Jeff Manship (1985)
Jimmy Macullar holds the career record for most games by a left-handed-throwing shortstop (325). Oddly, he batted right-handed.
Pitcher Tsuneo Horiuchi made nine all-star teams in Japan and won seven Gold Gloves.  On October 10, 1967 he pitched a no-hitter and also hit three home runs.
Dave Jauss is a long-time minor league manager, scout, and major league coach.
Marty Castillo was drafted by Minnesota in the twenty-first round in 1975, but did not sign.
Right-hander Ronald Samuel Herbel did not play for the Twins, but was in their minor league system in 1972. He was born in Denver, went to high school in Brighton, Colorado, attended the University of Northern Colorado, and was signed as a free agent by San Francisco in 1958. He struggled early in his minor league career but hit his stride in 1960, going 15-4, 3.50 for AA Rio Grande Valley and following it up in 1961 with 16-5, 3.57 for AAA Tacoma. He was walking a lot of batters, though, so he did not get the call to the majors right away. In 1962 he got his control together, dropping his walks per nine innings to 2.0, and when he continued to do that in 1963 he finally got a September call-up. He was up to stay, starting 1964 with the Giants. He both started and relieved a significant number of games in his first four seasons, not producing eye-popping numbers but not pitching badly, either. He made a permanent switch to the bullpen in 1968. After the 1969 campaign, the Giants traded Herbel to San Diego, and he was traded again this time to the Mets, before the 1970 season ended. He led the league in appearances that year with 76, the only time he led the league in something. The Mets traded him to Atlanta before the 1971 season. He did not pitch well for the Braves, and was released after the season. He signed with Minnesota for 1972 and spent the year in AAA Tacoma. He both started and relieved, going 6-9, 4.41 with a 1.49 WHIP in 151 innings. His playing career ended after that. He holds the distinction of having the lowest career batting average for any player with more than a hundred at-bats (6-for-206—his slash line is .029/.065/.039). He remained in Tacoma after his career ended. He passed away in Tacoma on January 20, 2000.
Right-hander Joseph Peter Bonikowski pitched for Minnesota in 1962. He was born in Philadelphia and attended high school there. Bonikowski signed as a free agent with Washington in 1959. He had three solid minor league seasons, first in Class D, then in Class B, then in AAA. A starter in the minors, he began the 1962 season in the Twins' bullpen, but joined the rotation in mid-May, getting a complete game victory in his first major league start. He pitched very well for about a month, but throwing back-to-back complete games in early June seemed to take something out of him. He had a series of fair-to-poor starts, was removed from the rotation in early July, and sent to the minors in late July, coming back in September. He never returned to the majors after that, and never had a good minor league year again, finally retiring after the 1965 season. One wonders if he might have been a victim of over-use: in addition to throwing three complete games within a month as a 22-year old, he threw 159 innings at age 18 at Class D Sanford, 242 innings at age 19 at Class B Wilson, and 180 innings at age 20 at AAA Syracuse. As a Twin, Joe Bonikowski made 30 appearances, 13 of them starts. He was 5-7, 3.88 with a 1.33 WHIP. While it is unclear what happened to him after his playing days, it appears that he returned to Philadelphia and then retired to southern Florida.
Left-hander Matthew Michael Maloney appeared in nine games for the Twins in 2012.  He was born in Sandusky, Ohio, went to high school in Huron, Ohio, attended the University of Mississippi, and was drafted by Philadelphia in the third round in 2005.  He was a starter throughout his minior league career.  He had a couple of good seasons in the low minors for the Phillies and was doing fairly well in AA in 2007 when he was traded to Cincinnati for ex-Twin Kyle Lohse.  He pitched well enough in AAA for the Reds in 2008 and very well there in 2009.  He made his major league debut in 2009, making three starts in June.  He pitched well in the first one, but not so well in the other two and was sent back to AAA, coming back to the majors at the end of August.  He had another very good AAA season in 2010 and made seven very good major league starts that season, going 3-2, 3.05, 1.21 WHIP.  So far, that's as good as it's gotten for Maloney.  He started 2011 in the Reds bullpen and made four appearances there, one disastrous but the other three pretty good.  He then made a poor start and was sent to AAA, where he again pitched well and earned a September call-up.  His major league numbers that year are 0-3, 9.16, but thirteen of the nineteen runs came in two appearances.  He was placed on waivers after the season and claimed by Minnesota, and even though he was 28 it did not seem unreasonable to think he could help.  It didn't work out that way.  Maloney made nine appearances for the Twins and went 1-0, 8.18 in eleven innings, although again, half of the ten earned runs he allowed came in one really bad outing.  He was sent to the minors in early May, pitched poorly in eight appearances, then missed the rest of the season with injury.  He was allowed to become a free agent after the season and signed with Boston.  He was injured much of the season, pitching only fourteen not very good innings in AA.  He spent most of 2014 pitching well for Somerset in the Atlantic League, although he also made two starts in AAA for the Cincinnati organization.  He made only four starts for Sugar Land in the Atlantic League and did not pitch well, bringing his playing career to an end.  At last report, Matt Maloney was living in Columbus, Ohio, and was a scout for the San Diego Padres.  He also gives private pitching lessons.
Right-hander Jeffrey Michael Manship made 41 appearances for Minnesota from 2009-2012. He was born in San Antonio, attended high school there, went to Notre Dame, and was drafted by the Twins in the 14th round in 2006. He has never spent a full year with one team: 2006 was split between the GCL Twins and Ft. Myers, 2007 between Beloit and Ft. Myers, 2008 between Ft. Myers and New Britain, 2009 among New Britain, Rochester, and Minnesota, 2010-2012 between Rochester and Minnesota, and 2013 between Colorado Springs and Colorado. although all but five of his 2011 appearances were in Rochester. He pitched fairly well throughout his minor league career with the Twins other than 2010, but was injured much of 2011.  He pitched fairly well in AAA in 2012 and came up to the majors in late May, but did poorly pitching out of the bullpen and was sent back to AAA in mid-August.  He became a free agent after the season and signed with Colorado for 2013.  They sent him to AAA Colorado Springs.  He didn't do all that well there, but was still promoted to the Rockies in early August and placed in the rotation.  That didn't go very well, and things did not get better when, after four starts, he was placed in the bullpen.  He was again a free agent after the season and signed with Philadelphia.  He was in the big leagues for the first two months of 2014, got hurt, and got only four more major league appearances that season.  He wasn't very good when he was healthy.  He was a free agent again after the season and signed with Cleveland for 2015.  He was sent to AAA to start the season but came up to the Indians in mid-June and pitched extremely well out of the bullpen for them.  He went 1-0, 0.92, 0.76 WHIP in 32 appearances (39.2 innings).  In 2016, at age thirty-one, he spent his first full season in the majors and did all right, going 2-1, 3.12, although with a WHIP of 1.43.  As a Twin, he was 3-2, 6.20, 1.62 WHIP in 85.2 innings (41 games, 6 starts).  He turns thirty-two today and is currently a free agent.  Given what he's done for Cleveland over the last year and a half, one would think that someone will sign him for 2017.


Sunday, January 15, 2017

January 15

Johnny Nee (1890)
Ray Chapman (1891)
Steve Gromek (1920)
Georges Maranda (1932)
Dr. Mike Marshall (1943)
Bobby Grich (1949)
Rance Mulliniks (1956)
Jerry Narron (1956)
Don Cooper (1956)
Delino DeShields (1969)
Ray King (1974)
Matt Holliday (1980)
Armando Galarraga (1982)
Johnny Nee was a long-time minor league manager and scout.
Right-handed pitcher Georges Henri Maranda is the only major league player ever named "Georges". He was with Minnesota for all of 1962. Born in Levis, Quebec, Canada, he was signed by the Boston Braves as a free agent in 1951. He spent the next five years pitching in Class C leagues, spending three years in Quebec and two years in Eau Claire. He bounced back and forth between starting and relieving in those years: his best was 1954, when he went 18-6, 3.16 in 228 innings. Finally, in 1956, Maranda was promoted to AA Austin, where he spent most of the next three seasons. He posted decent numbers there, too, although nothing particularly eye-popping. Then, in 1959, he was promoted to AAA Louisville, where he went 18-6, 2.48. He was just about to turn 28, however, and was left unprotected in the Rule 5 draft. San Francisco selected him, and he was in the majors for 1960. He was used sparingly, making four starts and thirteen relief appearances, and while he was not terrible he was not particularly good, either. Back in the minors in 1961, he had another good year at AAA, but again was left unprotected, and again was chosen in the Rule 5 draft, this time by Minnesota. Maranda again made four starts, but made 28 relief appearances. He was actually fairly decent as a reliever, posting a 3.48 ERA and a 1.36 WHIP in that role. His four starts were not good, however, and his total stats as a Twin are 1-3, 4.46 with a 1.43 WHIP in 72.2 innings. After the season, Maranda was sent to Cleveland as the player to be named later in a trade that also sent Jackie Collum and cash to the Indians for Ruben Gomez. He pitched in AAA in 1963, and then his career was over. He went on to do some minor league managing in Canada. The baseball stadium in Levis is named for him, and he was inducted into the Quebec Baseball Hall of Fame in 2000. Georges Maranda passed away on July 14, 2000, in his home town of Levis, Quebec.
Right-handed reliever Michael Grant Marshall played for the Twins from 1978-1980 and was the Twins' closer for a little over two seasons. He was born in Adrian, Michigan and attended high school there. He was signed as a free agent by Philadelphia in 1960. He was drafted as a shortstop, and played four minor league seasons at that position, rising as high as AA. You really can't say he washed out at that position, because in his last season as a regular shortstop, 1964, he hit .275 as a 21-year-old in AA Chattanooga. Still, he became a pitcher in 1965, and remained one the rest of his career, with the exception of 12 games at shortstop in 1966 and an emergency appearance in the outfield in 1969. He was successful almost immediately, beginning the year as a reliever in Class A but being promoted to AA in 1965. At the start of the 1966 season, he was sold to Detroit and made his major league debut as a Tiger in 1967. He pitched extremely well, posting a 1.98 ERA and a 1.20 WHIP in 59 innings. Detroit then decided to make Marshall a starter, and sent him to AAA for 1968. He pitched extremely well again, going 15-9 with a 2.94 ERA and a 1.15 WHIP, but these were the 1968 Tigers, with Denny McLain, Mickey Lolich, Earl Wilson, and Joe Sparma in the rotation and Pat Dobson and John Hiller to make spot starts, so there simply was no room for Marshall. As a result, despite his record, Marshall was left unprotected, and was chosen by Seattle in the expansion draft. Still a starter, he got off to a strong start but then struggled, was removed from the rotation in mid-June, and was sent to the minors in early July. He was sold to Houston after the 1969 season and then traded to Montreal in June. The Expos returned him to the bullpen, made him the bullpen ace, and that's when he became a star. In three and a half years with Montreal, Marshall led the league in games finished three times, in appearances twice, and in saves once. He finished in the top four in Cy Young voting twice and in the top ten in the MVP voting twice. In 1973, Marshall appeared in 92 games and pitched 179 relief innings, incredible numbers. That off-season, he was traded to the Dodgers, and proceeded to top those incredible numbers. In 1974, Mike Marshall appeared in 106 games and pitched 208.1 relief innings, records that will probably stand for quite some time. He won the Cy Young Award that year, made the all-star team for the first time, and finished third in MVP voting. Marshall again made the all-star team in 1975, but then it appeared that the workload had caught up to him. He struggled through two mediocre seasons, was traded to Atlanta in June of 1976, sold to Texas in April of 1977, and became a free agent after the 1977 campaign. He went unsigned until May 15, 1978, when the Twins took a chance on him. He immediately became their closer, although the term "closer" is misleading in Marshall's case, as all through his career he was brought into tie games and games when his team was behind, and he was frequently brought in earlier than the ninth inning. He posted ERAs in the mid-twos in 1978 and 1979, setting an American League record in 1979 by appearing in 90 games and pitching 142.2 relief innings. Marshall finished in the top seven in Cy Young voting in both years and finished 11th in the MVP voting in 1979. Marshall got off to a poor start in 1980 and was released in June. He was out of baseball until August of 1981, when he signed with the Mets. He pitched well for them in 20 appearances and ended his career after that. As a Twin, Mike Marshall was 21-30 with 54 saves and a 2.99 ERA. He made 162 appearances and pitched 274 innings. After his playing career ended, Mike Marshall received a Ph. D in kinesiology from Michigan State. He currently coaches young pitchers in proper pitching techniques.  He also has a website, drmikemarshall.com, where you can watch free instructional videos and email him pitching questions for free.
Right-handed pitcher Donald James Cooper was with the Twins in the early 1980s. Born in New York, he attended the New York Institute of Technology, one of four major league players that school has produced. He was drafted by the Yankees in the 17th round in 1978. His early minor league record was unimpressive, but he had a big year in 1980, going 12-7 with a 1.93 ERA mostly as a reliever in a season split between AA and AAA. He was left unprotected, however, and was chosen by Minnesota in that year's Rule 5 draft. He was with the Twins all of the 1981 season, was used rather sparingly, and was, well, not totally awful, but not particularly good, either. Sent back to AAA for 1982 and converted to a starter, he was not all that good again, but still got a September call-up. After that season, the Twins traded Cooper to Toronto for Dave Baker. The Blue Jays sent Cooper to AAA and returned him to the bullpen, where he had a good year in Syracuse and got another September callup. He was traded in spring training of 1984 to the Yankees, who again sent him to AAA. He had two very good years in the Columbus bullpen, but only pitched seven games for the big club, all in 1985. Released by the Yankees after the 1985 campaign, he signed with Oakland, moved on to the Toronto organization for 1986, and to the Baltimore chain for 1987, pitching well in AAA both years but not getting a shot in the majors. After the 1987 season, Cooper gave up and called it a career, although he did play in the seniors league in 1989-1990. As a Twin, Don Cooper made 33 appearances, three of them starts. In seventy innings, he was 1-6, 5.14. After his playing career ended, Cooper went into coaching in the White Sox' organization, worked his way up through the minor league system until he became the major league pitching coach in 2002.  He has remained the White Sox pitching coach since then.  Cooper also will provide private analysis of pitching mechanics via video through his website, doncooperbaseball.com.