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)
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.
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