Wednesday, June 30, 2021

June 30

Davy Jones (1880)
Ron Swoboda (1944)
Chuck Meriwether (1956)
Bud Black (1957)
Al Newman (1960)
Tony Fernandez (1962)
Mark Grudzielanek (1970)
Garret Anderson (1972)
Chan Ho Park (1973)
Pat Venditte (1985)

Chuck Meriwether was a major league umpire from 1993-2010.

Infielder Albert Dwayne Newman played for the Minnesota Twins from 1987-1991.  He was born in Kansas City, attended San Diego State, and was drafted by Montreal in the first round of the June Secondary draft in 1981.  He was not much of a hitter in the minors, although he did draw a pretty fair number of walks.  After the 1983 season, he was traded to San Diego as part of a three-team deal, but in July of 1984 he was traded back to Montreal.  He hit .282 at AAA in 1985, which got him about two months in the majors as a reserve infielder.  He began 1986 with the Expos, and was in the majors to stay.  He hit a home run that season, his only home run in the majors.  After the 1986 season, however, he was traded to Minnesota for Mike Shade.  His best role was always as a utility player.  He was considered a good glove man who could play three infield positions well.  On the other hand, his bat left much to be desired.  His best year at bat was 1989, which was also the year he got the most playing time, but even then, he hit only .253 with an OPS of .643 (although with an OBP of .341).  In 1991 he slumped to .191 with an OPS of .471, and he was allowed to become a free agent after the season.  Despite his numbers, many fans were upset that the popular Newman was let go, especially coming off a World Championship season.  As GM Andy McPhail explained, however, “Any way you look at it, .191 is still .191.”  It turned out to be a wise decision; Newman played only one more season, with Texas in 1992, and then was done as a player.  As a Twin, he hit .231/.306/.275 in 1,647 at bats.  He remained in baseball after his playing career ended.  Newman was a minor league manager for the Twins from 1995-1997 and 1999-2001 and was a coach for them from 2002-2005.  He  became an advance scout for the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2006.  He was the manager of the Alexandria Blue Anchors of the Northwoods League from 2013-15, was a coach for the St. Cloud Rox of the same league from 2016-17, and managed the Rox in 2018.  At last report, Al Newman was working with the Minnesota Blizzard, a youth baseball program based in Vadnais Heights, Minnesota.

Infielder Mark Grudzielanek did not play for the Twins, but was in their minor league system for about three weeks in 2009.  He was born in Milwaukee, went to high school in El Paso, and was drafted by Montreal in the eleventh round in 1991.  He started slowly in the minors, but hit .322 at AA in 1994 and followed that up with .298 in AAA in 1995, which got him to the majors for a little over half the season.  He became the Expos’ starting shortstop the next year.  It was his best season as an Expo:  he hit .306 and made the all-star team.  He remained the Expos’ starting shortstop, posting solid batting averages but doing little else offensively, until the end of July, 1998, when he was traded to the Dodgers.  He had a fine 1999, hitting .326, but then went back to being the player he had been with the Expos, which wasn’t bad, but wasn’t great, either.  He shifted to second base in 2000, which is where he would play the rest of his career.  Grudzielanek was traded to the Cubs after the 2002 season.  He had a couple of good years as a Cub, hitting over .300 in both of his seasons for them.  He signed with the Cardinals for 2005, hitting .294, then moved on to Kansas City.  He was a Royal for three years, hitting .300, but could not find a job after the 2008 season.  The Twins picked him up in mid-July of 2009 and sent him to the minors for about three weeks, then released him.  He was quoted as saying the Twins had wasted his time, although the feeling appears to have been mutual.  Grudzielanek signed with Cleveland for 2010.  He hit .273 as a part-time player and was released June 10, ending his playing career, although he did not officially retire until February 23, 2011.  Mark Grudzielanek was the manager of the Kane County Cougars in 2015, was the assistant player development coordinator for the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2016, and has been the manager of the AAA Charlotte Knights in the White Sox organization from 2017-2019.  He was not scheduled to be the Knights manager in 2020, and we could not find where he had gotten another baseball job.  It appears that he is now living in the Scottsdale, Arizona area.  A news report from April of 2021 indicated that he was under investigation for a child abuse incident, but no resolution of that investigation could be found.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

June 29

Wilbert Robinson (1863)
Harry Frazee (1880)
Bobby Veach (1888)
Ollie Carnegie (1899)
Ken Blackman (1911)
Dizzy Trout (1915)
Cal Drummond (1917)
Bob Shaw (1933)
Katsuya Nomura (1935)
Harmon Killebrew (1936)
John Boccabella (1941)
Larry Stahl (1941)
Bruce Kimm (1951)
Rick Honeycutt (1954)
Pedro Guerrero (1956)
John Wehner (1967)
Trey Hodges (1978)
Dusty Hughes (1982)
Brooks Raley (1988)

Harry Frazee was the owner of the Red Sox from 1916-1923 and is best remembered for selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees.

Ollie Carnegie is the all-time home run king of the International League with 258.  He started his minor league career at age 32.

Ken Blackman was a minor league player, college coach, minor league executive, and major league scout.

Cal Drummond was an American League umpire from 1960-1969.

Katsuya Nomura hit 657 home runs in Japan during his twenty-five-year career.

An original Twin, Harmon Clayton Killebrew was with the Twins through the 1974 season.  Born and raised in Payette, Idaho, he was signed by Washington in 1954 under the “bonus baby” rules, which required him to be on the major league roster for two full years.  While he obviously overcame it, one has to think that slowed his development, as he got only 93 at bats in his first two major league seasons.  He got 34 more at bats through June of 1956, then his two years finally expired and he got regular playing time in the minors, coming back as a September call-up.  He hit around .280 in the minors in 1957 and 1958, hitting a total of 48 home runs, and got brief time in the majors both years.  Finally, in 1959, Killebrew reached the majors to stay.  He had been exclusively a third baseman in the minors, and he was the regular third baseman for Washington in 1959.  He responded by hitting 42 home runs, driving in 105 runs, making his first of eleven all-star teams, and finished fifteenth in MVP voting.  He played both first and third in 1960, had another fine year, and came to Minnesota with the team in 1961 as its first star player.  He played mostly first base in 1961, then moved to the outfield for 1962-1964.  He kept hitting, belting between 45 and 49 homers each season, posting an OPS over .900 every year, finishing in the top eleven in MVP voting, and making the all-star team every year except 1962 (an odd omission, since he led the league in homers and RBI that year).  He was injured part of 1965, when he was moved back to the infield, but still finished fifteenth in MVP balloting as he helped lead the Twins to the World Series.  He bounced back to play in every game in 1966 and 1967, playing primarily at third in 1966 and almost exclusively at first in 1967.  He hit a total of 83 homers with 234 walks in those seasons and finishing in the top four in MVP voting each year.  In 1968, Killebrew was having a bad year when he was famously injured in the all-star game, not coming back until September.  It was a bad year for Harmon, but he came back to play in every game in 1969, mostly at third but a substantial number at first, and leading the league in homers, RBIs, walks, and OBP and winning his only MVP award.  He remained at third in 1970 and had another fine year.  Shifted to first in 1971, Killebrew continued to play well, but signs of decline began to show; his OPS that season was the lowest of his career to that point other than in 1968.  He slipped a little more in 1972 and became a part-time player after that.  Killebrew became a free agent after the 1974 season.  The Twins thought he was finished, but he thought he wasn’t, so he signed with Kansas City.  Unfortunately, the Twins were right:  Killebrew hit only .199 with fourteen homers as a Royal, and his playing career came to an end.  It was a tremendous career, though.  As a Twin/Senator, he hit .258/.278/.514, with 559 homers, giving him a total of 573 home runs for his career.  He made eleven all-star teams, including nine in a row from 1963-1971.  He was in the top ten in MVP voting seven times and in the top fifteen ten times.  Harmon Killebrew was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1984, the first Twin to be so honored.  Despite denials from major league baseball, Killebrew is widely thought to be the model for the MLB logo.  He was a television broadcaster for the Twins from 1976-1978, with Oakland from 1979-1982, with California in 1983, and back with the Twins from 1984-1988.  Harmon Killebrew retired to Scottsdale, Arizona, where he was the chair of the Harmon Killebrew Foundation, which is dedicated to enriching the quality of life by promoting positive and healthy participation in sports.  He also founded the Danny Thompson memorial golf tournament, which has raised millions of dollars for leukemia research.  Sadly, Harmon Killebrew passed away from esophageal cancer on May 17, 2011.

Right-hander Trey Allen Hodges did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for a month in 2005.  He was born in Houston, went to high school in Spring, Texas, attended LSU, and was drafted by Atlanta in the seventeenth round in 2000.  He had an outstanding year in 2001 in Class A, followed that with a fine season in AAA in 2002, and reached the majors as a September call-up in 2002.  He was with the Braves for all of 2003, his only full season in the majors.  A starter in the minors, he was used out of the bullpen that season and struggled with his control, something that had not been a problem for him in the minor leagues, and had a mediocre year, going 3-3, 4.66, 1.52 WHIP.  He was back in AAA in 2004 and having another mediocre year when he was released in late June, finishing the season in Japan.  He signed with the Twins for 2005 and was sent to Rochester, where he went 0-0, 5.62, 1.69 WHIP in nine relief appearances (16 innings).  The Braves re-signed him a couple weeks later, but he continued to not pitch well and was released again a month later.  Hodges was out of baseball in 2006 but decided to give it another try in 2007.  Atlanta gave him another chance, and he stayed in AAA all season, but he really was no better than he had been before.  He moved to the Texas AAA team in 2008 and played for independent Lancaster in 2009, then his playing career came to an end.  At last report, Trey Hodges was a financial advisor for Northwestern Mutual in Lafayette, Louisiana.

Left-hander Dustin Robert Hughes appeared in fifteen games for the Twins in 2011.  He was born in Tupelo, Mississippi, went to high school in Horn Lake, Mississippi, attended Delta State University, and was drafted by Kansas City in the eleventh round in 2003.  He pitched very well in the low minors through 2004, then had a terrible year in 2005 at Class A.  This may have been due to injury; he missed all of the 2006 season.  He pitched well in AA in 2007 and 2008, but less well when promoted to AAA in 2008.  He moved to the bullpen in 2009 and did well in AAA Omaha, earning a September call-up.  He was with the Royals for all of 2010, going 1-3, 3.83, but with a WHIP of 1.47 in 57 appearances (56.1 innings).  Kansas City wasn’t fooled and placed him on waivers.  The Twins claimed him and he started the season in Minnesota.  He was mostly bad; in 15 appearances (12.2 innings) he went 1-0, 9.95, 2.13 WHIP, giving up 19 hits and 8 walks.  Sent back to AAA, he was better, but not particularly good.  A free agent after the season, he signed with Atlanta for 2012 and was fairly mediocre in AAA for them as well.  He re-signed with Atlanta for 2013 but was released on May 10 and later announced his retirement.  At last report, Dusty Hughes was a physical education teacher in Southaven, Mississippi.  He was also the owner of the Royal Baseball Traning Academy in the Memphis area.

Left-hander Brooks Lee Raley did not play for the Twins, but he was in their farm system for about a month in 2014.  He was born in San Antonio, went to high school in Uvalde, Texas, attended Texas A&M, and was drafted by the Cubs in the sixth round in 2009.  There's really nothing particularly impressive about his minor league career.  He sometimes had some decent ERAs, but it was generally with a high WHIP.  He was a starter throughout his minor league career with the Cubs, reaching AA in 2011 and AAA in 2012.  He made five big-league starts with the Cubs in August of 2012, going 1-2 but with an ERA of 8.14.  He got a September callup in 2013 and did better pitching out of the bullpen, but still was not very good, posting an ERA of 5.14.  The Cubs put him on waivers after the season and he was selected by the Twins.  He made eight appearances in Rochester, pitching 14.2 innings.  He was 0-1, 3.68, but with a WHIP of 1.91.  The Twins waived him in early May of 2014 and he was selected by the Angels.  They sent him to AAA, where he pitched poorly again.  He moved on to Korea for 2015 and  pitched there through 2019.  He did fairly well there, with 2017 being his best season.  He signed with Cincinnati for 2020, but was traded to Houston in August and is still there in 2021.  He turns thirty-three today.  A year ago, we wrote, "We wish him well, but there's no real reason to think he'll succeed in the major leagues.  Still, he's left-handed, so he may well get some more chances."  Well, he's continued to get more chances, and since then he's gone 2-4, 5.48 in 47.2 innings (54 games).  Our opinion is that what we wrote a year ago still applies.

Monday, June 28, 2021

June 28

Ken Williams (1890)
Haruyasu Nakajima (1910)
A. Ray Smith (1915)
Oscar Rodriguez (1931)
Fred Gladding (1936)
Ron Luciano (1937)
Al Downing (1941)
Fred Talbot (1941)
Don Baylor (1949)
Chris Speier (1950)
Joe Sambito (1952)
Clay Christiansen (1958)
John Elway (1960)
Jay Schroeder (1961)
Mark Grace (1964)
Ron Mahay (1971)
Corey Koskie (1973)
Richard Hidalgo (1975)
Brandon Phillips (1981)

Haruyasu Nakajima is in the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame.

A. Ray Smith owned minor league baseball teams from 1961-1986.

Oscar Rodriguez is in the Mexican Baseball Hall of Fame.

Ron Luciano was an American League umpire from 1969-1979.

NFL quarterbacks John Elway and Jay Schroeder each played minor league baseball.  Elway hit .318 in 151 at-bats as an outfielder for Class A Oneonta in 1982.  Schroeder was primarily an outfielder for four years in the Toronto system, never getting higher than Class A.  He hit .213 with 36 homers in 1,304 minor league at-bats.

Mark Grace was drafted by Minnesota in the fifteenth round of the January draft in 1984, but did not sign.

Outfielder Don Edward Baylor played in twenty games for the Twins in 1987 and also played in seven post-season games.  Born and raised in Austin, Texas, he was drafted in the second round by Baltimore in 1967.  He had a tremendous minor league record, hitting .310 or more every season and hitting 20 or more home runs in his last two seasons, both at AAA Rochester.  He also stole over twenty bases each of his last three minor league years.  Baylor got cups of coffee in the majors in 1970 and 1971 before making the big leagues for good at the start of the 1972 season.  He was a part-time player the first year, mostly regular in 1973, and a full time outfielder after that.  He remained with the Orioles through 1975, hitting around .280 with double digit homers and about 30 stolen bases every season.  His best year in Baltimore was his last one, when he hit .282 with 25 homers and 32 steals and finished twentieth in MVP voting.  Just before the 1976 season, Baylor was traded to Oakland in a multi-player deal which included Reggie Jackson and Mike Torrez.  He had a down year for Oakland, although he set a career high with 52 stolen bases, and became a free agent, signing with the Angels.  He stayed in California through 1982, gradually moving from the outfield to designated hitter.  He had some fine years for the Angels.  The best was 1979, when he led the league in both runs and RBIs, hit .296 with a career-high 36 homers and a career-high 71 walks, and won the Most Valuable Player award.  After the 1982 campaign, Baylor became a free agent and signed with the Yankees, staying there three seasons.  He had a couple of good years there, too, but entered into the decline phase of his career.  His last two years with the Yankees were the first of four consecutive seasons he led the league in getting hit by pitch (he led the league a total of eight times in his career).  He was traded to Boston in late March of 1986 for Mike Easler in a trade of aging DHs.  He was nothing special for the Red Sox, but was traded to the Twins for a player to be named later (Enrique Rios) just in time to be placed on the post season roster.  He hit .286/.397/.306 in 49 at-bats the rest of the way, but went 7-for-18 in the post-season with a home run in helping the Twins to their first World Series championship.  A free agent again after the season, he went to Oakland for the 1988 season, then retired.  Baylor has remained in major league baseball, serving as a coach for Milwaukee (1990-1991) and St. Louis (1992), as manager for Colorado (1993-1988), as a coach for Atlanta (1999), as manager for the Cubs (2000-2002), and as a coach for the Mets (2003-2004), Seattle (2005), Colorado (2009-2010), Arizona (2011-2013), and the Angels (2014-2015).  On opening day of 2014, he broke his right leg while catching the ceremonial first pitch of the game.  He was let go by the Angels after the 2015 season.  Don Baylor passed away on August 7, 2017 from plasma cell myeloma.

Shortstop Chris Edward Speier played 12 games for the Twins in 1984.  Born and raised in Alameda, California, he attended UC–Santa Barbara and was chosen by San Francisco with the second pick in the January Secondary draft in 1970.  He spent one year in AA, hitting .283 in Amarillo, and was the starting shortstop for the Giants in 1971 at age 20.  He made the all-star team in 1972, the first of three consecutive seasons in which he did so.  He remained the Giants’ starting shortstop through April of 1977.  He was a solid player for several years, but slumped in 1976.  When he did no better at the start of 1977 he was traded to Montreal.  He was the regular shortstop for the Expos through 1982.  He was never great offensively, but in his good years he would hit in the .250s or .260s.  He fell to part-time status in 1983, and when his offense collapsed in 1984 he was traded to St. Louis on July 1.  He hit no better there, but the Twins were desperate for a shortstop in 1984, so they acquired Speier for a player to be named later (Jay Pettibone) on August 19.  Unfortunately, Speier was injured much of his time with the Twins, playing in only twelve games.  He went 7-for-33 for a line of .212/.278/.212.  Speier became a free agent after the season.  He signed with the Cubs, hitting .260 over two seasons as a part-time player.  He then moved on to San Francisco, where he was a reserve infielder for three seasons before retiring.  Speier remained in baseball after his playing career ended.  He was a roving instructor for the Giants from 1990-1994, hitting coach for the Orlando Cubs in 1995, managed in the Arizona organization from 1996-1999, was a major league coach for Milwaukee in 2000, for Arizona in 2001, for Oakland in 2004, and for the Cubs in 2005-2006.  He was the bench coach for Cincinnati from 2007-2013, was a special assistant to the general manager for the Reds from 2014-2015, and was the bench coach for the Washington Nationals from 2016-2017.  He appears to have been out of baseball for a couple of years, but was hired to be the quality control coach for Houston in 2020.   He retired again after the season.  His son, Justin Speier, was a major league pitcher from 1998-2009.

Right-hander Clay C. Christiansen did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for part of 1986 and 1987.  Born in Wichita, Kansas, went to high school in Columbia, Kansas, attended the University of Kansas and was drafted by the Yankees in the fifteenth round in 1980.  He pitched well in the low minors, going up a level per year.  He won 16 games in back-to-back seasons at A and AA in 1981 and 1982.  He stumbled on his first try at AAA in 1983 but did better there in 1984, earning a promotion to the majors for about six weeks in mid-summer and then coming back as a September call-up.  A starter in the minors, he was used almost exclusively in relief in the majors and did not pitch well, going 2-4, 6.05, 1.60 WHIP in 38.2 innings (24 appearances, 1 start).  Those would turn out to be his career totals, as he never made it back to the majors.  He pitched well in AAA in 1985, but not well enough to get promoted, and the Yankees released him in June of 1986.  The Twins signed him and sent him to AAA, where he stayed until June of 1987 when he was traded to Houston for Eric Bullock.  B-r.com does not give his numbers just in the Twins’ organization, but he did not have a particularly good year either of those seasons.  He stayed in the Houston system until 1988, then his playing career came to an end.  At last report, Clay Christiansen was living in Olathe, Kansas and was working for Pepsi as an install driver for the vending department, but that last report is several years old now.

Left-handed reliever Ronald Matthew Mahay joined the Twins in late August of 2009 and stayed through 2010.  He was born in Crestwood, Illinois, went to high school in Palos Heights, Illinois, and was drafted by Boston in the eighteenth round in 1991.  He was drafted as an outfielder, remaining one through 1995.  His minor league batting record is nothing to shout about, but he still was brought up to the majors briefly in 1995, spending about a week as their starting center fielder.  He went 4-for-20 with a home run.  Mahay turned to pitching in 1996 and reached the majors as a pitcher in 1997.  He has been with several teams since then, and has frequently been sent back to the minors–he has only three full seasons in the major leagues.  He was with the Red Sox from 1997-1998, with Oakland from 1999-2000, with Florida in 2000, with the Cubs in 2001-2002, with Texas from 2003-2007, with Atlanta in 2007, and with Kansas City from 2008-2009.  In that span, he was waived once, sold once, released twice, traded once, and allowed to become a free agent twice.  In late August of 2009, he was released for the third time and signed with Minnesota.  He pitched pretty well as a Twin, going 2-1, 3.14, 1.19 WHIP in 43 innings (57 appearances).  He became a free agent after the 2010 season, signed with the Dodgers, was released in spring training, signed with Arizona, was released after a month in AAA, signed with the Cardinals in July, for whom he also pitched in AAA, and was released in August.  He signed with Cincinnati for 2012, was again in AAA, and was released in mid-May.  He did not sign with anyone and announced his retirement in January of 2013.  He had a pretty solid career, though, lasting fourteen major league seasons.  He never pitched more than 67 innings in a season, leading to season ERAs as low as 1.86 and as high as 8.59.  He then became a scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers, which he was still doing at last report.

Third baseman Cordel Leonard Koskie played for the Twins from 1998-2004.  He was born in Anola, Manitoba and went to high school in Outbank, Manitoba.  He attended Des Moines Area Community College and Kwantlen University College of Surrey, British Columbia before being drafted by the Twins in the twenty-sixth round in 1994.  He advanced through the minors about one level per season and did pretty well, hitting over .300 twice and topping twenty home runs twice.  He got a September call-up in 1998 and in 1999 was the Twins’ semi-regular third baseman, sharing time with Ron Coomer.  By 2000 he was the Twins’ regular third baseman and remained in that role through 2004.  He was solid there, posting an OPS in the low to mid 800s every season.  His best year is generally considered to be 2001, when he scored 100 runs, hit 26 homers, and drove in 103 runs.  In fact, though, his OPS then was not particularly better than in any other year; his higher numbers are at least partly due to the fact that he played 153 games that season.  He became a free agent after the 2004 season and his career went almost straight down hill.  He signed with Toronto, suffered through an injury-plagued 2005, and was traded to Milwaukee for Brian Wolfe in the off-season.  Koskie was playing well for the Brewers in 2006 when he suffered a concussion in early July.  He never really recovered from it, at least not in a baseball sense.  He tried to play in the 2009 World Baseball Classic and in spring training with the Cubs that year.  He convinced himself that he could still play, but could not convince himself that it was worth risking further injury, and opted to retire. He operated a couple of Planet Fitness clubs in the Twin Cities area for several years, but eventually decided it wasn't worth the hassle and sold them in January of 2016.  At last report he was living in Plymouth, Minnesota and was involved in a number of charitable and community projects, including the Minnesota Twins Community Fund and the Positive Coaching Alliance.

Sunday, June 27, 2021

June 27

Rube Benton (1890)
Fred Saigh (1905)
Dick Terwilliger (1906)
Wendell Smith (1914)
Lou Kretlow (1921)
Gus Zernial (1923)
Wayne Terwilliger (1925)
Charles Bronfman (1931)
Chuck Coles (1931)
Eddie Kasko (1931)
Rico Petrocelli (1943)
Takashi Nishimoto (1956)
Jeff Conine (1966)
Jim Edmonds (1970)
Daryle Ward (1975)
Chris Woodward (1976)
Luis Rodriguez (1980)
Jim Johnson (1983)

Fred Saigh was the owner of the St. Louis Cardinals from 1947-1953, selling to Anheuser-Busch.

Wendell Smith was an African-American sportswriter who was influential in the choice of Jackie Robinson as the first African-American major league player.

Charles Bronfman was the owner of the Montreal Expos from 1969-1991.

Takashi Nishimoto was a star pitcher in Japan from 1977-1993.

Daryle Ward is the son of ex-Twin Gary Ward.

Willard Wayne Terwilliger, known as “Twig”, did not play for the Twins, but was part of their organization for several years.  Unrelated to Dick Terwilliger, who was also born on June 27, they are the only two people with the last name “Terwilliger” to have played in the major leagues.  He was born in Clair, Michigan, attended Western Michigan University, and was signed by the Cubs as a free agent in 1948.  A second baseman, he had a fine year at AAA in 1949 and made his major league debut that year, coming to the Cubs in early August.  He was the Cubs’ regular second baseman in 1950, but hit only .242 with ten homers.  He remained the Cubs’ regular second sacker at the start of 1951, but when he hit no better he was traded to Brooklyn as part of an eight-player deal.  He was okay as a reserve the rest of the season, backing up Jackie Robinson, but in 1952 he went down to AAA St. Paul, where he hit .312.  The Dodgers were obviously not impressed, because Terwilliger was put on waivers after the season.  Washington selected him and made him their started second baseman for two seasons.  Twig was sold to the New York Giants for 1955.  He split the next two seasons between New York and AAA Minneapolis, then was in Minneapolis for all of 1957.  He was traded to Detroit for 1958, spent all of that season in the minors, and was taken by the Kansas City Athletics in the Rule 5 draft.  He was with the Athletics for all of 1959, was in the minors for nearly all of 1960, and then turned to managing and coaching (he made a few brief appearances in the minors all the way through 1968, presumably when his team was short of infielders).  His minor-league managing career was in the Yankees’ organization in 1961, the Washington chain from 1963-1968, Houston in 1973, Texas in 1975 and 1980, and with independent Ft. Worth from 2003-2005.  He was a major league coach with Washington/Texas from 1969-1972 and 1981-1985, and the Twins from 1986-1994.  He was a minor league coach with the St. Paul Saints from 1995-2002 and Ft. Worth from 2006-2010, when he finally retired at age 85.  He is a member of the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame and wrote an autobiography, “Terwilliger Bunts One.”  Wayne Terwilliger passed away of February 3, 2021 at age ninety-five.

Outfielder Charles Edward Coles did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system from 1961-1962.  He was born in Fredericktown, Pennsylvania and attended Waynesburg College in Waynesburg, Pennsylvania, one of two major league players produced by that school (Dick Gray).  He signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers as a free agent in 1950.  He hit well in the minors through 1952, then missed two seasons due to the Korean War.  He was 24 when he returned.  He continued to hit well but could not get a chance above Class A in the Dodgers’ organization.  He played for independent Albuquerque in 1957, then moved to the Cincinnati system in 1958.  He hit .307 with 29 home runs in AA and got a September call-up.  He went 2-for-11 in five games, but it looked like, at age 27, Chuck Coles might finally get his chance.  It didn’t happen.  He had a terrible year in AA in 1959; one wonders if he might have been hurt, because his numbers are completely out of line with the rest of his career.  He bounced back with a solid year in AA in 1960, but by then he was 29 and was no longer considered a prospect.  He came to the Twins’ organization in 1961 and had a solid year at Class A Charlotte, but that was as good as it would get for him as a Twin.  He split 1962 between Charlotte and Class B Wilson, played for independent Tidewater in 1963, then ended his playing career.  In twelve minor league seasons, mostly in A and AA, Chuck Coles hit .293/.330/.466 with 176 home runs.  After his playing career, he was employed as a millwright in Jefferson, Pennsylvania.  He passed away in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina on January 25, 1996 at the age of 64.  In 2009, Chuck Coles was posthumously inducted into the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame.

Infielder Luis Orlando Rodriguez played for the Twins from 2005-2007.  Born and raised in Codejos, Venezuela, he signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1997.  He primarily played second base and shortstop in the minors.  He put up consistent but unspectacular numbers in the minors, generally hitting around .270 and drawing a good number of walks, but showing little power.  He was in his third year of AAA when he came up to the Twins in late May of 2005.  He did about as well as you’d expect a reserve infielder to do at the plate and got his only full season in the majors in 2006.  He was with the Twins for nearly all of 2007 as well, but his offense got worse every year, and since he was never known for his defense, the Twins placed him on waivers after the season.  As a Twin, Luis Rodriguez hit .243/.311/.339.  He played in 206 games and had 445 at-bats.  He signed with San Diego and in the majors with them for the second half of 2008 and nearly all of 2009.  He signed with Cleveland for 2010, was released in late April, and signed with the White Sox.  He was in AAA for them all season, then signed with Seattle for 2011.  Surprisingly, he made the Mariners as a reserve infielder and split the season between the majors and AAA.  He was still in the Mariners organization in 2012 and had a fine year at AAA Tacoma, batting .296 with an OPS of .841, but was not recalled to the majors.  A free agent after the season, he signed with the Angels for 2013 and had a good season for AAA Salt Lake, but again did not get a call-up.  Once again a free agent, he played in Mexico in 2014, played in Mexico and in the Atlantic League in 2015, and was back in the Atlantic League with Bridgeport in 2016.  He played winter ball that off-season, but then his playing career ended.  It appears that the Luis Rodriguez who was a coach for the Cedar Rapids Kernels in 2019 and would have been again in 2020 Luis Antonio Rodriguez.  At last report "this" Luis Rodriguez had returned to Venezuela.

Saturday, June 26, 2021

June 26

Topsy Hartsel (1874)
Babe Herman (1903)
Debs Garms (1907)
Willard Brown (1915)
Howie Pollet (1921)
Bill Robinson (1943)
Dave Rosello (1950)
Mike Myers (1963)
Rodney Myers (1969)
Derek Jeter (1974)
Jason Kendall (1974)

Outfielder Willard Brown was a star for the Kansas City Monarchs from 1935-1948.  He played briefly for the St. Louis Browns in 1947.

There do not appear to be any players with connections to the Minnesota Twins born on this day.  I haven't checked but I think this is the only time we have two consecutive days with no Twins birthdays.

Friday, June 25, 2021

June 25

Joe Kuhel (1906)
Don Demeter (1935)
Dick Drago (1945)
Clay Kirby (1948)
Bob Shirley (1954)
Alejandro Pena (1959)
Mike Stanley (1963)
Aaron Sele (1970)
Michael Tucker (1971)
Carlos Delgado (1972)
Aramis Ramirez (1978)
Paul Maholm (1982)

First baseman Joe Kuhel played for the franchise for several years while it was in Washington and later managed the team there. However, there do not appear to be any players with connections to the Minnesota Twins born on this day.

Thursday, June 24, 2021

June 24

Billy Nash (1865)
George Harper (1892)
Rollie Hemsley (1907)
Jim Mills (1919)
Wally Yonamine (1925)
Don Mincher (1938)
Ken Reitz (1951)
Doug Jones (1957)
Tom Klawitter (1958)
Doug Bernier (1980)
Phil Hughes (1986)

Jim Mills spent almost his entire adult life involved in baseball in the Carolinas.  He played college ball at North Carolina State, played minor league ball for nine seasons in the Carolinas, managed in Carolina minor leagues for six seasons, umpired in the Carolina League for two seasons, was in minor league front offices in the Carolinas from 1956-1971, and was president of the Carolina League for seven years.

Born in Hawaii, Wally Yonamine was a star in Japan from 1951-1962, stealing home eleven times.

First baseman Don Mincher played for the Twins from 1961-1966.  Born and raised in Huntsville, Alabama, he was signed by the White Sox as a free agent in 1956.  He had a very good minor league record, batting over .300 twice and hitting over 20 homers three times.  Just before the 1960 season, Mincher was traded to Washington with Earl Battey and $150,000 for Roy Sievers, a trade which worked very well for the soon-to-be Minnesota Twins.  Mincher was given the first base job for Washington in 1960, but did not hit well and was back in the minors by mid-May.  He was with the new Minnesota Twins in 1961, but again did not hit and was back in the minors in late May.  Mincher finally made the majors to stay in 1962, but as the Twins also had Vic Power and Harmon Killebrew, he had a hard time getting playing time.  He appeared in 86 games, but 61 of them were as a pinch-hitter, as he played the field in only 25 contests.  Given his role, he did pretty well, hitting .240 with 9 homers for an OPS of .894.  He got into the field more in 1963, but still only batted 225 times, posting an OPS of .871.  By 1964 Power was gone, but Sam Mele chose to give Bob Allison substantial playing time at first base.  Mincher did get 65 starts and hit 23 homers in 287 at-bats, recording an OPS of .847.  Finally, in 1965, he got semi-regular status, sharing first base with Harmon Killebrew (Killebrew shifted to third when Mincher played).  Mincher finally got almost regular playing time in 1966, at age 28, but after the season was traded to California with Pete Cimino and Jimmie Hall for Dean Chance and a player to be named later (Jackie Hernandez).  He had a very good year for the Angels in 1967, hitting .273 (which was very good for 1967) with 25 homers and making his first all-star team.  He slumped in 1968, however, and was left unprotected in the expansion draft.  Seattle chose him, and he was easily their best offensive player, hitting 25 homers, again posting an OPS over .800, and making his second all-star team.  He was traded to Oakland after the season and had another solid year, but was again traded in May of 1971, this time to Washington.  He hit fewer homers as a Senator but had the highest batting average of his career, .291, and again had an OPS over .800.  That was his last good year; he got off to a poor start when the team moved to Texas in 1972, was traded to Oakland in July, and ended his career as he had started it, as a pinch-hitter.  As a Twin, Don Mincher hit .244/.340/.479.  There were reasons he didn’t play more, but one wonders what sort of numbers he might have posted if he had been given regular playing time in his mid-twenties.  Don Mincher remained in baseball after his playing career ended.  He became general manager and part-owner of the Huntsville Stars in the Southern League, holding those titles from 1994-2001.  At that point, he became president of the Southern League, a position he held until his death.  He was elected to the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2008.  Don Mincher passed away in Huntsville, Alabama on March 4, 2012.

Left-hander Tom Klawitter appeared in seven games for the Twins in 1985.  He was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin and attended Wisconsin-La Crosse.  Klawitter was drafted by the Dodgers in the nineteenth round in 1980.  He struggled in the Dodgers’ system, reaching AA in 1982 but never posting an ERA under four.  The Dodgers released him in May of 1983.  Minnesota picked him up and sent him to Class A Wisconsin Rapids, where he pitched fairly well the rest of the season.  Promoted to AAA for 1984, Klawitter continued to do fairly well, going 10-6, 3.59 with a 1.35 WHIP.  He made the Twins out of spring training in 1985; manager Billy Gardner would make a claw gesture to the bullpen when he wanted Klawitter in the game.  Unfortunately, that didn’t happen for very long, as his control, which had always been shaky, pretty much deserted him.  Klawitter made five relief appearances and two starts for the Twins.  He gave up seven runs on seven hits and thirteen walks in 9.1 innings.  The record is not clear about what happened to him after mid-May of 1985; Klawitter was no longer with the Twins, but he does not appear to have gone to the minors, either.  At any rate, he made six appearances for AA Knoxville in 1986, and then his playing career was over.  Tom Klawitter was a high school girls basketball coach in Janesville, Wisconsin for many years, winning three state championships and being named state coach of the year in 1993.  He retired in 2015 to become an assistant baseball coach at Wisconsin-Whitewater, a position he continues to hold.

Infielder Douglas Paul Bernier has played briefly for the Twins in 2013, 2014, and 2015.  Born and raised in Santa Maria, California, he attended Oral Roberts University and was signed by Colorado as a free agent in 2002.  He spent two years in high-A and two years in AA before getting to AAA Colorado Springs in 2007.  He had a couple of solid seasons there, but considering that it's Colorado Springs, his numbers were not all that impressive.  He appeared in two games for the Rockies in the middle of June, one as a defensive replacement and one as a starter, and went 0-for-4.  He then bounced around AAA for a while.  He became a free agent after the 2008 season and signed with the Yankees.  He had a poor year in 2009, moved to the Pittsburgh organization in 2010, continued to not hit much, moved back to the Yankees organization from 2011-2012, and signed with Minnesota for 2013.   He got called up to the majors in late July, batting .226/.339/.283 in 53 at-bats as a Twin.  He got a September call-up in 2014 and went 2-for-7 in seven games.  He was back in the majors briefly in 2015 also, going 1-for-5 in four games.  As a Twin, therefore, he hit .231/.351/.292 in 65 at-bats.  He became a free agent after the 2015 season and signed with Texas.  He was in AAA for two seasons, doing fairly well in 2016 but not as well in 2017.  He became a free agent after that season and did not sign with anyone, bringing his playing career to an end.  He has founded Pro Baseball Insider, a website which provides instructional articles and videos on how to play baseball.

Right-hander Philip Joseph Hughes is in his first season as a Twin.  He was born in Mission Viejo, California, went to high school in Santa Ana, California, and was drafted by the Yankees in the first round in 2004.  He pitched very well throughout his minor league career, never posting a WHIP above 1.00, and reached the majors in 2007, making a couple of starts early in the season and coming up for good in August.  He was injured much of 2008 and when he came back in 2009 he found himself in the bullpen, as the Yankees preferred giving starts to Joba Chamberlain, Sergio Mitre, and Chien-Ming Wang.  He had an excellent year as a reliever and returned to the rotation in 2010, when he won 18 games and made the all-star team.  He again had injury troubles in 2011 but came back to pitch well in 2012.  He had what was easily the worst year of his career to that point in 2013 and the Yankees let him become a free agent.  He signed with Minnesota and had the best year as a starter he ever had, going 16-10, 3.52 and finishing seventh in the Cy Young balloting.  He didn't match that in 2015, but he was still fairly decent.  Since then, however, he has battled injuries and has been ineffective when he has pitched.  The Twins finally gave up on him in late May of 2018, trading him to San Diego for Janigson Villalobos.  He made seven appearances for the Padres, went back on the disabled list, made nine more appearances for them, and was released in mid-August.  He did not signed with anyone and his playing career came to an end, although he did not actually announce his retirement until January of 2021.  As a Twin, he was 32-29, 4.43, 1.29 WHIP in 489.2 innings.  He could have pitched several more years if he could have stayed healthy, but sadly that was not the case.  He appears to be quite active on twitter, but a very quick review of his twitter page did not reveal what Phil Hughes may be doing these days, although it did reveal that he's gotten into baseball card collecting and has a youtube channel which focuses on it.  It appears that he is living in Laguna Beach, California.

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

June 23

This is a reprint from last year which has not been updated, mainly because I apparently forgot to do it yesterday and don't have time right now.

George Weiss (1894)
Jack Smith (1895)
Karl Spooner (1931)
Dave Bristol (1933)
Tom Haller (1937)
Dave Goltz (1949)
Marty Barrett (1958)
Jim Deshaies (1960)
Hensley Meulens (1967)
Josh Byrnes (1970)
Mark Hendrickson (1974)

George Weiss was the general manager of the New York Yankees from 1948-1960.

Karl Spooner set the record, later tied by J. R. Richard, for strikeouts in a major league debut with fifteen.

Dave Bristol managed four different teams from 1966-1980.

Josh Byrnes has been the general manager of Arizona and San Diego and is currently the senior vice president of baseball operations for the Dodgers.

Right-hander Dave Goltz pitched for the Twins through most of the 1970s.  He was born in Pelican Rapids, Minnesota, went to high school in Rothsay, Minnesota.  He was a four-sport star, playing basketball, football, and participating in track as well as playing baseball (he was all state in both basketball and baseball).  Goltz was drafted by Minnesota in the fifth round in 1967.  He had two very good years in the low minors, then missed all of the 1969 season due to military service and made only two appearances in 1970 due to injuries.  He came back to have a fine 1971 campaign and was doing fairly well in AAA in 1972 when he was called up to Minnesota in mid-July to replace an injured Jim Kaat.  He pitched extremely well the rest of the way, going 3-3, 2.67 with a WHIP of 1.10 and an ERA+ of 121.  The Twins moved him to the bullpen for 1973, however, and he did not flourish in the role.  He was moved back to the rotation in late July and was extremely inconsistent, mixing brilliant outings with horrible ones.  The next year, he was in the rotation from the beginning, and had the first of five consecutive very good seasons for the Twins.  His best years were 1977-1978, when he went a combined 35-21, 2.99 with a WHIP of 1.24 in 523.1 innings (303 of which came in 1977, when he won 20 games and finished sixth in Cy Young voting).  He had double-digit complete games in each of those five seasons, with a high of nineteen in 1977.  He started to slip in 1979 and the Twins allowed him to become a free agent.  It turned out to be a good decision, as he never had as good a season again.  Goltz had a poor year in 1980, went to the bullpen in 1981, and when he was no better at the start of 1982 he was released in late April.  California signed him in late May and he did somewhat better, but he did nothing in 1983 and was released again in early July, ending his playing career.  He won twenty games once, got a World Series ring (with the Dodgers in 1981), and set one record, although not a good one.  Dave Goltz holds the record for most runs allowed while getting a save, giving up eight runs while getting a three-inning save against Cleveland on June 6, 1973.  Gene Mauch once was quoted as saying Goltz was the best starting pitcher he had ever managed.  As a Twin, Dave Goltz was 96-79, 3.48 with a 1.31 WHIP.  He appeared in 247 games, 215 of them starts, and worked 1,638 innings.  After retirement, Goltz returned to Minnesota.  He is currently an insurance agent, with offices in Fergus Falls and Rothsay, Minnesota.  He also was the baseball coach for Fergus Falls Community College for two years.

Left-hander Jim Deshaies was with the Twins for most of 1993 and all of 1994.  Born and raised in Massena, New York, he attended LeMoyne College in Syracuse, New York, one of six major league players that school has produced.  He was drafted by the Yankees in the twenty-first round in 1982.  He put up some really good numbers in the Yankees’ system, reaching AAA by 1984.  He also made his major league debut that year, making two starts for the Yankees in August.  He did not have a good year in AAA in 1985, however, and was traded to Houston in mid-September as part of a deal for Joe Niekro.  It was a good move for Deshaies, as he was immediately placed in the Astros rotation and stayed there for six years.  He was pretty good for five of those years; the best was 1989, when he went 15-10, 2.91 with a WHIP of 1.15.  He pitched poorly in 1991, however, and when contract expired he was allowed to become a free agent.  He signed with Oakland, but was released in spring training of 1992.  San Diego signed him in late April, sent him to AAA, and brought him to the majors in early July, place him in their starting rotation.  He bounced back pretty well, but was a free agent after the season, signing with Minnesota.  He did okay in 1993, not great but not terrible.  The Twins fell out of the race, however, and in late August Deshaies was traded to San Francisco for Andres Duncan, Aaron Fultz, and a player to be named later (Greg Brummett).  Deshaies was a free agent after the season and returned to Minnesota for 1994.  He was much worse in his second go-round with the Twins, leading the league both in home runs allowed and in earned runs allowed.  As a Twin, he was 17-25, 5.71 with a WHIP of 1.46.  He appeared in 52 games, all of them starts, and pitched 297.2 innings.  He became a free agent again and signed with Philadelphia for 1995.  He did well in AAA, but flopped in two starts with the Phillies and was released in late July, ending his playing career.  In 1986, he struck out the first eight batters of the game, setting a modern-day record.  He also holds the record for most at-bats without an extra-base hit.  Jim Deshaies was a  television broadcaster for the Houston Astros from 1997-2012 and is currently a broadcaster for the Chicago Cubs.

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

June 22

Carl Hubbell (1903)
Walt Masterson (1920)
Han Urbanus (1927)
Faye Throneberry (1931)
Russ Snyder (1934)
Ron Hodges (1949)
Dave Tomlin (1949)
Greg Booker (1960)
Brant Brown (1971)
Esteban Yan (1975)
Willie Harris (1978)
Luis Maza (1980)
Ian Kinsler (1982)
Engelb Vielma (1994)

Han Urbanus is in the Dutch Baseball Hall of Fame.  He pitched over 150 consecutive complete games over a period of eight years.

The brother of Marv Throneberry, outfielder Faye Throneberry spent much of his career with the Twins franchise while it was still in Washington (1957-1960).  In December of 1960, he was chosen by the Los Angeles Angels in the expansion draft.

Right-handed reliever Gregory Scott Booker appeared in six games for the Twins in 1989.  The son-in-law of Jack McKeon, he was born in Lynchburg, Virginia, went to high school in Burlington, North Carolina, and then attended Elon University in Elon, North Carolina (a school also attended by Dick Such).  He was drafted by San Diego in the tenth round in 1981.  Mostly a starter in the minors, he did not have very good numbers there at all, although much of his time was spent in hitter-friendly Las Vegas in the PCL.  Despite never posting a minor league ERA under 5.25 or a WHIP under 1.6, Booker got a September call-up in 1983.  He went back-and-forth between San Diego and Las Vegas from 1984-1986.  He was almost exclusively a reliever in the majors, making only four career starts.  His major league numbers are substantially better than his minor league totals, although it should be noted that Booker never pitched as many as seventy innings in a major league season.  His only two full seasons in the majors were 1987-1988, and he pitched pretty well in those years, posting ERAs in the low threes and WHIPs around 1.35.  He did not pitch as well in 1989, was sent back to AAA in June.  In late June, his father-in-law traded him to Minnesota for Fred Toliver.  Most of his time with the Twins was in AAA, but he came up to the majors in September.  He appeared in six games and pitched 8.2 innings.  Had no record, giving up four runs on eleven hits for a 4.15 ERA and a 1.50 WHIP.  The Twins allowed him to become a free agent and he signed with the Cubs, but he was released at the end of spring training.  He signed with the Giants for 1990 and was in AAA most of the year, playing in two major league games in late May.  That was the end of his playing career.  He has stayed in professional baseball since then, coaching in the Indians and Rockies organizations, and was the major league pitching coach for San Diego from 1997-2003.  He was the pitching coach of the Syracuse Chiefs in the International League from 2010-2013.  He then became a scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers.  His son, Zach Booker, played in the minors from 2007-2011.  Sadly, Greg Booker passed away from melanoma on March 30, 2019.

Infielder Luis Alberto Maza did not play for the Twins, but was in their minor league system for several years.  Born and raised in Cumana, Venezuela, he signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1997.  Partly due to his age, Maza was in the low minors for several years, not reaching AA until 2004.  He hit .311 there that year and was promoted to AAA in 2005.  He had a bad year in Rochester in 2006, hitting only .207, and became a free agent after the season.  He signed with the Dodgers, played very well in the minors, and reached the majors in mid-May of 2008, staying for two months.  He hit only .228, however, and so far this has been Maza’s only time in the majors.  He hit .378 in Albuquerque that year, and followed it up with a .300 season last year.  When he did not get a call back to the big leagues, Maza again became a free agent, this time signing with Philadelphia.  He moved on to Houston in late June, but was released in early August.  He signed with Grosseto in the Italian Baseball League for 2011 and played for Rimini in that same league in 2012.  He did not play anywhere during the regular 2013 or 2014 seasons but he continued to play winter ball in Venezuela through the winter of 2015-16.  No information about what Luis Maza has done since then was readily available.

Infielder Engelb Stalin Vielma did not play for the Twins, but was in their minor league system from 2012-2017.  He was born in Maraciabo, Venezuela and signed with Minnesota as a free agent in September of 2011.  He rose through the Twins system at a steady pace, playing in the DSL in 2012, the GCL and the Appalachian League in 2013, Class A in 2014, high-A in 2015, and AA in 2016.  He started 2017 in AA but went to AAA about at third of the way through the season.  He apparently is consider a superior fielder, because he has never posted an OPS of .700 or better at any level.  His best mark was .690 in that third of a season in AA Chattanooga in 2017.  His highest batting average was .286 in that same third of a season--for a full season his highest is .271 in 2016.  The Twins waived him in September of 2017, which started an interesting off-season for him.  The Giants selected him, but waived him in November.  He was selected by Philadelphia, who waived him in December.  He selected by Pittsburgh, who waived him in January.  A week later, he was traded to Baltimore for a player to be named later or cash.  He started the season with the Orioles but played sparingly, appearing in just six games and batting only seven times (1-for-7 with a single and a walk).  He missed most of the rest of the season due to injury, appearing in just twelve minor league games.  In 2019 he appeared in 40 games, mostly for AAA Norfolk, but did not hit.  He became a free agent after the season and did not sign with anyone, although he continues to play winter baseball in Venezuela and did very well last winter. He turns twenty-seven today.  He can probably play winter ball for a while yet if he chooses to, but the chances are very slim that we'll ever see him in a major league uniform again.

Monday, June 21, 2021

June 21

Matt Kilroy (1866)
Randy Moore (1906)
Harold Seymour (1910)
Ed Lopat (1918)
Merle Harmon (1926)
Jackie Collum (1927)
Charlie Moore (1953)
Rick Sutcliffe (1956)
Jay Pettibone (1957)
Donovan Osborne (1969)
Garrett Jones (1981)
Jeff Baker (1981)
Sam Clay (1993)

Harold Seymour wrote a three-part History of Baseball, published from 1960-1990.

Merle Harmon broadcast Minnesota Twins games from 1967-1969.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to MagUidhir, Sheenie, and UncleWalt’s daughter.

Left-hander Jack Dean “Jackie” Collum pitched in eight games for the Twins in 1962.  He was born in Victor, Iowa and went to high school in Newburg, Iowa.  He signed with St. Louis as a free agent in 1946.  He was used as both a starter and a reliever in the minors and appears to have pitched pretty well in both roles.  He got cups of coffee in the majors in both 1951 and 1952, appearing in a total of five games for the Cardinals.  1953 was his first full season in the majors, but most of it was not spent in St. Louis, as Collum was traded to Cincinnati in late May.  He stuck with the Reds through 1955, making 31 starts and appearing in 98 games.  He did a good job, posting ERAs in the mid-threes.  He was traded back to St. Louis for 1956, and unfortunately things went downhill for him after that.  He did not do particularly well for the Cardinals, was traded to the Cubs after the season, pitched poorly, and was traded to Brooklyn in late May.  Most of his time with the Dodgers that year was spent in AAA, and he remained in AAA for the Dodgers through 1960.  He did fairly well there, but was traded to the Twins sometime afte the 1960 season “in an unknown transaction.”  He stayed in AAA in 1961 but had a strong season there in 1962, earning about three weeks with the Twins.  It did not go well, however; as a Twin, Jackie Collum was 0-2, 11.15 in 15.1 innings.  He appeared in eight games, three of them starts.  On August 20, he was traded to Cleveland with a player to be named later (Georges Miranda) and cash for Ruben Gomez.  He made one appearance with the Indians, and then his playing career was over.  He was a good hitter, batting .269 in the minors and .246 in the majors.  He occasionally played outfield in the minors as well as pitching.  After retiring from baseball, Collum became the owner of the Pioneer Oil Company in Grinnell, Iowa.  Jackie Collum passed away on August 29, 2009 in Grinnell.

Right-hander Harry Jonathan ”Jay” Pettibone made four starts for the Twins in 1983.  He was born in Mount Clemens, Michigan, attended Chapman University of Orange, California, one of seven major leaguers to have attended that school.  He was drafted by Texas in the thirtieth round in 1979.  He was in the minors with the Rangers for two ineffective years, not rising above Class A, and was released in December of 1980.  The Twins signed him in February of 1981 and sent him to Class A Visalia, where he went 14-8, although with a 4.33 ERA and a 1.46 WHIP.  He had a good year in Visalia in 1982 and a half-way decent year in AA Orlando in 1983, earning a September call-up in the latter season.  His first game was a complete game 3-1 loss, but he did not pitch well in the other three starts.  He was 0-4, 5.33 with a WHIP of 1.33 in 27 innings.  Pettibone was back in the minors in 1984 and did not pitch particularly well.  After the season, he was the player to be named later in the deal that brought Chris Speier to the Twins from St. Louis for a month and a half in 1984.  He did not pitch in the Cardinals organization, however; his playing career ended after the 1984 campaign.  He auditioned for a job as a replacement player in 1995, and was working as a special agent in the Treasury Department at that time.  At last report, Jay Pettibone was working for the Department of Homeland Security as a special agent, although I'm not sure if we're supposed to know that, so just forget it.  His son, Jonathan Pettibone, pitched for the Philadelphia Phillies and pitched for New Britain in the Atlantic League from 2017-2018.

Outfielder/first baseman Garrett Thomas Jones had three stints with the Twins in 2007, totaling about two and a half months.  He was born in Harvey, Illinois, went to high school in Tinley Park, Illinois.  He was drafted by Atlanta in the fourteenth round in 1999.  He was in rookie ball for three years, did not do a whole lot (although he did hit .289 in 2001), and was released in May of 2002.  Minnesota signed him three days later and sent him to Class A Quad Cities.  He hit for low averages for two years in Class A, but he began to develop some power, and finally in 2004 in AA New Britain he put things together.  He hit .311 that season with 30 home runs.  He spent almost all of the next four seasons at AAA Rochester, hitting over 20 homers three of those years and posting an OPS over .800 the last two.  He appeared in 31 games for the Twins in 2007, twelve of them at DH, eight at first base, six in the outfield, and five as a pinch-hitter.  He hit .208/.262/.338 in 77 at-bats.  Jones was allowed to become a free agent after the 2008 season and signed with Pittsburgh.  He started the season in AAA but came up on July 1 and was a regular for the Pirates, although at three different positions (right field, first base, and left field).  Surprisingly, he did very well, hitting .293 with 21 homers, posting an OPS of .938, and finishing seventh in Rookie of the Year voting.  He continued to play regularly for the Pirates in 2010, but failed to match his 2009 totals.  2011 turned out to be much more similar to 2010 than 2009 and he found himself being platooned, although as a left-handed batter he still got the bulk of the playing time.  He was still platooned some in 2012, but came back to have a better season.  He had a down year in 2013 and became a free agent after the season.  He signed with Miami and was okay, but nothing special.  He was traded to the Yankees during the off-season, was been used as a role player in 2015, and really didn't do a whole lot for them, getting released in August.  He had a solid season in Japan in 2016, but then his playing career ended.  He is married to a cousin of ex-Twin Ron Coomer.  He was not a star, obviously, but he still had a very respectable career for someone who got started that late.  At last report, Garrett Jones was an analyst for AT&T Sportsnet of Pittsburgh.

Left-hander Samuel Thomas Hunter Clay did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system from 2014-2020.  He was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, went to high school in Buford, Georgia, attended the Georgia Institute of Technology, and was drafted by Minnesota in 2014.  He was a reliever in college, but the Twins tried to make him into a starting pitcher.  It did not go well, as he struggled in the minors until 2017, when the Twins sent him back to the bullpen.  He had a fine season with Fort Myers that year, going 8-0, 1.38 with a 1.14 WHIP.  He struggled in AA in 2018, however.  His 2019 season was split between AA and AAA--he did pretty well in AA, but struggled in AAA.  There was, of course, no 2020 minor league season, and as Clay was now twenty-seven and had not established himself beyond AA, the Twins allowed him to become a free agent.  He signed with Washington and, surprisingly, has so far spent the entire season in the majors.  He has not exactly distinguished himself, going 0-0, 4.35, 1.69 WHIP in 20.2 innings (27 games).  He turns twenty-eight today.  Relievers, especially left-handed relievers, often get a longer leash, but Sam Clay is going to have to get something figured out pretty soon if he's going to have a long major league career.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

June 20

Ned Cuthbert (1845)
Jim Delahanty (1879)
Cum Posey (1890)
Billy Werber (1908)
Andy Etchebarren (1943)
Dave Nelson (1944)
Paul Beeston (1945)
Dickie Thon (1958)
Doug Gwosdz (1960)
Paul Bako (1972)
Juan Castro (1972)
Carlos Lee (1976)
Kevin Gregg (1978)
Kendrys Morales (1983)
Adalberto Mejia (1993)

Cum Posey, played for, managed, and owned the Homestead Grays in the Negro National League.

Paul Beeston has been president and CEO of the Toronto Blue Jays from 1989-1997 and from 2010-2016, at which time he became president emeritus.

Infielder Juan Gabriel Castro played for the Twins in 2005 and the first part of 2006.  Born and raised in Los Mochis, Mexico, Castro signed with the Dodgers as a free agent in 1991.  He had decent batting averages in the minors, but did not walk very much nor did he show much power.  He gained a reputation as a fine fielder, however, and made his major league debut as a September call-up in 1995.  He spent the next two years going back and forth between Albuquerque and Los Angeles, putting up good numbers in the minors but bad numbers in the majors, where he was used as a utility player.  He got his first full season in the majors in 1998, again as a utility player, and hit only .195 with an OPS of .499.  He was back in AAA for almost all of 1999 and then was traded to Cincinnati.  He started 2000 in AAA but was back in the majors in late April and remained with the Reds through 2004, again as a utility infielder.  He continued to not hit very well– his best year was 2003, when he hit .253 with nine homers for an OPS of .678.  Castro became a free agent after the 2004 campaign and signed with Minnesota.  As a Twin, he basically was what he was–a weak hitter with a reputation as a good fielder.  He hit .248/.271/.357 in 428 at-bats.  He stayed with Minnesota until mid-June of 2006, when he was traded to Cincinnati for Brandon Roberts.  He had a good rest-of-2006 for the Reds, but did little in 2007 and was released in early May of 2008.  He signed with the Rockies, played in AAA there for two and a half months, then was traded to Baltimore.  He was with the Dodgers in 2009, moved on to Philadelphia for 2010, was released in mid-July, and signed with the Dodgers again.  He was still with the Dodgers in 2011, but spent most of the season in the minors and retired on July 10.  Upon his retirement, Juan Castro was named a special assistant for player personnel for the Dodgers.  He was the Dodgers' Quality Assurance Coach from 2016-2017.  He was the director of operations for the Tijuana Toros in the Mexican League in 2017, and was manager of the Aguilas de Mexicali in the Mexican Pacific League in 2018.  He was named manager of Team Mexico in the WSBC Premier12 tournament in 2019.  He became the Philadelphia Phillies' infield coach in 2020, a job he continues to hold.

First baseman/designated hitter Kendrys Morales was with the Twins for about six weeks in 2014.  He was born in Fomento, Cuba.  He played in Cuba through 2003, then defected, established residency in the Dominican Republic, and was signed by the Angels in December of 2004.  His name was incorrectly listed as "Kendry", a mistake he lived with until prior to the 2011 season.  He started 2005 in Class A and quickly proved he was too good to be there, being promoted to AA after twenty-two games.  He started 2006 in AAA but spent half the season in the majors, making his debut in late May.  He went back and forth between AAA and the majors through the 2008 season before coming up to stay in 2009.  He had a fine season, finishing fifth in MVP voting, and was having another solid year in 2010 when he broke his leg stepping on home plate following a walkoff grand slam on May 29.  He missed the rest of that season and all of 2011.  He came back in 2012 and was again a good player, although perhaps not quite as good as he had been before his injury.  After the season he was traded to Seattle for Jason Vargas.  He spent 2013 with the Mariners and again put up solid numbers.  He became a free agent after the season and went unsigned until early June, when he signed with Minnesota.  He hit poorly and was traded back to Seattle in late July for Stephen Pryor.  He was a free agent after the season and it looked like he might be done, but he signed with Kansas City and started hitting again.  It's unclear what happened to him in 2014, but whatever it was it obviously went away, as he had two solid seasons for the Royals.  A free agent after the 2016 campaign, he signed with Toronto and did okay from 2017-2018, although not as well as he had done in Kansas City.   He was traded to Oakland just before the 2019 season, then was traded to the Yankees in mid-May.  He has not hit for either team and was released by the Yankees in early July.  He announced his retirement in February of 2020.  As a Twin, he hit .234/.259/.325 in 154 at-bats.  For his career, he hit .265/.327/.453.  No information about what he has been doing more recently was readily available.

Left-hander Adalberto Mejia pitched in the Twins' organization since 2016.  He was born in Donao, Dominican Republic and signed with the Giants as a free agent in 2011.  He moved steadily up the Giants system, going to Class A in 2012, high-A in 2013, and AA in 2014.  He had a rough year in 2014 but was off to an excellent start there in 2015 when his season was cut short, first by injury and then by a suspension for use of a banned stimulant.  He did very well in eleven AA starts in 2016 and did okay in seven AAA starts when he was traded to Minnesota for Eduardo Nunez.  He pitched well in four starts in Rochester and made one appearance with the Twins.  He started the 2017 season in the Twins' rotation, was sent back to Rochester for a month after three starts, and came back to the Twins in late May.  He was not particularly good, but he was not terrible, either.  He spent most of 2018 in Rochester but made sporadic appearances with the Twins and did well in the limited chances he got.  He was with the Twins for the first month of the 2019 season and had terrible numbers, then missed time due to injury.  The Twins waived him in July.  He was claimed by the Angels, waived again ten days later, claimed by St. Louis, was waived again about ten days after that, and was claimed by the Angels again.  He signed with the White Sox for 2020 but was released in August.  He signed with the Fubon Guardians in Taiwan for 2021.  As a Twin he was 6-0, 4.63, 1.55 WHIP in 138 innings.  He appeared in 40 games, starting 25 of them.  He turns twenty-eight today.  It's not impossible that Adalberto Mejia could still have a decent major league career, but the odds are definitely against it.