Friday, May 15, 2026

May 15

Tip O'Neill (1860)
Joe Evans (1895)
Jimmy Wasdell (1914)
Al McBean (1938)
Yukata Enatsu (1948)
Bill North (1948)
Rick Waits (1952)
George Brett (1953)
John Smoltz (1967)
Scott Watkins (1970)
A. J. Hinch (1974)
Josh Beckett (1980)
Justin Morneau (1981)
Brian Dozier (1987)
Michael Brantley (1987)
Trevor Richards (1993)
Kody Clemens (1996)

Yukata Enatsu was one of the first closers in Japan, recording 193 saves.

A. J. Hinch was drafted by Minnesota in the third round in 1995, but did not sign.

Left-hander Scott Allen Watkins pitched for the Twins for about two months in 1995.  He was born in Tulsa, went to high school in Sand Springs, Oklahoma, and was drafted by Minnesota in the 23rd round in 1992.  A reliever throughout his minor-league career, his numbers were not particularly impressive until 1995, when he posted a 2.80 ERA, a 1.06 WHIP, 20 saves, and 57 strikeouts in 54.2 innings (45 games) for AAA Salt Lake.  He was often used as a LOOGY; in nearly half of his 27 appearances, he faced only one or two batters.  He was not particularly successful in that role, as in a small sample size left-handers hit him nearly as well as right-handers.  For the last two months of 1995, Watkins had no decisions with an ERA of 5.40 and a WHIP of 1.52.  He pitched 21.2 innings spread over 27 games.  Watkins was back in AAA in 1996, but could not duplicate his success of the prior season.  From there, he started moving around.  He was in the minor league systems of Colorado and Kansas City in 1997, in the Texas organization in 1998, in the Cubs chain in 1999, and at AAA with Colorado again from 2000-2001.  He had varying degrees of success, but did not make it back to the majors.  His playing career ended after the 2001 season.  At last report, Scott Watkins had gone back to his home town of Sand Springs, and was a special education teacher and assistant baseball coach there.

First baseman Justin Ernest George Morneau played for the Twins from 2003-2013.  He was born and raised in New Westminster, British Columbia and was drafted by Minnesota in the third round in 1999.  He hit well throughout the minors, hitting over .300 in his first three professional seasons, but the Twins took their time with him:  Morneau was in rookie ball for two years, was in Class A for all but ten games in 2001, and was in AA all of 2002.  He began 2003 in AA, but was advanced to AAA after 20 games.  He got his first chance at the majors in 2003 spelling Doug Mientkiewicz, which is not an easy thing to do.  He was in the majors about half the season.  He started 2004 in Rochester, but after he hit .306 with 22 home runs in half a season, Mientkiewicz was traded and Morneau became the Twins’ regular first baseman, a job he retains to this day.  He struggled in 2005, but played well from 2006-2010.  He was playing extremely well in 2010, hitting .345 with an OPS of 1.055, when he suffered a concussion in mid-July and missed the rest of the season.  He struggled in 2011 due to a combination of a wrist injury and lingering concussion problems.  He did better in 2012, but was still not the Justin Morneau of old.  He was doing no better in 2013 when he was traded to Pittsburgh at the August deadline for Alex Presley and a player to be named later (Duke Welker).  A free agent after the season, he signed with Colorado for 2014.   He undoubtedly was helped by playing in Coors Field, but he still had a fine season, winning the batting title with a .319 average.  He had a good season in 2015 when he could play, but concussion issues struck again and he missed over half the season, going out in the middle of May and not coming back until September.  He was a free agent after the season, but had elbow surgery and was unable to play at first, but signed with the White Sox in June.  He started in the minors but came up to the big club in mid-July, serving as their DH the rest of the season.  He did okay, but nothing special.  He became a free agent after the season, and while he played for Canada in the World Baseball Classic he did not sign with anyone, bringing his playing career to an end.  His best season was 2006, when he hit .321 with 34 homers and 130 RBIs and won the Most Valuable Player award.  He received MVP consideration the next two years as well, finishing second to Dustin Pedroia in 2008.  He made the all-star team every year from 2007-2010 and has won two Silver Slugger awards.  He is currently a special assistant for the Twins and part-time game analyst for Fox Sports North.

Infielder James Brian Dozier was an infielder for the Twins from 2012-2018.  He was born in Tupelo, Mississippi, attended the University of Southern Mississippi, and was drafted by Minnesota in the eighth round in 2009.  He spent most of 2009 in Elizabethton, most of 2010 in Fort Myers, and most of 2011 in New Britain.  He started to develop a little power in 2011, hitting 33 doubles, 12 triples, and 9 home runs.  He split 2012 between Rochester and Minnesota, not batting particularly well in either place.  He drew a decent number of walks in the lower minors, leading to solid on-base percentages.  In 1,405 minor league at-bats, he hit .298/.370/.409, but in 200 plate appearances in AAA he hit .232/.286/.337.  He had primarily been a shortstop until 2013, when the Twins moved him to second base. He showed surprising power, hitting eighteen homers after never having hit more than nine in a season in the minors.  He increased his power the next couple of seasons, hitting twenty-three homers in 2014 and twenty-eight in 2015, a number which helped him make his first all-star team.  He got off to a slow start in 2016 but more than made up for it, ending up with forty-two home runs and finishing thirteenth in MVP voting.  His 2017 was similar, with his numbers down slightly but still very good and an eleventh-place finish in MVP voting.  He also won his only Gold Glove that season.   He struggled in 2018, however, and with the team out of contention he was traded to the Dodgers at the July deadline for Luke Raley, Logan Forsythe, and Devin Smeltzer.  A free agent after the season, he signed with Washington and was their regular second baseman for most of the season, but lost the job late in the year to Asdrubal Cabrera.  He signed with San Diego for 2020, but was released before the season started.  He signed with the Mets in late July, but was released in late August, having played in just seven games.  He went unsigned for 2021 and announced his retirement. His sudden fall from grace is somewhat surprising, but when one looks at his minor league career the good years appear to be more the aberration.  As a Twin, he batted .248/.325/.447 with 167 home runs in 4232 plate appearances.  At last report, Brian Dozier was living in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where he owned a real estate business.

Right-handed reliever Trevor Michael Richards was with the Twins for the last two months of the 2024 season.  He was born in Aviston, Illinois, attended Drury University (also attended by Roy Smalley, Sr.), and signed with Miami as a free agent in 2016.  A starter in college, he remained one throughout his time with the Marlins.  He pitched very well throughout the minors and reached Miami out of spring training in 2018.  He was there for most of the season, and mixed good outings with bad ones for a rather mediocre season.  In 2019 he was more consistently mediocre, and was traded to Tampa Bay at the July deadline.  The Rays moved him to the bullpen, then traded him to Milwaukee in late May of 2021.  He wasn't with the Brewers long, moved to Toronto in early July.  He pitched well the rest of that season, but not so well the rest of his time in Toronto.  He was traded to the Twins at the July deadline of 2024 for Jay Harry, a move made so that the Twins front office could say they made a move.  He did about what he could have been expected to do with the Twins, going 0-1, 4.15, 1.46 WHIP in 13 innings (ten games).  A free agent after the season, he signed with the Cubs for 2025, but was released in early May after seven AAA appearances.  He signed with Kansas City a few days later, was released in mid-June, and signed with Arizona, where he finished the season.  Along the way, he played in five more major league games.  He signed with Philadelphia for 2026, but was sold to the White Sox in early May and has so far gotten one more major league game with them. He's never been great, and it's been a while since he's been good, but he's an undrafted free agent who's played in the majors for nine seasons so far, and that's definitely worthy of respect.  We wish him well.

Infielder Kody Alec Clemens came to the Twins in late April of 2025.  The son of major league great Roger Clemens, he was born in Hornell, Texas, went to high school in Houston, attended the University of Texas, and was drafted by Detroit in the third round in 2018.  He was okay, but nothing special, in the minors through 2021.  He got off to a strong start in AAA in 2022, however, and reached the majors in late May.  He didn't hit, though, and was traded to Philadelphia after the season.  His next two seasons were similar, as he hit well in AAA but did little in the majors.  He was not doing much in 2025, either, when he was sold to Minnesota in late April.  He did better than might have been expected, which is not the same as saying he was good:  he batted .216/.284/.442, but did hit nineteen home runs.  He's having a similar season in 2026.  He wouldn't have a role on a good team, but this is the Twins.  We assume he's a really good guy.  He turns thirty today.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

May 14

J. L. Wilkinson (1878)
Alex Pompez (1890)
Earle Combs (1899)
Bob Thurman (1917)
Les Moss (1925)
Dick Howser (1936)
Tony Perez (1942)
Dick Tidrow (1947)
Dave LaRoche (1948)
Dennis Martinez (1955)
Hosken Powell (1955)
Pat Borders (1963)
Joey Cora (1965)
Larry Sutton (1970)
Roy Halladay (1977)
Luke Gregerson (1984)
Kyle Freeland (1993)
James Outman (1997)
Daniel Susac (2001)

J. L. Wilkinson was the long-time owner of the Kansas City Monarchs.

Alex Pompez was the long-time owner of the New York Cubans.

Outfielder Robert Burns Thurman did not play for the Twins, but was briefly in their farm system at the end of his career.  Born in Kellyville, Oklahoma, he played semipro ball until 1941, when he went in to the Army for World War II.  Upon leaving the Army, he became a victim of baseball’s color barrier, playing in the Negro Leagues from 1946-1949 and playing winter ball in Puerto Rico, where he became a star.  The Yankees purchased his contract in July of 1949, and he hit .317 the rest of the year in the International League.  He played in AAA for the Cubs in 1950, then spent two seasons playing for San Francisco in the Pacific Coast League.  He continued to play winter ball in Puerto Rico in those years.  Then, in 1954, the Dominican Summer League attempted to compete with the major leagues.  Thurman signed with the DSL, and was again on the wrong side of a major league blacklist.  He spent two years there before the DSL became a part of organized baseball.  He continued to play winter ball in Puerto Rico in those years, becoming the all-time leader in home runs and RBIs in the Puerto Rican Winter League.  In 1955 he signed with Cincinnati, and on April 15, at the age of 38 (he had given his age as four years younger), Bob Thurman made his major league debut.  He was with the Reds for four seasons as a pinch-hitter and reserve outfielder, getting 139-190 at-bats per season.  His best year was 1956, when he hit .295/.340/.532.  He started 1959 with the Reds, but was sent to the minors in April and never returned.  He was in AAA with Cincinnati and St. Louis in 1959 and St. Louis and Washington in 1960.  When the Washington franchise moved to Minnesota he was still in the organization, playing 21 games for Class A Charlotte and hitting .267/.276/.453.  For his major league career, he hit .246/.314/.465 in 663 at-bats.  He remained in the Twins’ organization as a scout for some time, and also scouted in the Kansas City and Cincinnati organizations.  He is said to have been instrumental in signing several players who became part of the Big Red Machine, including Johnny Bench and Hal McRae.  After leaving baseball, he became a partner in Marketing Associates of Wichita.  Bob Thurman passed away of Alzheimer’s Disease in Wichita, Kansas on October 31, 1998 at the age of 81.

Left-hander David Eugene LaRoche pitched for the Twins in 1972.  He was born in Colorado Springs, went to high school in Torrence, California, and attended UNLV.  He was born David Garcia, but changed his name to LaRoche after his stepfather.  He was drafted by California in the fifth round of the January secondary draft in 1967.  He was a reliever all of his career, making only twelve minor-league starts.  He pitched very well in the minors and was off to a tremendous start in AAA Hawaii in 1970, going 6-0, 1.24 with five saves and a WHIP of 0.86 in 58 innings, when he was called up to the Angels in mid-May.  He had two strong years in the California bullpen, and came to Minnesota after the 1971 season in exchange for Leo Cardenas.  He was the left-handed part of a closer platoon with Wayne Granger in 1972.  LaRoche again pitched well, going 5-7, 2.83 with ten saves and a WHIP of 1.16.  He appeared in 62 games, pitching 95.1 innings.  After the season, a year to the day after which they had acquired LaRoche, the Twins traded him to the Cubs for Bob Maneely, Joe Decker, and Bill Hands.  He had two poor years for the Cubs and was traded to Cleveland in February of 1975.  He rebounded with the Indians, posting an ERA around 2.20 and recording 38 saves over the next two seasons.  He got off to a bad start in 1977 and was traded back to California in mid-May.  LaRoche pitched very well for the Angels through 1978, going 16-14 with 38 saves.  He followed that up with a couple of down years, and was released on April 1, 1981.  The Yankees signed him and he had a couple of good years for them.  LaRoche was out of baseball at the start of 1983, but tried to come back with the Yankees, signing in late July.  It did not go well, however, and after the season his playing career ended for good.  Today, he is probably best remembered for “LaLob”, an eephus-like pitch he developed later in his career.  LaRoche then became a pitching coach, working in college, the majors, and the minors.  He retired after the 2010 season, but came to be the pitching coach of the Brooklyn Cyclones from 2014-15 before retiring again.  He then came out of retirement one more time to be pitching coach for the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp in 2018.  He is a member of the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame, apparently because of his work for Fort Scott Community College.  His son Adam was a major league first baseman and his son Andy was a major league infielder.  At last report, Dave LaRoche was living in Fort Scott, Kansas.

Outfielder Hosken Powell played for the Twins from 1978-1981.  Born in Selma, Alabama, he attended Chipola Junior College in Marianna, Florida and was chosen by Minnesota with the third pick of the June Secondary draft in 1975.  Powell advanced rapidly through the Twins’ system.  He had little power, but hit for a high average and drew quite a few walks in the minors.  In 1977, he hit .326/.427/.429 at AAA Tacoma, and in 1978 he was the starting right fielder in Minnesota.  He hit only .247 (although with an OBP of .323), however, and in 1979 fell into a platoon role, sharing time with Willie Norwood and Dave Edwards.  He had his best season, hitting .293 with an OBP of .360, and in 1980 was back as the starting right fielder.  He dropped back to .262 and went back to a part-time role in 1981.  This time, however, he did not respond, and Powell was traded after the season to Toronto for a player to be named later (Greg Wells).  Powell did okay as a reserve in 1982, but hit only .169 in the first half of 1983 and was released.  Milwaukee signed him, and he played in AAA for the Brewers for a year and a half before his career came to an end after the 1984 campaign.  He was the head baseball coach at Pensacola High School in Pensacola, Florida, for some time. Hosken Powell continued to live in Pensacola and was active in youth baseball there.  He passed away in Pensacola on June 27, 2025.

Catcher Patrick Lance Borders was with the Twins for the last month of 2004.  He was born in Columbus, Ohio, went to high school in Lake Wales, Florida, and was drafted by Toronto in the sixth round in 1982.  It took him a long time to advance, as he did not reach AA until 1986 and then only for twelve games.  He never hit much above AA, but still made the majors in 1988.  He stayed with the Blue Jays through 1994 and was their regular catcher from 1990-1993.  He was the MVP of the World Series in 1992, but the only really good season he had as a regular was in 1990, when he hit .286 with 15 homers and an OPS of .816.  His OPS never topped .700 in any other season as a regular, and Borders was allowed to become a free agent after the 1994 season.  He was a much-traveled reserve catcher for the next couple of years, playing for Kansas City and Houston in 1995 and for St. Louis, California, and the White Sox in 1996.  He found a home in Cleveland for a couple of years, serving as their backup backstop in 1997-1998.  He spent much of 1999 at AAA for the Indians and was released in August, signing with Toronto.  He signed with Tampa Bay for 2000 and played in AAA for them, also playing for the gold-medal Olympic team that season.  The Devil Rays sold Borders to Seattle in August of 2001.  He went to spring training with Texas in 2002, but was released and went back to Seattle, where he stayed through August of 2004.  Most of that time was spent in AAA, but he got a few at-bats with the Mariners each season.  He was traded to Minnesota on August 31, 2004 for B. J. Garbe.  Borders appeared in 19 games as a Twin, going 12-for-42 for a line of .286/.302/.381.  He was a free agent after the season and started moving around again.  He signed with Milwaukee for 2005, was sold to Seattle in May, and was released in July.  He signed with the Dodgers for 2006, played in AAA, and retired in late May.  He had a seventeen-year career and played 1,099 games.  He apparently was a coach in the Braves organization for a while and became the manager of the Williamsport Crosscutters in the Phillies organization in 2015, a position he held through 2019.  He was going to be the manager of high-A Clearwater in the 2020 season, but of course there was 2020 minor league season.  He was the manager of the GCL Phillies in 2021, then appears to have left professional baseball.  He then was an assistant baseball coach with Webber International University in Babson, Florida from 2024-2025 before retiring.  His son, Levi Borders, played baseball for the University of South Florida and was an assistant baseball coach for Gulf Coast State College.

Outfielder/first baseman Larry James Sutton did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for a couple of months in 2001.  He was born in West Covina, California, went to high school in Santa Ana, California, and attended the University of Illinois.  He was drafted by Kansas City in the twenty-first round in 1992.  He was almost exclusively a first baseman as he was coming up.  He posted solid numbers in the low minors but progressed very slowly, spending a full year at low A and a full year at high A (hitting .306 with 26 homers) before finally getting to AA in 1995.  He missed a lot of 1995 with injuries and repeated AA in 1996, hitting .296 with 22 homers there.  He had another good year in AAA in 1997, posting an OPS of .921 before finally being called up in mid-August.  By this time he had a lifetime minor league average of .293 and had hit 94 homers in basically four seasons.  Unfortunately, he was also 27 years old.  He did well in his late-season call-up in 1997.  The Royals decided Jeff King was their answer at first base, though, and tried to convert him to outfield.  The Royals already had Jeff Conine, Jermaine Dye, and Johnny Damon in the outfield, as well as Shane Mack on the bench and Carlos Beltran almost ready to come up, so the decision did not make a lot of sense.  The combination of learning a new position in the majors and getting inconsistent playing time was more than Sutton could overcome, as he hit only .245 with five homers in 310 at-bats.  He started 1999 in the majors, but when he did no better he was sent back to AAA, coming back for a September call-up.  He signed with St. Louis as a free agent for 2000 but spent most of the season with AAA Memphis, again coming back for a September call-up.  He did quite well in that call-up and started 2001 in St. Louis, but was sent back to AAA in late May and about a month and a half later was sent to the Twins for Hanley Frias.  He finished the season in Edmonton, hitting .251/.352/.402 in 147 at-bats.  A free agent after the season, he again spent most of the season in AAA and was released after the season.  He signed with Boston for 2003 but was released late in spring training and did not play in 2003.  He came back with Florida and again was mostly in the minors, getting only five at-bats with the big club.  He then spent three seasons in Korea playing for clubs sponsored by auto makers (two for Hyundai, one for Kia) before ending his playing career.  Maybe he wouldn’t have done much anyway, but one has to wonder what might have happened if the Royals had just put him at first base when he was younger and let him play.  Since ending his playing career, he was the batting coach for the Royals entry in the Dominican Summer League and managed the Pirates entry in that league in 2012.  He then became the Dominican Field Coordinator for the Pirates in 2013, and was the minor league hitting coordinator for Pittsburgh from 2014-2018.  He went back to the Royals in 2019, serving as batting coach for the Class A Wilmington Blue Rocks, went back to Korea in 2020 as the manager of the Lotte Giants' minor league team, and  was the manager of the Lotte Giants major league team from 2021-2023.  It was reported that he stepped down from the position for health reasons.  He must have gotten better, though, because he has been the manager of the ACL Royals since 2024.

Outfielder James Matthew Outman has played for the Twins since 2025.  He was born in Redwood City, California, attended Cal State--Sacramento, and was drafted by the Dodgers in the seventh round in 2018.  He was a solid player, but nothing special, in college.  That really continued through most of his minor league career.  He hit for decent average, showed moderate power, drew some walks--a good player, but nothing that would really say "star".  He reached AA in 2021 and AAA in 2022, getting about a week in the majors in the latter season.  He was the starting center fielder for the Dodgers in 2023 and had a good year, batting .248/.353/.437 with twenty-three homers and sixteen stolen bases.  Unfortunately, his rookie season was as good as it would get for him.  He got off to a horrible start in 2024 and was sent back to AAA.  He was no better in about six weeks in the majors in 2025, then was traded to Minnesota for Brock Stewart.  The Twins sent him to AAA for a couple of weeks, then brought him up for the rest of the season.  He has been in the majors all of 2026 so far, despite not hitting a lick.  He's reputed to be a very good defender, but as a Twins he's batted .141/.209/.297 in 128 at-bats.  That's better than Corky Miller, but that's about it.  He turns twenty-nine today.  We have nothing against him, and we wish him well, but he has no business being in the major leagues right now.  That he is speaks volumes about how the Twins' organization is bring run.

Catcher Daniel Shawn Susac was a Twin for a few minutes on December 10, 2025.  He was born in Roseville, California, went to high school in Carmichael, California, attended the University of Tucson, and was drafted by Oakland in the first round in 2022.  He progressed a level a year, playing in Class A in 2022, high-A in 2023, AA in 2024, and AAA in 2025.  He as a solid batter for most of those seasons, with his best being in AAA Las Vegas in 2025, when he batted .275/.349/.483 with eighteen home runs.  He was left unprotected that off-season, drafted by Minnesota, but immediately traded to San Francisco for Miguel Caraballo.  He was with the Giants for the first three weeks of April and did very well in a limited role, going 11-for-23 with two doubles and a triple, giving him a career major league OPS of 1.152.  He then went on the injured list with right elbow ulnar neuritis, which apparently is a fancy way of saying inflammation of the funny bone.  He is expected back soon, and with the trade of Patrick Bailey should have a clear shot at the starting job.  He turns twenty-five today, and we wish him well.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

May 13

Jimmy Archer (1883)
Larry Gardner (1886)
Babe Dye (1898)
Leroy Morney (1909)
Bill McKinley (1910)
Bill Kinnamon (1919)
Dusty Rhodes (1927)
Johnny Roseboro (1933)
Leon Wagner (1934)
Bill Dailey (1935)
Juan Beniquez (1950)
Bobby Valentine (1950)
Lenny Faedo (1960)
Sean McDonough (1962)
Jose Rijo (1965)
Jack Cressend (1975)
Trajan Langdon (1976)
Barry Zito (1978)
David Hernandez (1985)
John Ryan Murphy (1991)
Willson Contreras (1992)
DaShawn Keirsey (1997)

Hockey Hall of Famer Babe Dye was a minor league outfielder from 1919-1926, spending much of his career in the American Association.  In 811 games, he hit .311, slugged .443, and stole 118 bases.

Bill McKinley was an American League umpire from 1946-65.

Bill Kinnamon was an American League umpire from 1960-69.

Sean McDonough has been a baseball broadcaster since 1988.

College basketball star Trajan Langdon was a third baseman in the low minors for three seasons.

Catcher John Junior Roseboro was with the Twins from 1968-1969, near the end of his career.  Born and raised in Ashland, Ohio, Roseboro signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers as a free agent in 1952.  He hit very well for two years in the low minors, then missed a year due to military service.  It took Roseboro a while to get going upon his return, but he hit .273 with 25 homers at AAA Montreal in 1956.  He started 1957 in Montreal, but was brought up to Brooklyn in mid-June as a seldom-used backup to Roy Campanella.  That off-season, however, Campanella's career ended suddenly in an automobile accident, and Roseboro became the regular catcher of the then Los Angeles Dodgers in 1958.  He hit .271 with 14 home runs that season and made the all-star team for the first time.  He was rather up-and-down at the plate in his Dodger career, hitting as high as .287 in 1964 and as low as .213 in 1960.  His best offensive year may have been 1961, when he hit 18 home runs with a .251 batting average and walked a career-high 56 times.  He made his second all-star team that year, won his first Gold Glove, and finished 19th in MVP voting.  Roseboro made three all-star teams for the Dodgers, won two Gold Gloves, and received MVP consideration three times, with his highest finish being thirteenth in 1966.  He had decent speed for a catcher, hitting 44 triples in his career.  Roseboro remained the regular catcher for the Dodgers through the 1967 season, at which time he was traded to Minnesota with Bob Miller and Ron Perranoski for Mudcat Grant and Zoilo Versalles.  He did not hit much in 1968, but he bounced back in 1969 to make his fourth all-star team as the Twins won the Western Division title.  That was to be Roseboro's last hurrah, however, as the Twins released him after the season.  As a Twin, Johnny Roseboro hit .239/.316/.316 in 741 at-bats.  He signed with Washington, but struggled to adapt to a reserve role and was released in mid-August, ending his playing career.  Roseboro went on to coach for the Senators and the Angels, and later served as both a batting instructor and a catching instructor for the Dodgers.  Johnny Roseboro passed away on August 16, 2002 in Los Angeles from complications resulting from a stroke.

Right-handed reliever William Garland Dailey was with the Twins from 1963-1964.  Born in Arlington, Virginia, he signed with Cleveland as a free agent in 1953.  Despite pitching pretty well in the minors, he rose slowly, not getting above Class B until 1956 and not reaching AAA until the end of 1958.  Dailey pitched over 1,300 innings in the minor leagues before reaching the majors in 1961.  He was a starter most of that time.  Dailey never had a minor league ERA above 3.80, and his career minor league ERA was 3.15.  Finally, in mid-August of 1961, the Indians brought him up to pitch mop-up relief.  In twelve games, he pitched 19 innings and posted an ERA of 0.95 with a WHIP of 1.16.  For his trouble, he was sent back to the minors in 1962, finally coming back to the majors in early July.  He put up a 3.59 ERA, but the Indians clearly had no faith in him--in 27 appearances, he was brought into a game Cleveland was leading only twice, and one of those was the ninth inning of a 6-1 game.  Just before the 1963 season started, Dailey was sold to Minnesota.  He was tremendous out of the bullpen in 1963, going 6-3, 1.99 with a WHIP of 0.91 in 108.2 innings spread over 66 games.  His success led to a parody song, “Won’t you come in, Bill Dailey?” The workload took a toll on his arm, however; he was injured the next season, pitched poorly, and then ended his playing career.  As a Twin, Bill Dailey went 7-5, 2.76 in 124 games (80 appearances).  Bill Dailey worked as a security guard in Dublin, Virginia, until retiring.  He passed away on January 11, 2025 in Bedford, Virginia.

Shortstop Leonardo Lago Faedo was with the Twins for the first half of the 1980s.  Born and raised in Tampa, Faedo was drafted by Minnesota in the first round of the 1978 draft.  He was not a great batter in the minors; his best year was 1979, when he hit .271 with AA Orlando.  He hit .240 there in 1980, the year he made his big-league debut as a September call-up.  He was apparently loaned to the Cleveland organization for part of 1981, as he split that season between AAA Charleston and AAA Toledo before being promoted to the Twins after the strike ended in August.  1982 was Faedo's only first season in the majors, as he was the semi-regular at shortstop, sharing the job with Ron Washington.  He won the starting job in 1983 and played well, hitting .305 on May 6 before injuries started to bother him.  Faedo played sporadically for a month, then was shut down in early June, missing half the season before coming back in September.  When he came back, he could not duplicate his earlier success, hitting only .231 the rest of the way.  He started the 1984 season as the Twins shortstop and was not playing that badly, at least not compared to the alternatives the Twins had, but they soured on him and not only sent him to the minors in late April but again loaned him to other organizations, as he finished the season in AAA for Detroit and Texas.  The Twins finally released Faedo just before the 1985 season and he signed with Kansas City.  He played two more seasons in the minors, one in the Royals' organization and one in the Dodgers' chain, before his playing career ended after the 1986 campaign.  In parts of five seasons in the majors, all with the Twins, Lenny Faedo hit .251/.284/.316 in 529 at-bats.  He moved back to Tampa and was a scout for the Detroit Tigers, also giving personal batting instruction.  He was also associated with the Hillsborough County School District.  A younger cousin of his, Alex Faedo, was a reliever for the Detroit Tigers for three seasons.  He was in the Tampa Bay organization in 2025, but had thoracic outlet syndrome surgery in August and has not pitched since.

Right-hander John Baptiste Cressend pitched for the Twins from 2000-2002.  He was born in New Orleans and went to high school in Mandeville, Louisiana.  He then attended Tulane, and signed with Boston as a free agent in 1996.  He pitched well in the low minors, but struggled in the Red Sox' organization when promoted to AA.  Boston waived him in late April of 1999, and Cressend was selected by Minnesota.  He had always been a starter to this point, but the Twins moved him to the bullpen in 2000 and he had a decent season in AAA, coming up to the majors at the end of August of that year.  He began the 2001 season in AAA, but came up to Minnesota in mid-May and stayed the rest of the season.  He was a pretty valuable reliever that season, going 3-2, 3.67 with a WHIP of 1.17.  He started 2002 with the Twins, but could not duplicate his success of the previous year, became injured, and was placed on waivers after the season.  As a Twin, Jack Cressend was 3-3, 4.59 in 102 innings spread over 78 games.  The Indians selected him off waivers, and Cressend spent the next two years bouncing back and forth between Cleveland and the minors.  He pitched well in half a season for them in 2003, but again could not sustain his success the next season, and was released after the 2004 campaign.  He signed with Boston and pitched in Pawtucket in 2005, but it did not go well and his playing career came to an end.  After that, Jack Cressend became a scout for Tampa Bay from 2006-2008.  He was the pitching coach for Tulane University from 2009-2010, then became the pitching coach for the University of Houston in 2011.  He then got back into professional baseball, scouting for the Rays from 2012-2014 and being hired as a cross-checker for the Dodgers in 2015.  He is also the president of the Louisiana Knights, a program that helps develop young baseball players for college and/or the pros.  His son, Cole, pitched in the Dodgers organization in 2024 and was in independent ball in 2025.

Catcher John Ryan Murphy appeared in twenty-six games for the Twins in 2016.  Born and raised in Bradenton, Florida, he was drafted by the Yankees in the second round in 2009.  He hit decently in the low minors, had a poor 2012, but rebounded in a 2013 split between AA and AAA, getting a September call-up that year.  He was the Yankees reserve catcher in 2014 and did okay in that role for two and a half months, batting .286 (though with few walks and little power), but was sent back to AAA in mid-June anyway, again receiving a September call-up.  He was the Yankees reserve catcher for all of 2015, so far his only full season in the majors, and hit .277/.327/.406 in 155 at-bats.  After that season he was traded to the Twins for Aaron Hicks, a trade which is not likely to go down as one of Terry Ryan's best deals.  He was the Twins' reserve catcher for the first month of 2016 and played both poorly and seldom, batting .075/.119/.100 in 40 at-bats.  He came back in September and did a little better but not much.  In between he played in Rochester, where he batted .236 with an OPS of .609.  He was back in Rochester in 2017, where he continued to not hit.  The Twins traded him to Arizona in late July for Gabriel Moya.  He got a September call-up with the Diamondbacks and was their backup catcher for all of 2018, once again not hitting.  He started 2019 as their backup catcher again, but by late May they finally decided to send him back to AAA and at the July deadline he was sold to Atlanta, presumably as catching depth.  He got a September call-up and went 0-for-1.  A free agent at the end of the season, he signed with Pittsburgh for 2020 and was their reserve catcher.  That ended his playing career.  He joined the Philadelphia organization as a coach in 2023 and was the position coach for the Class A Clearwater Threshers in 2024.  He has founded the IamMore Foundation, which  aims to help children with challenges realize they are more than their affliction.

Outfielder DaShawn Robert Keirsey, Jr. has played for the Twins since 2024.  He was born in San Diego, attended the University of Utah, and was drafted by Minnesota in the fourth round in 2018.  He hit very well in rookie ball in 2018 but struggled in Class A in 2019.  He missed the COVID year of 2020 and did not hit much in 2021, but was better, though nothing special, in AA in 2022.  He was very good in AA in 2023 (as a twenty-six year old) and did okay in AAA that season.  He had a fine year in AAA in 2024 and appeared in six major league games that season.  He was been with the Twins for much of 2025 but was generally used as a defensive replacement or pinch-runner, appearing in seventy-four games but getting just eighty-four at-bats.  He was released after the 2025 season and signed with Atlanta, for whom he is playing in AAA.  He turns twenty-nine today.  As a Twin, he batted .113/.149/.206.  In AAA, he has batted .281/.355/.446 in 823 at-bats.  He turns twenty-nine today.  He has not done much in the majors, but he has not been given much of a chance, either.  Unfortunately for him, it does not appear likely that he will be.  But as we've said before, as long as you're still playing, there's still a chance.  We wish him well.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

May 12

Chicken Wolf (1862)
Lave Cross (1866)
Jumping Joe Dugan (1897)
Hank Borowy (1916)
Ed Runge (1918)
Yogi Berra (1925)
Felipe Alou (1935)
Ted Kubiak (1942)
Vic Albury (1947)
Bob Heise (1947)
Joe Nolan (1951)
Lou Whitaker (1957)
Kevin Bass (1959)
Willie Lozado (1959)
Mark Clark (1968)
Wes Helms (1976)
Felipe Lopez (1980)
Evan Meek (1983)
Lance Lynn (1987)
Terrin Vavra (1997)

Ed Runge was an American League umpire from 1954-1970.  His son Paul and his grandson Brian have also been major league umpires.

Infielder Willie Lozado was drafted by Minnesota in the third round of the January Secondary draft in 1978, but did not sign.

Terrin Vavra is the son of former Twins coach Joe Vavra.

Left-hander Victor Albury pitched for the Twins from 1973-1976.  Born and raised in Key West, Albury was drafted by Cleveland in the ninth round in 1965.  He was a first baseman then, and spent a year at Class A Dubuque hitting .233.  He then went into the military for three years, and when he came back he was a pitcher.  Somewhere along the line, Cleveland transferred his rights to the Cubs.  He pitched for them in Class A in 1969 and did well, posting an ERA of 2.32.  Despite that, the Cubs transferred him to San Diego, for whom he had a bad year split between Class A and AAA.  Minnesota selected him in November of 1970 in the minor league draft.  He had a tremendous year at AA Charlotte in 1971, going 12-7, 1.72 with a WHIP of 1.20.  The next year, he was mostly injured, pitching only 18 innings at AAA Tacoma.  He came back in 1973, put up an ERA of 3.99 at Tacoma, and was promoted to the Twins in August, pitching out of the bullpen the rest of the season.  He was with Minnesota for the next three seasons.  He started the 1974 season in the bullpen, went into the starting rotation for about three months, then went back to the bullpen again.  He was much better as a starter, going 7-9, 3.77, so he started 1975 in the rotation again.  He didn’t do all that badly, but the Twins had no patience with him, and switched him back to the bullpen in late May.  This time, he did quite a bit better as a reliever, going 3-0, 3.00 in that role.  In 1976 he was a full-time reliever, going 3-1, 3.58 in 50.1 innings, although with a WHIP of 1.49.  The Twins decided that was not good enough and he spent 1977 pitching in AAA for the Yankees.  He did poorly there, was out of baseball in 1978, then tried to come back with AAA Tacoma, by then in the Cleveland organization, in 1979.  He did poorly there, too, and his playing career came to an end.  In his major league career, all of which came with Minnesota, he was 18-17, 4.11 in 372.2 innings.  He appeared in 101 games, 37 of them starts.  Albury stayed in baseball for a while, coaching in the Indians organization at Waterloo in 1983.  Vic Albury passed away on April 18, 2017 in Tampa.

Right-handed reliever Evan David Meek did not pitch for the Twins, but was drafted by them.  He was born in Bellevue, Washington, went to high school in Kenmore, Washington, and was drafted by Minnesota in the 11th round in 2002.  He had an outstanding season at Elizabethton in 2003, going 7-1, 2.47 with a 1.12 WHIP.  He followed that with two outstandingly bad seasons at Elizabethton, Quad Cities, and Beloit, and the Twins released him in June of 2005.  He signed with San Diego in September and was in Class A for them for most of 2006 before being traded to Tampa Bay in late August.  Meek did somewhat better in AA in 2007 and was chosen by Pittsburgh that winter in the Rule 5 draft.  He began the year in Pittsburgh, but the Pirates then purchased him from Tampa Bay and sent him to AA Altoona.  He pitched very well both there and in AAA Indianapolis.  What seems to have changed the most is that Meek learned how to throw strikes, which he had not done most of his time in the Twins’ organization.  He was in the Pirates’ bullpen for most of 2009 and pitched quite well, posting a 3.45 ERA and a 1.34 WHIP although in only 47 innings over 41 appearances.  He did even better in 2010, his first full season in the majors, going 5-4, 2.14, 1.05 WHIP in 80 innings over 70 appearances and making the all-star team.   He was injured much of 2011, making only 20 appearances, and his control problems returned when he was able to pitch.  He spent most of 2012 in AAA when healthy, and while he did not give up a lot of hits he continued to struggle to throw strikes.  A free agent after the 2012 season, he signed with Texas and spent 2013 at AAA Round Rock, and while his control improved some he did not have a very good year.  He signed with Baltimore for 2014 and made the big club out of spring training, but again could not throw strikes and was sent to Norfolk in early May.  Surprisingly, he did throw strikes there, walking only four in 41.2 innings.  He again became a free agent, signed with Washington for 2015, and spent the season pitching for AAA Syracuse, where his control problems returned.  He pitched well otherwise, but was still released in July and finished the season in Korea.  He pitched in independent ball in 2016, then his playing career was over.  At last report, Evan Meek was living in Hixson, Tennessee, and was a senior commercial territory manager for JAT Energy.

Right-hander Michael Lance Lynn pitched for the Twins for about four months in 2018.  He was born in Indianapolis, went to high school in Brownsburg, Indiana, attended the University of Mississippi, and was drafted by St. Louis in the first round in 2008.  He progressed rapidly through the low minors and reached AAA in 2010 (other than one AAA start in 2009).  He had a rather mediocre year in Memphis and started 2011 there as well, but came up to the majors in early June and, after a rough start, pitched very well out of the Cardinals bullpen.  He went into the Cardinals' rotation (he had always been a starter in the minors) at the start of the 2012 season and stayed there through 2015.  He was a solid rotation starter for those seasons, going 60-38, 3.38 and making over thirty starts each season.  He missed 2016 due to injury, but came back in 2017 to go 11-8, 3.43.  A free agent after the season, he signed with Minnesota for 2018.  For whatever reason, he never got anything going with the Twins, going 7-8, 5.10, 1.63 WHIP in twenty starts.  The Twins traded him to the Yankees at the July deadline for Tyler Austin and Luis Rijo.  He pitched better for the Yankees for two months, then signed with Texas for 2019.  He had two fine seasons for the Rangers, going 22-14 and finishing in the top six in Cy Young voting both years.  He was traded to the White Sox after the 2020 season and had a fine 2021 for them, making his second all-star team.  He injured his knee late in spring training in 2022 and did not start his season until the middle of June, but again had a good season.  He got off to a poor start in 2023, but did substantially better when he was traded to the Dodgers in late July.  He signed with St. Louis for 2024 and had a solid season.  There's no reason to think he couldn't have still been an effective pitcher in 2025, but he chose to retire instead. His career can basically be summed up this way:  He pitched well everywhere other than Minnesota.  At last report, Lance Lynn was living in Marion, Illinois.  He was inducted into the University of Mississippi M Club Hall of Fame.

Monday, May 11, 2026

May 11

Charlie Gehringer (1903)
Rip Sewell (1907)
Eddie Chiles (1910)
Jack Lang (1921)
Nestor Chylak (1922)
Milt Pappas (1939)
Frank Quilici (1939)
Jerry Martin (1949)
Dane Iorg (1950)
Mark Huismann (1958)
Walt Terrell (1958)
Trent Hubbard (1964)
Bobby Witt (1964)
Kerry Ligtenberg (1971)
Francisco Cordero (1975)
Miguel Sano (1993)

Eddie Chiles was the owner of the Texas Rangers from 1980-1989.

Jack Lang was a long-time sportswriter in New York and was the secretary-treasurer of the Baseball Writers Association of America from 1966-1988.

Nestor Chylak was an American League umpire from 1954-1978.

Infielder/manager/broadcaster Francis Ralph Quilici was associated with the Twins for many years.  He was born and raised in Chicago, attended Loras College of Dubuque, Iowa, one of two major league players that school has produced (Red Faber), then transferred to Western Michigan.  Quilici signed with Minnesota as a free agent in 1961.  He was not a great batter in the minors, but had a decent season at AA Charlotte in 1964 and was hitting .277 in AAA Denver when he was called up to the majors in mid-July of 1965.  He only hit .208 in Minnesota that year but started in the World Series in place of the injured Jerry Kindall.  Quilici was back in Denver for all of 1966 and was a seldom-used reserve in 1967.  In 1968 he got the most playing time of his career, starting 34 games at second and 24 at third and getting 229 at-bats.  He didn’t do much with the playing time, and by 1969 he was essentially Harmon Killebrew’s late-inning defensive replacement at third.  In 1970, he was given another chance at second when Rod Carew was out, but he didn’t do much with it and was released in April of 1971.  That ended Quilici’s playing career; he hit .214/.281/.287 in 682 at-bats.  He became a coach with the Twins in 1971, and when Bill Rigney was fired in July of the following year Quilici became the youngest manager in the major leagues.  He remained the manager through the 1975 season, when he was replaced by Gene Mauch.  Quilici then joined the Twins’ broadcasting crew, calling games for the team on radio from 1976-1977, 1980-1982 and on television in 1987.  Quilici was nominated as a candidate for the College World Series Legends Team.  He retired to Burnsville, Minnesota, was a member of the board of directors of the Twins Community Fund, and participated in Twins’ fantasy camps.  In August of 2011, a baseball field in North Minneapolis was renovated and re-named “Frank Quilici Field” in his honor.  It serves as home to the North Minneapolis RBI program.  He was also involved in charitable work encouraging organ donation.  Frank Quilici passed away on May 14, 2018, after suffering from a kidney disease.

Infielder Miguel Angel (Jean) Sano was with the Twins from 2015-2022.  He was born in San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic and signed with the Twins as a free agent in 2009.  He dominated throughout the low minors, posting an OPS of over .900 every year but 2012, when it was .893 for Class A Beloit.  His batting averages were not always high, but he always drew a lot of walks and always hit for power.  He reached AA in 2013, missed 2014 due to injury, but came back strong in 2015, when he jumped from AA to the majors in early July.  He made an immediate impact, hitting .269/.385/.530 in a half-season.  Used mostly as a designated hitter, he was moved from his natural position, third base, to right field in 2016 in what can only be described as a lame-brained decision.  He was a liability in the outfield, then got hurt, and had a year that, while it wasn't all that bad (25 homers, an OPS of .781), was not a step forward in his development.  Back at third base where he belonged in 2017, he improved in the field and had a fine year at the plate, hitting 28 home runs and posting an OPS of .859).  He was off to a slow start in 2018, dealt with a variety of injuries, and never really did get going.  An injury delayed the start of his 2019 season, but once he started he had his best season, clouting 34 home runs with an OPS of .923.  He was unable to build on that in the next couple of seasons, however--he continued to hit home runs, but posted batting averages so low that, although he drew a decent number of walks, his OBP was still nothing to shout about.  He was off to an awful start in 2022 when he tore his meniscus and missed the rest of the season.  He became a free agent after the season, went unsigned, and did not play at all in 2023.  He played winter ball that off-season, however, and signed with the Angels for 2024.  He got off to a hot start, but could not maintain it and was released in mid-July.  He hit well in winter ball for two years, then signed with Chunichi in Japan for 2026.  He turns thirty-three today.  He can probably play somewhere for a couple more years if he wants to, but the odds are very heavily against him making it back to the majors again.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

May 10

Chippy McGarr (1863)
Ed Barrow (1868)
Klondike Douglass (1872)
Harry Salsinger (1885)
Allan Roth (1917)
Hideo Fujimoto (1918)
John McMullen (1918)
Herb Carneal (1923)
Jim Hickman (1937)
Ken Berry (1941)
John Cumberland (1947)
Chris Berman (1955)
Joey Meyer (1962)
Robby Thompson (1962)
Pete Schourek (1969)
Edward Mujica (1984)
Salvador Perez (1990)
Lucas Sims (1994)
Cody Laweryson (1998)

Ed Barrow was the manager of the Boston Red Sox from 1918-1920, and is credited with making the decision to make Babe Ruth an outfielder, rather than a pitcher.  He was then general manager of the New York Yankees from 1921-1944.

Harry Salsinger was the sports editor of the Detroit News for forty-nine years.

Allan Roth was the first full-time statistician employed by a major league team, being hired by Branch Rickey in 1947.  He is credited with promoting the idea that on-base percentage is more valuable than batting average and with providing the first evidence that right-handed batters tend to hit better against left-handed pitchers and vice versa.

Hideo Fujimoto holds the Japanese records for lowest career ERA and lowest one-season ERA.

John McMullen was the owner of the Houston Astros from 1979-1992.

With all due respect to John Gordon, Cory Provus, and Kris Atteberry, some of us will always consider Herb Carneal to be the Voice of the Twins.

Chris Berman broadcast baseball on ESPN for several years.

Left-hander John Sheldon Cumberland did not play for the Twins, but went to spring training with them in 1973.  He was born in Westbrook, Maine, attended the University of Maine, and signed with Philadelphia as a free agent in 1966.  He had a mediocre season in Class A, but the Yankees thought they saw something in him and selected him in the minor league draft.  He had a decent in 1967 in AAA and a solid 1968 there, making his major league debut in the latter season as a September call-up.  He was not as good in 1969 but was not terrible, either, and made two more major league appearances.  He started 1970 with the Yankees and was doing okay, but was traded to San Francisco in mid-July.  1971 was his first full season in the majors and it was his best one:  he went 9-6, 2.92, 1.12 WHIP in 185 innings.  He made 45 appearances, 21 of them starts.  That was as good as it would get for him.  He struggled at the start of 1972, was traded to St. Louis in mid-June, continued to struggle, and after the season was traded to Minnesota with Larry Hisle for Wayne Granger.  That turned out to be a good trade for the Twins, but not because of Cumberland—he was released at the end of spring training.  He signed with the Giants again a couple of weeks later, was released at the end of June, and signed with California.  He made it back to the majors at the end of May, 1974 and pitched fairly well for the Angels for two months, but was sent back to the minors at the end of July.  His playing career came to an end after the season.  For his major league career, he was 15-16, 3.82, 1.24 WHIP in 334.1 innings.  He appeared in 110 games, 36 of them starts.  He stayed in baseball for a while as a coach, most recently working for the Kansas City Royals from 2002-2004.  His son Chris was in the minors for 12 seasons, two of them in the Twins’ organization, but did not make the major leagues.  John Cumberland passed away at his home in Lutz, Florida on April 5, 2024.

First baseman Tanner Joe Meyer did not play for the Twins, but went to spring training with them in 1991.  He was born in Honolulu, went to high school in Kailua, Hawaii, attended the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and was drafted by Milwaukee in the fifth round in 1983.  A big man (listed at 6′ 3″, 260), he crushed the ball in the minors, averaging thirty home runs a season over his first four seasons and hitting over .300 in three of those seasons.  He was in the majors all of the 1988 season, but was used as a part-time player, mostly at DH, as the Brewers preferred giving playing time to Greg Brock and Billy Joe Robideaux to seeing what their young slugger could do playing every day.  He wasn’t terrible in part-time duty, hitting .263 with 11 homers in 327 at-bats.  In 1989 he got even less playing time, as he continued to lose time to such stalwarts as Brock and George Canale.  He managed to hit seven homers in 147 at-bats, but his average declined.  The Brewers released him after the season, he went to Japan for 1990, then came back to the Twins for 1991.  They got rid of him at the end of spring training, but they at least had a better excuse, as they had Kent Hrbek to play first and Paul Sorrento at AAA.  Also, they did not just release him, but traded him to Pittsburgh for Greg Sims.  He played part-time at AAA in the Pirates’ organization in 1991, then his playing career came to an end.  He was a big guy who struck out a lot, but given his minor league record, one has to wonder what he might have done if someone had just given him regular playing time in the big leagues.  After his playing career he returned to Honolulu, and at last report was a security officer for Maui Memorial Medical Center.  He also was a manager for LLS Pacific, a landscaping company.

Right-hander Cody Orion Laweryson came up to the Twins in 2025.  He was born in Bingham, Maine, attended the University of Maine, and was drafted by the Twins in the fourteenth round in 2019.  He was primarily a reliever until his last year of college, mostly started for the Twins through 2021, and has been mostly in the bullpen since then.  He struggled as a starter in high-A in 2021, which is probably why he was moved to relieving.  He had an excellent 2022 split between high-A and AA, but had a poor 2023 in AAA and continued to pitch poorly when returned to AA in 2024.  In 2025, however, something clicked.  He pitched very well in AA, still did well in AAA, and did well in a September call-up that season.  He started 2026 in the majors, but was put on the injured list with a right forearm strain in early April and has not pitched since.  His major league numbers, all with the Twins, are 0-1, 2.57, 1.85 WHIP with fifteen strikeouts in fourteen innings.  He turns twenty-eight today.  His record so far is a pretty mixed bag, so it's anyone guess what the future will hold for him.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

May 9

Frank Bancroft (1846)
Tommy Clarke (1888)
Neck Stanley (1905)
Billy Jurges (1908)
Tony Bartirome (1932)
Ron Jackson (1953)
Tom Chism (1954)
Tony Gwynn (1960)
Aaron Harang (1978)
Prince Fielder (1984)
Chase Headley (1984)
Buddy Boshers (1988)
Jace Peterson (1990)
Oswaldo Arcia (1991)
Cade Smith (1999)

Frank Bancroft managed seven teams in nine different seasons over the period of 1880-1902.

Infielder Tony Bartirome is better known as an athletic trainer, working for Pittsburgh from 1967-1985 and for Atlanta from 1986-1988.

Cade Smith was drafted by Minnesota in the sixteenth round in 2017, but did not sign.

First baseman Ronnie Damien Jackson played for the Twins from 1979-1981.  Born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama, he was drafted by California in the second round in 1971.  He was primarily a third baseman in the minors.  He had good but unspectacular minor league seasons with the exception of 1974, when he hit .328 with 11 home runs at AA El Paso.  He made his major league debut as a September callup in 1975 and started 1976 with the Angels.  He began as a bench player, but by mid-May Jackson was the regular third baseman.  He did not hit, however, and was down to part-time status in 1977.  He played more first base than third in 1978 and had a pretty good year, batting .297 in 387 at-bats.  After the season, Jackson was traded with Danny Goodwin to Minnesota for Dan Ford.  He was the Twins’ regular first baseman in 1979 and was fairly decent, hitting .271 with 14 home runs.  He was the mostly regular in 1980 as well, but slipped a little and fell to part-time status in 1981 before being traded to Detroit in August for a player to be named later (Tim Corcoran).  Jackson became a free agent after the season and did not sign until mid-April of 1982, going back to the Angels.  He hit .331 in only 142 at-bats for California in 1982, but slid back after that.  California released him in August of 1984 and he finished the season with Baltimore.  Jackson played in AAA for St. Louis in 1985 and briefly in AAA for the White Sox in 1988.  He played for a couple of years in the Seniors League, but then his playing career ended.  He was consistently employed until 2009 as a batting coach, either in the majors or in the minors.  He has made a series of instructional videos under the general title “Ron Jackson’s Hitting Factory.”  At last report, he was the owner of Gap to Gap, a website which offers various batting instructional videos and aids.  He also serves as a guest instructor at various baseball academies and coached Birmingham's Willie Mays Youth Baseball team to the 2014 championship of the Junior RBI Classic.  He has also started the Ron "Papa Jack" Baseball Foundation in Birmingham.

First baseman Thomas Raymond Chism did not play for the Twins, but he was in their farm system for a brief time in 1980.  He was born in Chester, Pennsylvania, attended Brandywine Junior College, went to Widener University (the only major league player to have gone to that school), and was drafted by Baltimore in the fourth round in 1974.  He did quite well in the minors, hitting .300 more often than not and posting an OPS over .800 every year.  He got a September call-up in 1979, appearing in six games and going 0-for-3.  Unfortunately for Chism, the Orioles had a first baseman named Eddie Murray, so there was no room for Chism. After the season, the Orioles traded him to Minnesota for Dan Graham.  That seemed to be a turning point in his career; he never made the majors again, and his averages in the minors fell into the .250s.  He apparently did not get along with Twins management very well, moved on to the Detroit organization after 34 AAA games for the Twins, and finished the year back in the Orioles’ chain.  He stayed there for 1981, but at that point he could see that he was unlikely to get much of a chance.  He was a player-coach in 1981 and became a full-time minor-league coach in 1982 .  He remained in the Orioles organization through 1985 as a coach and scout.  He received a World Championship ring from them in 1983, a ring that was later stolen.  The thief was caught, but the ring was never recovered.  At last report, Tom Chism was living in Brookhaven, Pennsylvania, where he worked as a security guard for the Crozer-Chester Medical Center for twenty-years until a back injury forced him to retire.  His son, T. J. Chism, was a pitcher in the Mets’ organization, reaching AA, and played in the Atlantic League in 2015.

Left-hander Jeffrey Allan "Buddy" Boshers played for the Twins for parts of 2016-17.  Born and raised in Huntsville, Alabama, he attended Calhoun Community College in Decatur, Alabama (a school which produced Jorge Posada and Gary Redus) and was drafted by the Angels in the fourth round in 2008.  He was a starter through 2009, but became primarily a relief pitcher in 2010.  He struggled early in his career, not reaching AA until 2012.  He began 2013 in AA, but was promoted to AAA in June.  He made sixteen appearances in AAA, doing okay but nothing special, when for no apparent reason he was promoted to the majors in mid-August.  He spent the rest of the season there and was apparently used as a LOOGY, as he made 25 appearances but pitched only 15.1 innings.  He did okay, sort of, posting a 4.70 ERA and a 1.37.  He actually did significantly better against right-handed batters than he did against lefties, although it's obviously a small sample size.  He split 2014 between AA and AAA, became a free agent, signed with Colorado for 2015, was released in late March, did well in the Atlantic League that season, and signed with the Twins for 2016.  He started 2016 in Rochester but came up to the Twins in late May and did fairly well for them.  He started 2017 in Rochester as well, but again came up to the Twins in late May and did well at first, but faded in the second half.  The Twins waived him after the season and he was claimed by Houston.  He was in AAA for the Astros, was waived in August, and finished the year in AAA for Pittsburgh.  He signed with Cincinnati for 2019, was released in March, and signed with Toronto in May.  He made it back to the majors for the last couple of months of the season and wasn't awful.  He became a free agent after the season and did not play in 2020.  He played in the Dominican Winter League that off-season, but that brought his playing career to an end.  As a Twin, Buddy Boshers was 3-0, 4.56, 1.25 WHIP in 86.1 innings (100 games).  At last report, Buddy Boshers was coaching youth baseball in the Huntsville area.

Outfielder Oswaldo Celestino Arcia played for the Twins from 2013-2016.  He was born in Anaco, Anzoategui, Venezuela and signed with Minnesota as a free agent in 2007.  He did okay his first couple of years, but really broke through with Elizabethton in 2010, hitting .375/.424/.672.  He was jumped to Fort Myers for 2011 and did not really stand out, but he did not do badly, either.  He took another substantial step forward in 2012, hitting .320/.388/.539 in a season divided between Fort Myers and New Britain.  He began 2013 in Rochester, but was brought to Minnesota early in the season.  He struck out a lot, which was a problem in the minors as well, but he still did okay, especially for a twenty-two year old. In 2014 he continued to strike out a lot, but also hit twenty homers and had an OPS of .752.  He was off to a decent start in 2015 when he was injured in early May.  He never got it going after that, having a poor year in Rochester.  He had quite an interesting 2016:  he started the season in Minnesota, was traded to Tampa Bay in June for a player to be named later or cash, was waived in late August and claimed by Miami, was waived again four days later and claimed by San Diego.  As a Twin, he batted .240/.303/.429.  He was released after the 2016 season and signed with Arizona for 2017.  He had a tremendous year in AAA, posting an OPS of 1.049, but did not get back to the majors.  He became a free agent after the season.  It's hard for me to think that no major league team wanted to give him a chance after a AAA season like that, but apparently no one did, because he played for the Nippon Ham Fighters in 2018 and played in Mexico in 2019.  He has continued to play winter ball since then and has been back playing in Mexico since 2023.  He hit really well there for two seasons, but he fell off in 2025 and did not do well in winter ball, either.  He's turns thirty-five today.  We suspect his playing career may be over, and we certainly wish him well in the future.  His brother, Orlando, was a major league shortstop for several seasons and is playing in AAA for the Twins in 2026.