John Henry “Pop” Lloyd (1884)
George Fiall (1900)
Bill Grieve (1900)
Roy Parmelee (1907)
Bobby Estalella (1911)
Red Flaherty (1917)
Ed Vargo (1930)
Lew Krausse (1943)
Kerry Taylor (1950)
Greg Wells (1954)
Larry Pashnick (1956)
Tony Phillips (1959)
Darren Holmes (1966)
Joe Buck (1969)
Brad Clontz (1971)
Jacque Jones (1975)
J. P. Howell (1983)
Garrett Mock (1983)
George Fiall (1900)
Bill Grieve (1900)
Roy Parmelee (1907)
Bobby Estalella (1911)
Red Flaherty (1917)
Ed Vargo (1930)
Lew Krausse (1943)
Kerry Taylor (1950)
Greg Wells (1954)
Larry Pashnick (1956)
Tony Phillips (1959)
Darren Holmes (1966)
Joe Buck (1969)
Brad Clontz (1971)
Jacque Jones (1975)
J. P. Howell (1983)
Garrett Mock (1983)
Shortstop Pop Lloyd was called
the Black Honus Wagner.
A member
of the basketball hall of fame as part of the “Renaissance Five” team,
shortstop George Fiall played in the Negro Leagues from 1918-1931.
Bill
Grieve was an American League umpire from 1938-1955.
Red
Flaherty was an American League umpire from 1953-1973.
Ed Vargo
was a National League umpire from 1960-1983 and was an umpire supervisor from
1984-1997.
Kerry
Taylor played for the GCL Twins in 1968. He then went into the Army and
was killed in the Vietnam War.
The son
of Hall of Famer Jack Buck, some sources say that Joe Buck is also a
professional baseball broadcaster.
Garrett
Mock was drafted by Minnesota in the fourteenth round in 2002, but did not
sign.
The
original Boomer Wells, first baseman Gregory De Wayne Wells had 54 at-bats with
the Twins in 1982. Born in McIntosh, Alabama, he went to Albany State
University (where he also played football and was drafted by the Jets in the
sixteenth round) and signed with Pittsburgh as a free agent in 1976.
He signed with the Pirates on March 26 and was released on April 7, making one
wonder why Pittsburgh bothered in the first place. He played
for independent Beeville in the Gulf States League that year, and was
signed by Cleveland on February 14, 1977. The Indians
released him on March 27; apparently teams liked the idea of signing Wells
a lot more than they liked actually having him around. In mid-June, he
signed with Toronto and finally got a chance to play for a major league
organization. He was dominant in the low minors, but was simply fairly
good when he was jumped from Class A to AAA. In 1981, though, he hit .292
with 20 homers at Syracuse and was called up to the majors once the strike
ended. He spent the rest of the season in Toronto. After the season
ended, he was traded to Minnesota as the player to be named later in
a deal that sent Hosken Powell to the Blue Jays. The Twins sent him to
AAA Toledo, where he had his best minor league season, hitting .336 with 28
home runs. He got a September call-up and was used in fifteen games
as a first baseman and DH, but hit only .204 with no home runs. The Twins
released him after the season and he went to Japan, where he played for ten
years. He became a star in Japan, making the all-star team five times and
becoming the first American to win the triple crown. He was inducted into
the Albany State University Hall of Fame in 2003. At last report, Greg
"Boomer" Wells was living in Cartersville, Georgia and helping care
for his elderly mother.
Right-hander
Larry John Pashnick appeared in 13 games for the Twins in 1984. He was
born in Lincoln Park, Michigan, attended Michigan State, and was signed by
Detroit as a free agent in 1979. He did fairly well at every stop in the
minors and reached the majors in 1982, beginning that season with the
Tigers. He was in the big leagues for most of the season, was used both
as a starter and in relief, and did reasonably well in both roles, going 4-4,
4.01 in 94.1 innings. He began 1983 in AAA, but had two stints in the
majors totalling about two months. He did not do as well this time and
was traded to Minnesota after the season for Rusty Kuntz. He started 1984
with the Twins and actually did pretty well, going 2-1, 3.52 with a 1.28 WHIP
in 38.1 innings. Still, the Twins sent him out in late June, and he never
made it back to the major leagues. In fact, 1984 was his last year, as
his playing career ended after that. Not that he would have been a
superstar, but it seems odd, given his record, that he did not get more of a
chance. At last report, Larry Pashnick was living in Livonia, Michigan
was the owner of Pashnick Sales LLC. He was active in Detroit Tigers’
alumni events and also in various charitable events.
Outfielder
Jacque Dewayne Jones played for the Twins from 1999-2005. Born and raised
in San Diego, he attended Kennesaw State University of Kennesaw, Georgia, one
of five major league players the school has produced. He was drafted by
the Twins in the second round in 1996. Jones played for the U. S. Olympic
team that year, so his professional career did not really get going until
1997. He hit well, showing double-digit home run power and narrowly
missing .300 in both 1997 and 1998. He started 1999 in AAA, but was in
the majors by early June and didn’t look back. He played center
field in 1999, played both center and left in 2000, was in left field from
2001-2003, and moved to right for 2004-2005. Jones was a solid big-league
outfielder throughout his tenure with the Twins. His best season was
2002, when he hit .300 with 27 home runs and 37 doubles. His numbers
dropped in his last two years in Minnesota, and Jones became a free agent after
the 2005 season. He had a fine season for the Cubs in 2006, but in 2007
his power disappeared: he still hit .285, but had only five home
runs. The Cubs traded Jones to Detroit after the season, and he
collapsed. He hit only .165 in 79 at-bats for the Tigers in 2008 and was
released in mid-May. He signed with Florida and was with the Marlins for
a month, but continued not hitting and was released again. Jones spent 2009
with the independent Newark Bears, and was signed by Minnesota for 2010.
He had a fine spring training, but was sent to AAA Rochester, where he hit .280
but with few walks and little power. He became a free agent after
the season and was not signed, ending his playing career. It was a pretty good
career, though. As a Twin, he hit .279/.327/.455, numbers which are
pretty much the same as his career numbers. Jacque Jones was he batting
coach for the AAA El Paso Chihuahaus in the San Diego organization at the start
of 2014, but quit in mid-June for personal reasons. He became the
assistant batting coach of the Washington Nationals in 2016.
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