Dave Eggler (1849)
Charley Jones (1850)
Jack Sheridan (1862)
Jumbo Brown (1907)
Chet Laabs (1912)
Ernie Tyler (1924)
Ken Retzer (1934)
Ray Miller (1945)
Phil Garner (1949)
Tracy Ringolsby (1951)
Jeff Reboulet (1964)
Ryan O'Rourke (1988)
Charley Jones (1850)
Jack Sheridan (1862)
Jumbo Brown (1907)
Chet Laabs (1912)
Ernie Tyler (1924)
Ken Retzer (1934)
Ray Miller (1945)
Phil Garner (1949)
Tracy Ringolsby (1951)
Jeff Reboulet (1964)
Ryan O'Rourke (1988)
Jack Sheridan was the first home
plate umpire to crouch behind the catcher in the style that umpires do today.
Ernie
Tyler was the umpires’ assistant for Baltimore Orioles home games from
1960 through 2010. He went from opening day of 1960 through July 27, 2007
without missing a game, a streak of 3,769 games. He missed two games that
weekend to go to Cooperstown for the induction of Cal Ripken, Jr. into the Hall
of Fame.
Ray
Miller was the manager of the Twins in 1985 and 1986, replacing Billy Gardner
and being replaced by Tom Kelly.
Tracy
Ringolsby has been a baseball writer since 1976 and was given the Spink Award
in 2005.
Catcher Kenneth Leo Retzer did
not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system in 1965. He was born
in Wood River, Illinois and signed with Cleveland as a free agent in
1954. He began in Class D and rose very slowly. He hit for good
averages most years, but with very little power. He reached Class A in
1956, but then missed 1957 due to military service. When he came back in
1958, he was once again in Class A. He got to AAA in 1959, went to the
Philadelphia organization in mid-season of 1960, and was in the White Sox’
chain in 1961. He appears, however, to have remained the property of the
Indians all that time, as he was traded in early September of 1961 by Cleveland
to Washington. He was in the majors the rest of the season, batting .340
in 57 at-bats. He stayed with the Senators through 1963 and was their
main catcher for those years, although he only caught 80-100 games each
season. His average dropped each season, and when he got off to a poor
start in 1964 he was sent to the minors in early May. After the 1964
season Washington traded Retzer to Minnesota for Joe McCabe. He spent
1965 at AAA Denver, hitting .270/.361/.357. He went to spring training
with the Twins in 1966, but was traded to Houston shortly before the season
started for Walt Bond. He remained in AAA for the rest of his career,
playing in the Houston organization in 1966 and in the Baltimore and Cleveland
systems in 1967. For his career, Ken Retzer hit .264/.316/.367 in 690
at-bats. He apparently is active in the Major League Baseball Players
Alumni Association and is reputed to be a very nice man.
Infielder
Jeffrey Allen Reboulet played for the Twins from 1992-1996, taking over the
utility infielder role from Al Newman. He was born in Dayton, Ohio, went
to LSU, and was drafted by Minnesota in the tenth round in 1986. He was a
shortstop for most of his minor league career. His highest minor league
average was .287 in Class A in 1986; he never topped .260 in a full minor
league season after that. He also had no power: his highest home
run total in the minors was four. Still, he came up to the majors in May
of 1992 and stayed for ten years. He was always a reserve: the
Twins used him primarily at shortstop, but he also played quite a bit of second
and third as well as outfield. In his years with the Twins, he played
every position except pitcher. His best year as a Twin was 1995, when he
hit .292 in 216 at-bats. As a Twin, Jeff Reboulet hit .248/.335/.342 in
450 games with just over a thousand at-bats. He became a free agent after
the 1996 season and signed with Baltimore, where he stayed for three
years. After his worst year in the majors, when he hit .162 in 154
at-bats in 1999, he was sent to Kansas City. He had one year as a Royal,
then moved to the Dodgers for two years. He was sent back to the minors
for a month in 2002 and was released late in spring training of 2003, signing
with Pittsburgh in April. Reboulet began 2003 in AAA, but came up to the
majors in mid-May and got the most at-bats he’d ever had in a season,
261. He was pretty much the same hitter he’d always been, however, and
after that season his playing career came to an end. After his
retirement, Jeff Reboulet went back to Dayton and is a co-founder of Horizon
Wealth Management, LLC, a full service financial planning and investment
advisory firm. He is also the president of REB Sports Academy of Kettering,
Ohio, an indoor sports training facility.
Left-handed
reliever Ryan Patrick O'Rourke has pitched for the Twins since 2015. He
was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, went to high school in Shrewsbury,
Massachusetts, attended Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts, and
was drafted by Minnesota in the thirteenth round in 2010. He both started
and relieved in his first couple of years as a pro but has been a reliever
since 2012. His minor league record has been less than stellar. Even
granting that ERA can easily be skewed for relief pitchers, he has an ERA over
five in both AA (69 games, 59.1 innings) and AAA 23 games, 15.2 innings).
He appears to have been used as a left-handed specialist even in the
minors. He spent the second half of 2015 with the Twins and pitched well
for the first month, but ended up with an ERA of 6.14 and a WHIP of 1.41.
He did, however, get 24 strikeouts in 22 innings (28 games). He
began 2016 in Rochester but was quickly brought up to the big club and is again
off to a good start. He seems to have been slotted into a narrow role
very early in his career, but if he can excel at it he could be around for a
very long time.
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