J. L. Wilkinson (1878)
Ed Walsh (1881)
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)
Ed Walsh (1881)
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)
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 both the
majors and minors. He retired after the 2010 season and was living in
Fort Scott, Kansas at last report. His son Adam was a first baseman and
his son Andy was a major league infielder for at least part of six seasons.
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, although it appears that he no longer holds that position.
Hosken Powell is still living in Pensacola and appears to be active in
the Boys and Girls Clubs there.
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. At last report, Pat Borders was a high school
baseball coach in Winter Haven, Florida. His son, Levi, was drafted by
the Atlanta Braves in 2012 but opted to play baseball for the University of
South Florida.
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 been 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 has been the minor
league hitting coordinator for Pittsburgh since 2014.
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