Charley Hickman (1876)
Jack Tobin (1892)
John Tsitouris (1936)
Rene Lachemann (1945)
Ken Oberkfell (1956)
Rick Leach (1957)
Tim Tschida (1960)
Eddie Perez (1968)
Joe Borowski (1971)
Miguel Cairo (1974)
Ben Grieve (1976)
Jason Michaels (1976)
Ryan Jorgensen (1979)
Matt Tolbert (1982)
Kevin Slowey (1984)
Jack Tobin (1892)
John Tsitouris (1936)
Rene Lachemann (1945)
Ken Oberkfell (1956)
Rick Leach (1957)
Tim Tschida (1960)
Eddie Perez (1968)
Joe Borowski (1971)
Miguel Cairo (1974)
Ben Grieve (1976)
Jason Michaels (1976)
Ryan Jorgensen (1979)
Matt Tolbert (1982)
Kevin Slowey (1984)
St. Paul native Tim Tschida was a
major league umpire from 1986-2012.
Catcher Ryan Wayne Jorgensen played a total of three innings for
the Twins in 2008. He was born in Jacksonville, Florida, went to high
school in Kingwood, Texas, and attended LSU. He was then drafted by the
Cubs in the seventh round in 2000. He really never had a productive
offensive season in the minors above Class A; his best was 2004, when he hit
.259 with eight homers for AAA Albuquerque. The Cubs traded him to
Florida in March or 2002 in a trade that involved Dontrelle Willis, Antonio
Alfonseca, and Matt Clement. Jorgensen does not seem to have been a
regular catcher even in the minors; once he got above Class A, he never got as
many as 250 at-bats in a minor league season. He was with the Marlins for
about two weeks, presumably when one of their catchers was injured. He
got four at-bats in four games and was 0-for-4. Jorgensen was traded to
Cincinnati in March of 2006 and got another two weeks or so in the majors with
the Reds in 2007, going 3-for-15. He became a free agent after the 2007
campaign and signed with Minnesota. He hit .247 in Rochester and got a
September call-up, going 0-for-1 in two games. He signed with Cincinnati
for 2009, but decided to retire instead. We had received information last
year that he had become an air traffic controller, but upon further review that
appears to be a different Ryan Jorgensen. No information about what our
Ryan Jorgensen is doing these days was readily availble.
Infielder
Christopher Matthew Tolbert was with the Twins from 2008-2011. He
was born in McComb, Mississippi, went to high school in Centreville,
Mississippi, and attended the University of Mississippi. He was drafted
by Minnesota in the sixteenth round in 2004. He has generally hit for a
decent average in the minors, but with little power and only an average number
of walks. He has hit over .300 in the minors twice: in rookie ball
in 2004, when he hit .308, and in a half-season at Ft. Myers in 2006, when he
hit .303 in 155 at-bats. After hitting .293 at Rochester in 2007, Tolbert
spent most of 2008 with Minnesota, although he was injured part of the
time. He hit .283 that season in 113 at-bats. He was with the Twins
for a little over half of 2009, but hit only .232 in 198 at-bats. He
began 2010 with AAA Rochester, but was called up in mid-May and spent most of
the rest of the season in Minnesota. He was with the big club almost all
of 2011 as a futility infielder, batting .198 with an OPS of .518. A
free agent after 2011, he signed with the Cubs and did not have a particularly
good year playing for AAA Iowa in 2012. He signed with the Phillies for
2013 but was injured most of the season. He was again in the Phillies
organization for 2014 but retired in July. He finished out the season as
a coach in the Phillies organization at short-season Williamsport but was not
retained for 2015. As a Twin, Matt Tolbert hit .230/.288/.319 in 605
at-bats. He hustled and he played a lot of positions, which enabled him
to have a longer playing career than he would've had just based on talent.
No information about what Matt Tolbert has done since the 2015 season was
readily available.
Right-hander
Kevin Michael Slowey pitched for the Twins from 2007-2011. He was born in
Conroe, Texas, attended high school in Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania, and
attended Winthrop University. He was drafted by the Twins in the second
round in 2005. He was tremendous in the minors: his highest
season-long ERA was 2.12 and his highest WHIP was 0.96. Slowey pitched
only 7.2 innings of rookie ball in 2005 before being moved up to Beloit, where
he posted an ERA of 2.24 and a WHIP of 0.78 in 64.1 innings. He made 14 starts
at Ft. Myers in 2006 and was almost unhittable, going 4-2, 1.01 with a 0.68
WHIP before being promoted to New Britain. He was 10-5, 1.89 in 20 starts
in Rochester in 2007. Slowey made his major league debut that year, going
4-1, 4.73 in 13 games, eleven of them starts. He was fairly good in 2008,
but missed half of 2009 with a wrist injury. He was in the starting
rotation in 2010, and did okay, going 13-6, 4.45, 1.29 WHIP in 28 starts.
He was injured much of 2011 and was ineffective when he did pitch. After
the season, he was traded to Colorado for a player to be named later (Daniel
Turpen). He did not play for the Rockies, however, as he was traded to
Cleveland about six weeks later. He was injured much of the season and
did not pitch particularly well in eight AAA starts. A free agent after the
season, he signed with Miami, made their rotation, pitched very well in his
first seven starts, but not so well after that. He went to the bullpen in
June and ended his season early due to injury in mid-July. He started
2014 in the Miami bullpen, made a couple of starts in April, and did not do
well in either role. He was released in June and was out of baseball
until the off-season, when he signed with Philadelphia. He was then
released in late March. As a Twin, he was 39-29, 4.66 with a WHIP of
1.30. He appeared in 100 games, 90 of them starts, and pitched 532.2
innings. In June of 2015, Slowey formally announced his retirement and
became a special assistant to the executive director of the major league
baseball players' association.
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