Johnny
Evers (1881)
Howie
Shanks (1890)
Moe Drabowsky (1935)
John Bateman (1940)
Denis Menke (1940)
Mike Hegan (1942)
Jim Manning (1943)
John Hart (1948)
Al Hrabosky (1949)
Mike Cubbage (1950)
Dave Henderson (1958)
Mike Bordick (1965)
Lance Painter (1967)
Kimera Bartee (1972)
Brian Buchanan (1973)
Geoff Jenkins (1974)
Willie Eyre (1978)
C. C. Sabathia (1980)
John Hart was the general manager of the
Cleveland Indians from 1999-2001 and of the Texas Rangers from 2001-2005.
Right-hander
James Benjamin Manning made five appearances with the Twins in 1962. He
was born in L’Anse, Michigan, went to high school in Ewan, Michigan, where he
starred in basketball as well as baseball, and signed with the Twins as a free
agent in 1961. He had a fairly mediocre year in Class D Wytheville in
1961, but started 1962 in the majors. He lasted almost a month, making
four relief appearances and one start. He did not give up any earned runs
in the relief appearances, but allowed six runs (four earned) on seven hits in
2.1 innings in the start, so his stats show an ERA of 5.14 in seven
innings. Those are also his lifetime numbers, as he never made it back to
the big leagues again. He spent the rest of 1962 in Class A Charlotte, had
solid years in AA in 1963-1965, but never got any higher and was let go by the
Twins after the 1965 season. He was at AA York in the Washington
organization in 1966, then his playing career was over at age 23. It
seems odd that the Twins would jump him from Class D to the majors at age 18,
but not give him another chance when he was a little older and had some success
at AA. As you might guess, there are lots of people in the world named
“Jim Manning”. No information about what this Jim Manning has done since
his playing career ended was readily available.
Infielder Michael Lee Cubbage played for the
Twins from 1976-1980. Born and raised in Charlottesville, Virginia, he
attended the University of Virginia and was drafted by Washington in the second
round of the June Secondary draft in 1971. He played more second base
than third in the minors, although he saw time at both positions. He hit
for high averages throughout the minors, topping .300 every year but 1972, when
he hit .281 for Class A Burlington. Cubbage was in the majors with Texas
briefly at the start of 1974 and came up to stay in mid-June of 1975, playing
as a reserve second baseman. On June 1 of 1976, he was traded to
Minnesota with Jim Gideon, Bill Singer, Roy Smalley, and $250,000 for Bert Blyleven
and Danny Thompson. He was the mostly regular third baseman for the next
few years, sharing the position with Dave McKay, Jerry Terrell, and Larry Wolfe
but getting the majority of the playing time. He hit for a decent average
with a fair number of walks, but had little power. In 1979 he began
losing playing time to John Castino, and in 1980 he actually saw more playing
time at first base than at third, starting 59 games there. He really
didn’t hit enough for a third baseman, so his offense was completely inadequate
at first. As a Twin, he hit .266/.336/.378 in 1,681 at-bats.
Cubbage became a free agent after the 1980 season and signed with the
Mets. He was mostly a pinch-hitter for the Mets, missing two months with
an injury. He played in AAA for them in 1982, then his playing career
came to an end. He remained in the Mets’ organization, however, managing
for them in the minors from 1983-1989 and coaching for them in the
majors from 1990-1996. He then coached for Houston in 1997-2001
and for Boston from 2002-2003. More recently, he was a scout
for the Tampa Bay Rays. At last report, Mike Cubbage was a special
assistant to the general manager for the Washington Nationals. He is
a cousin of former major league players Chris Haney and Larry Haney.
Outfielder Kimera Anotchi Bartee did not play
for the Twins in either the majors or the minors, but did belong to their team
for a short time. Born and raised in Omaha, he went to Creighton, then
was drafted by Baltimore in the fourteenth round in 1993. A speedy
singles hitter, Bartee hit fairly well in the minors through 1995. At
that point, he came to the Twins with Scott Klingenbeck as the player to
be named later in the trade that sent Scott Erickson to Baltimore. This
happened in mid-September; that December, the Twins left Bartee unprotected in
the Rule 5 draft and Baltimore took him back. They waived him in spring
training, and he was chosen by Detroit. He stayed with the Tigers all of
the 1996 season and wasn’t awful as a reserve outfielder, hitting .253 in 217
at-bats and stealing 20 bases. He went back and forth from AAA Toledo to
Detroit from 1997-1999, but never hit above .200 again in a major league
season. Bartee went to the Reds’ organization for 2000, signed with
Anaheim for 2001, was traded to Colorado in mid-July for Chone Figgins (a trade
that worked out well for the Angels), went to the Cubs for 2002, and played for
Long Island in the independent Atlantic League from 2003-2004 before ending his
playing career. His major league numbers are .216/.282/.298 in 416
at-bats. Bartee has remained in baseball since his playing career
ended. He was a coach in the Baltimore minor league organization from
2005-2007, and is currently the minor league outfield/baserunning coordinator
for the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Outfielder Brian James Buchanan played for
the Twins from 2000-2002. He was born in Miami, went to high school in
Fairfax, Virginia, attended the University of Virginia, and was drafted by the
Yankees in the first round in 1994. He hit well in the minors for them,
but without as much power as one might suspect; his best home run season in the
Yankees’ system was 14 in 1997. In February of 1998, Buchanan was traded
to Minnesota with Cristian Guzman, Eric Milton, Danny Mota, and cash for
Chuck Knoblauch. Sent to AAA Salt Lake, he hit well for them. His
best year was 2000, when he hit .297 with 27 homers and 103 RBIs despite being
in the majors for a month of that season and again in September. 2001 was
Buchanan’s first full year in the majors, and he didn’t do badly as a reserve
outfielder, hitting .274 with 10 homers in 174 at-bats. He remained with
the Twins through mid-July of 2002, when he was traded to San Diego for Jason
Bartlett. As a Twin, he hit .258/.319/.428 in 414 at-bats. He
did a decent job as a reserve outfielder for the Padres in 2003 but slumped in
2004, went to AAA, and was released in late August. The Mets signed him
the next day and he finished the season for them. Buchanan signed with
Tampa Bay for 2005, was released at the end of spring training, signed with
Colorado, was released in late July, signed with Minnesota, and was in
Rochester through the end of the season. He signed with Cincinnati for
2006, was released in mid-May, finished the season with the St. Paul Saints,
and played in Japan in 2007. He then signed with Kansas City and played
in AAA Omaha from 2008-2009, retiring after the 2009 campaign. Brian
Buchanan then became a manager and coach in the Kansas City minor league
system, and is currently the batting coach of Northwest Arkansas, where
ex-Twin Steve Luebber is the pitching coach.
Right-hander William Mays Eyre pitched
for the Twins in 2006. He was born in Fountain Valley, California,
attended the College of Eastern Utah (the only major league player that school
has produced), and was drafted by Minnesota in the twenty-third round in
1999. He started slowly, but began pitching well when shifted to the
bullpen in 2001. He reached AAA in 2003 and had a fine year for Rochester
in 2005, going 10-3, 2.72 with seven saves and a WHIP of 1.29. Eyre then
spent all of 2006 in Minnesota, his only full year in the majors to date.
He did not do particularly well, going 1-0, 5.31 with a WHIP of 1.64 in 59.1
innings spread over 42 games. He was allowed to become a free agent after
the 2006 season and signed with Texas. He began 2007 in AAA, but was
quickly called up to the majors, where he remained most of the season.
His numbers were not any better than they had been with Minnesota, and in late
August he was injured. He missed all of 2008 with Tommy John surgery but
came back in 2009, reaching the majors for about two months in four different
stints. Eyre remained in the Texas organization in 2010, pitching well
for AAA Oklahoma City. He moved on to the Oakland system for 2011, was
allowed to become a free agent at the end of July, and signed with Baltimore a
few days later, not only making it back to the big leagues but pitching
quite well in nineteen appearances. He signed with Baltimore again
for 2012, was sent to AAA, was released in mid-June, and signed back
with Texas, for whom he did not pitch well in AAA. His playing career
came to an end after that. As a Twin, he was 1-0, 5.31 in 42 games (59.1
innings). At last report, it appeared that Willie Eyre was living in the
Fort Myers area, where he was coaching youth sports and working as a teacher in
Exceptional Student Education. He is the brother of former major league
pitcher Scott Eyre.