Jack
Farrell (1857)
Robert Brown (1876)
Charles Stoneham (1876)
Bump Hadley (1904)
Jack Krol (1936)
Curt Blefary (1943)
Gary Matthews (1950)
Rich Gossage (1951)
Dave Eiland (1966)
Tim Worrell (1967)
Bo Porter (1972)
Jesse Crain (1981)
Jorge Polanco (1993)
Robert Brown (1876)
Charles Stoneham (1876)
Bump Hadley (1904)
Jack Krol (1936)
Curt Blefary (1943)
Gary Matthews (1950)
Rich Gossage (1951)
Dave Eiland (1966)
Tim Worrell (1967)
Bo Porter (1972)
Jesse Crain (1981)
Jorge Polanco (1993)
Robert
Brown owned various teams in Vancouver from 1910-45. He was also
president of the Western International League in 1953. He is a member of
the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.
Charles
Stoneham owned the New York Giants from 1919 until his death in 1936.
Jack
Krol was a long-time minor league manager and major league coach. coaching for
St. Louis from 1977-80 and San Diego from 1981-86.
Right-handed
reliever Jesse Alan Crain has played for the Twins since 2004. He was
born in Toronto, went to high school in Boulder, Colorado, and then attended
the University of Houston. He was drafted by Minnesota in the second
round in 2002. A reliever throughout his career, he had some tremendous
seasons in the minors, posting a minor league career ERA of 2.00 and a WHIP of
0.94 in 180 minor league innings. He was called up to the Twins in August
of 2004, and with a brief exception has been there ever since. He was
very good through 2006, although his ERA and his WHIP went up every year.
In 2007, he started poorly, was injured, missed most of the season, and has not
been as good since. He was decent, but no more, in 2008, but had a bad
year in 2009, going back to AAA Rochester for a little over a month. The
demotion may have done him some good, as he pitched much better when he was
brought back. He got off to a rough start in 2010, but eventually
righted the ship and had a pretty good season. He became a free agent
after the season and signed with the White Sox, for whom he pitched very well
for two and a half seasons. He was named to the all-star team in 2013,
but was injured in late June and has not pitched since. He became a free
agent and signed with Houston, but spent all of 2014 on the disabled list.
A free agent again, he signed with the White Sox and pitched briefly for
their rookie league team in Arizona in 2015, but that was all. He became
a free agent after the season and went unsigned, presumably ending his playing
career. As a Twin, Jesse Crain was 33-21, 3.42, with a 1.26
WHIP and three saves. He appeared in 376 games, pitching 382 innings.
At last report, he was living in Arizona and seemed to be enjoying his
retirement.
Infielder
Jorge Luis (Pacheco) Polanco made his major league debut on June 26 of this
season. He was born in San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic and
signed with Minnesota as a free agent in 2009. As he was only sixteen, it
took a little while for his offense to develop. In 2012, however, he hit
.313 with an OPS of .903 at Elizabethton and followed that up by hitting .308
with an OPS of .813 at Cedar Rapids in 2013. He began 2014 at Fort Myers,
was called up to Minnesota in late June due to injuries to infielders, and then
went back to Fort Myers, eventually being promoted to AA. He started
2015, was promoted to AAA, and appeared in four more games in the majors. In
2016 he's having a fine year in Rochester and has appeared in thirteen more
major league games. In the majors so far, he is hitting .262/.385/.476 in
forty-two at-bats. It's a small sample size, but he already has more
hits, home runs, RBIs, and walks in his Twins career than Corky Miller.
It seems like he should be older, but to coin a phrase, he's only
twenty-three. It's hard to tell what the Twins organization will do, but
there's no apparent reason Jorge Polanco should not be playing in the majors
before too much longer.
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