Frank
Grant (1865)
Joe Shaute (1899)
George Sisler, Jr. (1917)
George Bamberger (1923)
Masaichi Kaneda (1933)
Pedro Cisneros (1939)
Tony Muser (1947)
Milt May (1950)
Pete Mackanin (1951)
Greg Gross (1952)
Dave Anderson (1960)
Gregg Jefferies (1967)
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (1968)
Brian Bohanon (1968)
Kevin Jarvis (1969)
Adam Jones (1985)
Madison Bumgarner (1989)
Kennys Vargas (1990)
Joe Shaute (1899)
George Sisler, Jr. (1917)
George Bamberger (1923)
Masaichi Kaneda (1933)
Pedro Cisneros (1939)
Tony Muser (1947)
Milt May (1950)
Pete Mackanin (1951)
Greg Gross (1952)
Dave Anderson (1960)
Gregg Jefferies (1967)
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (1968)
Brian Bohanon (1968)
Kevin Jarvis (1969)
Adam Jones (1985)
Madison Bumgarner (1989)
Kennys Vargas (1990)
Infielder
Ulysses F. "Frank" Grant is considered one of the best
African-American baseball players of the nineteenth century.
The
son of the Hall of Famer, George Sisler, Jr. was a long-time minor league
executive, winning the Minor League Executive of the Year award three
times. He served as International League president from 1965-1976 and is
a member of the International League Hall of Fame.
Masaichi
Kaneda won four hundred games over a twenty-year career in Japan.
Pedro
Cisneros was commissioner of the Mexican League from 1982-99 and was the editor
of the first Mexican League Encyclopedia.
Infielder
Pete Mackanin played for the Twins from 1980-1981. Born and raised in
Chicago, he was drafted by Washington in the fourth round in 1969. He did
not do much in the minors until 1973, when out of nowhere he hit .302 at AAA
Spokane. He spent two months with Texas that year, used mostly as a
reserve shortstop behind Toby Harrah. He showed that 1973 was no fluke by
hitting .291 at Spokane in 1974, getting a September call-up. The Rangers
traded him to Montreal after the 1974 season. That turned out to be a
break for Mackanin, as he got a chance to play regularly for the Expos.
He was their starting second baseman for two seasons, but did not hit, batting
in the .220s both years. He lost his starting job in 1977 and spent most
of 1978 in AAA before being chosen off waivers by Philadelphia in
September. He was apparently injured most of the 1979 campaign, as he
played in only thirteen games in the majors and none in the minors. After
that season, Mackanin was traded to Minnesota for Paul Thormodsgaard. In
1980 he shared second base with Rob Wilfong, although he also played a little
shortstop. He took more of a utility role in 1981. As a Twin,
he hit .252/.279/.346 in 544 at-bats. He became a free agent after the
1981 season and signed with the White Sox, but was released in spring training
of 1982. He signed with Texas and spent the next three seasons in AAA,
two of them in the Rangers' organization and one in the Cubs' chain. He
remained in baseball after his playing career ended. He coached and
managed in the minors for several years, then became the third base coach for
Montreal from 1997-2001. He was back in the minors for a couple of years,
then became the bench coach for Pittsburgh. He was their interim manager
for about a month in 2005, then went back to the minors. He became an
advance scout for Cincinnati in 2007 and was their interim manager for half of
that season. He scouted for the Yankees in 2008, then became bench coach
for Philadelphia in 2009. He became the Phillies third base coach in 2014
and became their manager in 2015 when Ryne Sandberg resigned in late June.
Right-hander
Kevin Jarvis appeared in six games for the Twins in 1997. He was born in
Lexington, Kentucky, went to high school in Tates Creek, Kentucky, and attended
Wake Forest. He was drafted by Cincinnati in the twenty-first round in
1991. He did very well in the minors, going 10-2 with a 3.54 ERA in AAA
Indianapolis in 1994. He was on a shuttle between Indianapolis and
Cincinnati that year, making four brief appearances with the big club.
Things went downhill from there, though. He split 1995 between the majors
and AAA, not pitching particularly well in either league. He was in the
Reds' rotation for much of 1996, but did not fare any better. He began
1997 in the Cincinnati bullpen, was waived on May 2 and chosen by Detroit, was
waived again on May 9 and selected by Minnesota. He appeared in six games
for the Twins, two of them starts. In thirteen innings, he was 0-0,
12.46, 2.39 WHIP, allowing 18 runs on 23 hits and 8 walks. The Twins
waived him on June 17 and he was chosen by Detroit, where he finished the
season. He spent much of 1998 in Japan, but signed with
Cincinnati for about two weeks in late August-early September. He moved
on to the Oakland organization in 1999 and to the Rockies' chain in 2000.
He pitched well at AAA in those years, but did nothing in the majors. He
signed with San Diego in 2001 and got his only full season in the majors, going
12-11, 4.79 and leading the league in home runs allowed. He battled
injuries in 2002-2003, but was in the Padres' rotation when healthy, with
similar results. He was traded to Seattle after the 2003 season.
The Mariners released him May 6, he signed with Colorado May 11, was released
by the Rockies on July 6, and signed with Pittsburgh July 16, spending the rest
of the season in AAA. He signed with St. Louis for 2005, making four
appearances for the Cardinals, moved on to Arizona for 2006 (appearing in five
big league games), went to Boston at the end of August, appeared in four more,
and then his career was over. He had a career ERA of over six, yet
appeared in parts of twelve major league seasons, made 118 starts and 69 relief
appearances, and pitched 780.2 major league innings. His lowest season
ERA was 4.37, even including seasons where he pitched very few major league
innings. He holds the record with six seasons with an ERA above
seven. When you look at all the guys who pitch well in the minors year
after year and can't get a shot, it's amazing that Kevin Jarvis got as many
chances as he did. At last report, he was a scout for the Los Angeles
Angels.
First
baseman Kennys Vargas has played for the Twins in 2014 and 2015. Born and
raised in Canovanas, Puerto Rico, he signed with the Twins as a free agent in
2009. He hit well at every stop in the minors, but was promoted slowly.
He spent 2009-2011 in rookie ball, was in Class A in 2012-2013, reached
AA in 2014, then was suddenly promoted to the majors on the first of August of
that year. He did pretty well, although he was much better in August than
he was in September. A first baseman, he was mostly used at DH because
the Twins had some guy named Mauer at first base. He started 2015 with
the Twins, did not hit well in April, hit very well for the first half of May,
was sent back to tear up the International League for three weeks, came back to
Minnesota for a month, then was suddenly demoted all the way back to AA.
He hit well in AA and hit well when promoted to AAA. He started
2016 in AAA, but came back to the Twins in early July and has hit well.
He has hit at every level, and there's no reason to think he won't hit in
the majors. In fact, so far his major league line is .266/.316/.435, and
it's safe to say there are plenty of good players who did worse in their first
448 major league at-bats. If the Twins just leave him in the lineup and
let him play, there's no reason to think Kennys Vargas won't have a solid major
league career.
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