Pep
Young (1907)
Joe Schultz (1918)
Billy Cox (1919)
Orval Grove (1919)
Dave Nicholson (1939)
Doug DeCinces (1950)
Bill Latham (1960)
Jeff Kellogg (1961)
Henry Blanco (1971)
Steve Lomasney (1977)
Aaron Rowand (1977)
Roy Oswalt (1977)
Joe Schultz (1918)
Billy Cox (1919)
Orval Grove (1919)
Dave Nicholson (1939)
Doug DeCinces (1950)
Bill Latham (1960)
Jeff Kellogg (1961)
Henry Blanco (1971)
Steve Lomasney (1977)
Aaron Rowand (1977)
Roy Oswalt (1977)
Bill Nicholson is the one nicknamed "Swish", but Dave
deserved the nickname more. In the one season in which he played more
than a hundred games (126 in 1963), he struck out 175 times. He did hit
22 homers. In 1964 he had 294 at-bats and struck out 126 times while
hitting 13 homers. Come to think of it, that sounds like what Adam Brett
Walker II's major league career might be if he gets that much of a chance.
Jeff Kellogg has been a major league umpire since 1993.
Left-hander
William Carol Latham played for the Twins in 1986. Born and
raised in Birmingham, Alabama, he was signed out of Auburn University as a
free agent by the Mets in 1981. He did well in the minors, winning 13
games in both 1984 and 1985 with an ERA under 3.00 both years, mostly at AAA
Tidewater. Latham started 1985 with the Mets and did not do badly,
posting an ERA of 3.97 and a WHIP of 1.24 in 22.2 innings, starting three games
and relieving four. In the off-season, the Mets traded him along with
Billy Beane and Joe Klink to the Twins for Pat Crosby and Tim
Teufel. Latham pitched well in AAA Toledo, and appeared in seven
games for the Twins in 1986, two of them starts, going 0-1 with a 7.31 ERA in
16 innings. He started poorly in 1987 with AAA Portland and was traded
back to the Mets in May for Jayson Felice. He spent the rest of 1987 and
all of 1988 in the Mets’ minor-league organization, and then his
playing career came to an end. At last report, Bill Latham was a
scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers after having done that job for several years
for the Red Sox.
Catcher Henry Ramon Blanco played for the Twins in
2004. He was born in Caracas, Venezuela, went to high school in
Miranda, Venezuela, and was signed by the Dodgers as a free agent in
1989. He did not hit much in the minors, but slowly moved up, making his
AAA debut in 1995. A .313 average at AAA Albuquerque in 1997 earned him a
cup of coffee with the Dodgers, but he was back in Albuquerque for all of
1998. Blanco became a minor-league free agent after that season, and was
signed by the Rockies. His first full year in the majors came in 1999 for
Colorado, but it was his only season there, as he was traded to the Brewers as
part of a three-team deal that also included future Twin Jeff Cirillo.
Blanco spent two seasons as a part-time player in Milwaukee, and then was
traded to Atlanta in spring training of 2002. After two years in Atlanta,
he became a free agent. Minnesota signed him during the 2003-04
off-season to back up Joe Mauer, but when Mauer was hurt, Blanco became the
regular, playing 114 games, the most he has ever played in a season. He
had never hit well in the majors and did not do so in Minnesota, batting
.206/.260/.368 with 10 homers and 37 RBIs, but he gave the Twins good defense
behind the plate. The Twins let him go after that season, and Blanco
moved on to the Cubs, where he spent four years as a part-time catcher.
Let go by the Cubs after 2008, he signed with the Padres for 2009, moved on to
the Mets for 2010, was with Arizona in 2011-2012, signed with Toronto for 2013,
was released in mid-June, signed with Seattle three days later, and signed with
Arizona for 2014, but retired shortly before the season started and became a
coach for the Diamondbacks. He is currently the quality control coach for
the Chicago Cubs. Henry Blanco threw out 43 percent of opposing base
stealers for his career, throwing out 58 percent in 2000 and twice leading the
league in that category. Needless to say, the Twins still miss him.
Catcher Steven James Lomasney did not play for the Twins, but
was in their farm system for about four months in 2006. He was born in
Melrose, Massachusetts, went to high school in Peabody, Massachusetts, and was
drafted by Boston in the fifth round in 1995. He was not too bad in the
low minors, hitting 20 homers or more in consecutive seasons in
1998-1999. In 1999, after hitting .259 with twenty home runs in a season
split between Class A and AA, Lomasney got a September call-up. He made
his major league debut in the last game of the season, replacing Jason Varitek
in the fifth inning. He went 0-for-2, striking out against B. J. Ryan and
Brian Falkenborg. Unfortunately, that was Lomasney’s major league swan
song as well, as he never got back to the major leagues. He struggled
when he got to AAA, posting a batting average of .220 and an OPS of .590 with
seven home runs in 631 career AAA at-bats. He suffered a serious eye
injury near the end of 2001 when he was struck by a batted ball and his
eyesight never fully recovered, which partly explains his struggles in the high
minors. He became a free agent after the 2002 season and signed with
Baltimore for 2003. After one year in their farm system, he moved on to
the Cincinnati chain for 2004-2005. He signed with Minnesota for 2006,
spending most of the season at New Britain with ten at-bats in Rochester.
The Twins released him in August 3, bringing his playing career to an
end. At last report, Steve Lomasney was running The Show, a baseball
academy in Lawrence, Massachusetts. He is also the coach of an
under-fifteen baseball team which won the New England championship in 2010 and
finished second in the national AAU championship for under-sixteen (there was
no under-fifteen division).
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