Sam
Mertes (1872)
Sherry Magee (1884)
Ray Blades (1896)
Jim Turner (1903)
Prez Jones (1905)
Clem Labine (1926)
Ray Culp (1941)
Andy Messersmith (1945)
Ken Phelps (1954)
Ron Davis (1955)
Bob Horner (1957)
Stan Belinda (1966)
Chris Heintz (1974)
Luis Vizcaino (1974)
Sherry Magee (1884)
Ray Blades (1896)
Jim Turner (1903)
Prez Jones (1905)
Clem Labine (1926)
Ray Culp (1941)
Andy Messersmith (1945)
Ken Phelps (1954)
Ron Davis (1955)
Bob Horner (1957)
Stan Belinda (1966)
Chris Heintz (1974)
Luis Vizcaino (1974)
Prez
Jones was the president of Grambling University and started the school's
baseball team.
Right-handed
reliever Ronald Gene Davis pitched for the Twins from 1982-1986. Born and
raised in Houston, he was drafted by the Cubs in the third round in the
January draft in 1976. He was a starter in the minors, and a rather
mediocre one, but did substantially better when moved to the bullpen in
1978. What prompted the move was Davis’ trade to the Yankees in June
of 1978 for Ken Holtzman. He appeared briefly with the Yankees that year,
and then spent the next three seasons in New York, pitching very well as a
set-up man for Goose Gossage. He won 27 games out of the bullpen with 22
saves in three seasons, regularly posting ERAs below three. He made
the all-star team in 1981, a rarity for a set-up man. In April of 1982,
he was traded to Minnesota along with Paul Boris and Greg Gagne for Roy
Smalley. He was immediately installed as the closer, and mixed some
brilliant performances with some memorable meltdowns over roughly four and
a half years with the Twins. He appeared in 286 games as a
Twin, averaging nearly a strikeout per inning, but going 19-40 with 108
saves, an ERA of 4.51, and a WHIP of 1.49. He fell apart in 1986, posting
an ERA over nine and losing the closer role before being traded
to the Cubs in August along with Dewayne Coleman for Julius McDougal, Ray
Fontenot, and George Frazier. He bounced around after that.
The Cubs released him in August of 1987; he finished the season with the
Dodgers but was released again in March of 1988. The Giants
signed him and he pitched in Phoenix for two seasons, not doing badly but only
getting back to the big leagues at the end of the 1988 season.
He went to Japan for the 1989 season. The Yankees gave him one last
chance in 1990, sending him to AAA Columbus, but he could never
get his old form back, and his playing career ended after that season. At
last report, Ron Davis was the owner and operator of Team Davis Baseball in
Scottsdale, Arizona, which “offers several levels of competitive baseball
teams” as well as private lessons. His son, Ike Davis, is a first baseman
in the Yankees organization.
Catcher
Christopher John Heintz played briefly for the Twins from 2005-2007. He
was born in Syosset, New York, went to high school in Clearwater, Florida,
and was drafted in the 19th round by the White Sox in 1996. He
was in the White Sox’ system for six years, hitting well at Class A but
not as well at higher levels. He went to the Cardinals
and had a good year for them, hitting .314 at AA New Haven. St. Louis
allowed him to become a free agent after the season, though, and he signed with
the Pirates organization. Heintz did not have a particularly good
year at AA Altoona, and was now 29, so he was allowed to become
a free agent again and signed with Minnesota in November of
2003. He had only had ten at-bats above AA at that point, but the Twins
sent him to AAA Rochester. He was a decent but unspectacular batter
there, posting better batting averages than one might expect, but without
many walks or much power. Still, he was a catcher, and the Twins are
always looking for a third or fourth catcher, so he got brief appearances with
the big club. He was a September call-up in 2005 and 2006 and had
three stints with them in 2007, totalling nearly half the season. He had
82 at-bats in those appearances, batting .232/.267/.268. Let go by the
Twins after 2007, he signed with the Baltimore organization and spent 2008 at
AAA Norfolk, after which his playing career ended. He was the
hitting coach for the Beloit Snappers in 2009 and was scheduled to manage the
GCL Twins in 2010, but chose instead to take a job as hitting coach with the
University of South Florida, a school Heintz had attended. He continued
in that position through the 2014 season. At last report, Chris Heintz
was a commissioner's assistant for Hillsborough County, Florida. He was
inducted into the University of South Florida Athletic Hall of Fame in 2013.
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