Jim
O’Rourke (1850)
Joe Brown (1918)
Joe Astroth (1922)
Cloyd Boyer (1927)
Rico Carty (1939)
Craig Skok (1947)
Garry Maddox (1949)
Rob Wilfong (1953)
David West (1964)
Joe Brown (1918)
Joe Astroth (1922)
Cloyd Boyer (1927)
Rico Carty (1939)
Craig Skok (1947)
Garry Maddox (1949)
Rob Wilfong (1953)
David West (1964)
Joe Brown was the general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates from
1956-1976.
Craig Skok was drafted by Minnesota in 1967, but did not sign.
Second
baseman Robert Daniel Wilfong played for the Twins from
1977-1982. He was born in Pasadena, California, went to high school in
Covina, California, and was drafted in the thirteenth round by the Twins
in 1971. He had somewhat mixed results in the minors, but after hitting .305
with AAA Tacoma in 1976, he made his big-league debut with the Twins at the
start of the 1977 season. He spent most of that season with the Twins, going
back to AAA for a month or so, and then was in the big-leagues to stay. Wilfong
was almost exclusively a second baseman. For much of his Twins career, he
shared the position with Bobby Randall, but as a left-handed batter, Wilfong
got the majority of the playing time. His best year was 1979, when he hit .313
and led the league in sacrifice bunts with twenty-five. He remained with the
Twins until May of 1982, when he was traded to the Angels along with Doug
Corbett for Tom Brunansky, Mike Walters, and $400,000. Wilfong remained with
the Angels as a part-time player through 1986. He was released just before the
start of the 1987 season, and signed with the Giants. but played only two games
for them before retiring. As a Twin, Wilfong played in 554 games, batting
.262/.322/.360 with 22 home runs and 152 RBIs. At last report, Rob Wilfong
was a scout for the Angels based in San Dimas, California.
Left-hander David Lee West played for the Twins from
1989-1992. Born and raised in Memphis, he was drafted by the Mets in
the fourth round in 1983. It took him three years to get higher than Class A,
but then he took off, having two excellent years in AAA Tidewater in 1987-88,
during which he posted a combined ERA of 2.00 in 247 innings. He made his debut
with the Mets in 1988, pitching six innings in a September callup. In July of
1989, West was traded to the Twins with Rick Aguilera, Kevin Tapani, Tim
Drummond, and Jack Savage for Frank Viola. A highly touted prospect, West was
immediately placed in the Twins’ rotation, but he never really panned out for
them, and after spending part of 1992 in AAA he was traded to Philadelphia in
the off-season for Mike Hartley. He pitched much better in Philadelphia when he
was available, but battled injury problems much of his time there, and became a
free agent after the 1996 season. He spent 1997 in Japan, playing for the
Fukuoka Daiei Hawks, but was back in 1998, splitting the year in AAA for
Houston and Boston and making his major league swan song by pitching two
innings for the Red Sox. He pitched in eight games in the minors in 1999, and
then his career was over. As a Twin, David West was 15-18 with a 5.33 ERA and a
1.52 WHIP in 63 games, 47 of them starts. At last report, David West
had returned to Memphis and was the director of pitching for the Memphis
Baseball Academy.
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