Al
Spalding (1850)
Joe Heving (1900)
Monte Pearson (1908)
Marv Throneberry (1933)
Don Williams (1935)
Jerry Crider (1941)
Danny Goodwin (1953)
Rick Manning (1954)
Rex Hudler (1960)
Jeff Russell (1961)
Terry Jorgensen (1966)
Rich Aurilia (1971)
Jason Hammel (1982)
Joe Heving (1900)
Monte Pearson (1908)
Marv Throneberry (1933)
Don Williams (1935)
Jerry Crider (1941)
Danny Goodwin (1953)
Rick Manning (1954)
Rex Hudler (1960)
Jeff Russell (1961)
Terry Jorgensen (1966)
Rich Aurilia (1971)
Jason Hammel (1982)
Right-hander
Donald Reid Williams made three appearances for the Twins in 1963. He was
born in Los Angeles and was signed as a free agent by the Kansas City Athletics
in 1956. He pitched fairly well in Class D, but did not do particularly
well after that. He missed all of the 1959 season and was traded to the
White Sox in 1960. The White Sox sent him on to the Twins
minor-league system in June of 1960 in an unknown transaction. Williams
pitched reasonably well in three AAA seasons for the Twins, and spent two weeks
with the big-league club in August of 1963, pitching 4.1 innings in three
games. He gave up five runs on eight hits and six walks in 4.1 innings,
getting no decisions and posting an ERA of 10.38. He was back in the
minors in 1964, and pitched two AAA seasons in the Washington organization
before calling it a career after the 1966 season. Don Williams passed
away on December 20, 1991 in La Jolla, California.
Right-hander Jerry Stephen Crider appeared in 21 games for the
Twins in 1969. Born and raised in Sioux Falls, SD, he pitched
on three state champion American Legion teams, being named player of the
year in 1959, and pitched Humboldt, SD to its only state amateur baseball
championship in 1961 before being signed by the Twins as a free agent in
1962. He began to hit his stride in the minors in 1964, and after two
good years at AAA Denver, he was called up to Minnesota in May of 1969.
Crider pitched in 21 games for the Twins, working 28.2 innings with a record of
1-0 and an ERA of 4.71 but a WHIP of 1.61. The next year, he was traded
in May to the White Sox for Cotton Nash. Crider spent most of 1970 in
Chicago, and did not do that badly, but it was his last year in the big
leagues. He pitched a year and a half at AAA for the Padres and another
year and a half at AAA for the Giants, and did okay for both organizations, but
did not get another chance in the majors. After leaving baseball, Crider
moved to Mexico and owned and operated a hunting and
fishing business, helping to film programs for Bill Dance, Rowland
Martin, and the American Sportsman shows. A member of the South
Dakota Sports Hall of Fame, Jerry Crider passed away on April 4,
2008, after a long battle with emphysema.
First baseman Danny Kay Goodwin played for the Twins from
1979-1981. He was born in St. Louis, went to high school in Peoria, and
was drafted out of Southern University and A & M College by the California
Angels with the first pick of the 1975 draft. He got 10 at-bats with the
big club that year, going 1-for-10. Goodwin was drafted as a catcher, but
a shoulder injury suffered early in his minor league career left him unable to
throw out all but the slowest runners, and resulted in a move to first
base. He hit well throughout the Angels minor-league system, hitting 25
home runs for AA El Paso in 1978. After brief trials with California in
1977 and 1978, he was traded after the 1978 season to the Twins with Ron
Jackson for Dan Ford. He was a part-time player who was used mostly at DH
for the Twins, never compiling more than 160 at-bats in a season. He had
a good year in 1979, but hit poorly in 1980 and 1981 and was released after the
1981 season. He spent the next four years playing for AAA Tacoma in the
Oakland system, making a brief appearance with the A’s in 1982. Danny
Goodwin appeared in 172 games as a Twin, batting .242/.312/.372 with 8 home
runs and 55 RBIs in 475 at-bats. Goodwin is the only player to have been
twice chosen with the first pick in the draft, having been chosen but not signed
by the White Sox in 1971. He is one of three players, along with David
Clyde and Joe Mauer, to be chosen with the first pick by their home town team.
After he retired, Danny Goodwin was the director of the Atlanta Braves
Foundation, developing programs for underprivileged children in Atlanta.
At last report, he was the president of First Choice Management Services
in the Atlanta area. He is a member of the Greater Peoria (IL) Sports
Hall of Fame and the College Baseball Hall of Fame
Corner infielder Terry Allen Jorgensen played for the Twins
in 1989 and again from 1992-1993. He was born in Kewaunee, Wisconsin, and
was drafted by the Twins in the second round out of the University of
Wisconsin-Oshkosh in 1987. He got a September call-up in 1989,
getting twenty-three at-bats, but then did not make it back to the big leagues
until 1992. Primarily a third baseman in the minors, Jorgensen was decent
but unspectacular, batting around .300 in three seasons with AAA Portland with
moderate power. After a second brief trial in 1992, he spent about half
of 1993 with the Twins, but failed to impress. He became a free agent
after that season and signed with the Marlins, playing in their minor-league
system for two years. He played for Green Bay in the independent Prairie League
in 1996 before his playing career came to an end. Terry Jorgensen played
in 91 games as a Twin, batting .240/.292/.292 with 1 home run and 19 RBIs in
233 at-bats. He is a member of the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh Hall
of Fame. His brother, Tim Jorgensen, was also primarily a third baseman
and played for four years in the Cleveland and Pittsburgh organizations,
getting as high as AA. At last report, Terry Jorgensen was
a physical education instructor and high school baseball coach for Luxemburg-Casco,
Wisconsin. He had his number there retired in April of 2015 before a game
in which his nephew hit a walk-off single.
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