Due to personal time
constraints, this is a reprint from last year which has not been updated.
Gabby Street (1882)
Nap Rucker (1884)
Johnny Allen (1904)
Robin Roberts (1926)
Johnny Podres (1932)
Craig Kusick (1948)
Dave Magadan (1962)
Yorkis Perez (1967)
Jose Lima (1972)
Carlos Guillen (1975)
Seth Smith (1982)
Nap Rucker (1884)
Johnny Allen (1904)
Robin Roberts (1926)
Johnny Podres (1932)
Craig Kusick (1948)
Dave Magadan (1962)
Yorkis Perez (1967)
Jose Lima (1972)
Carlos Guillen (1975)
Seth Smith (1982)
Gabby Street was a light-hitting catcher who played in parts of
eight major leagues seasons, mostly for the Washington Senators. He was Walter
Johnson's primary catcher. He later did some managing and broadcasting. He is
best remembered as the first man to catch a baseball dropped from the top of
the Washington Monument.
Left-hander John Joseph Podres did not play for the Twins, but
served as their pitching coach from 1981-1985. Born and raised in Witherbee,
New York, he signed with Brooklyn as a free agent in 1951. He had a tremendous
season for Hazard in the Class D Mountain States League that year, going 21-9,
1.66 with a WHIP of 1.12. He went to AAA in 1952, then made his major league
debut in 1953. Still very young, Podres struggled some, but was kept in the
majors for three years and spent much of that time in the starting rotation. He
came up big for the Dodgers in the 1955 World Series, going 2-0 with an ERA of
1.00 and pitching a shutout in game seven, which earned him the first World
Series MVP award. After missing 1956 to military service, he came back in 1957
to have what was probably his best major league season. He was only 12-9, but
he led the league in ERA (2.66), shutouts (6) and WHIP (1.08). He moved to Los
Angeles with the team in 1958 and remained a rotation starter for the Dodgers
through 1963. His best year is often thought to be 1961, but other than his
won-lost record (18-5), he was not particularly better that year than any other.
He missed most of 1964 with an injury, but came back to have a solid year in
1965. He was traded to Detroit early in 1966 and had a couple of solid seasons
for them working mostly out of the bullpen. He was released in 1967 and was out
of baseball in 1968, but in 1969 Podres attempted a comeback with, fittingly
enough, the Padres. He had a mediocre season for San Diego, and then his
playing career was over for good. He went into coaching after that; he was the
pitching coach for the Twins from 1981-1985 and also was the pitching coach for
San Diego (1973), Boston (1980), and Philadelphia (1991-1996). After his
retirement he lived in Queensbury, New York. His career numbers are 148-116,
3.68, 1.32 WHIP. He made three all-star teams (1958, 1960, 1962) and finished
fourteenth in MVP voting in 1961. He was inducted into the Polish-American
Sports Hall of Fame in 2002. Johnny Podres passed away on January 13, 2008 in
Glens Falls, New York.
First baseman Craig Robert Kusick played for the Twins from
1973-1979. He was born in Milwaukee, attended the University of
Wisconsin-LaCrosse, and was signed by the Twins as a free agent in 1970. An
outfielder early in his minor-league career, Kusick was moved to first base in
1972. He hit well at every minor-league stop. In 1973, he hit .305 with 27
homers for AAA Tacoma, a season which earned him a September call-up to the
Twins. He was off to a hot start in Tacoma in 1974 when he was called up to the
Twins in early June. Kusick was the regular first baseman for the Twins the rest
of the season, but batted only .239 with 8 home runs. He was reduced to
part-time status in 1975, spending two months back at AAA. In 1976, the Twins
moved Rod Carew to first base, and Kusick became a part-time DH. He shared the
DH spot with Tony Oliva in 1976 and with Glenn Adams and Rich Chiles in 1977.
He was consistent in those years, at least, hitting in the .250s with 11 and 12
home runs, respectively. He fell apart in 1978, however, batting only .173. He
was used mostly as a pinch-hitter in 1979, and did not do badly in that role,
but was sold to Toronto in July. Kusick was released by the Blue Jays after the
season, and signed with the Padres organization. He had a strong year in 1980
for AAA Hawaii, but was not given another chance in the majors. He split 1981
between Hawaii and AAA Evansville in the Detroit organization, but was out of
baseball after that. As a Twin, Kusick hit .236/.343/.392, with 44 homers in
1184 at-bats. He tied a major league record when he was hit by a pitch three
times in one game in August of 1975. He returned to Minnesota after his
retirement, coaching baseball at Rosemount High School from 1983-2004. Kusick’s
son, Craig Kusick, Jr., won the Melberger Award as the nation’s top Division
III football player, and later played four seasons in the Arena League. Craig
Kusick passed away from leukemia on September 27, 2006.
Left-hander Yorkis Miguel Vargas Perez did not play for the
Twins but was in their minor league system for a few years. Born and raised in
Bajos de Haina, Dominican Republic, he signed with Minnesota as a free agent in
1983 at age 15. He made a few appearances at Elizabethton over the next few
years, but was apparently in the Dominican Summer League most of that time. He
reached Class A in 1986 and struggled, but he was still only eighteen years
old. In February of 1987, Perez was traded to Montreal with Al Cardwood, Neal
Heaton, and Jeff Reed for Tom Nieto and Jeff Reardon. His results were up and
down for the next few years in the minors, but he was always pretty young for
his league, reaching AA at age 19. The Expos were not impressed, though, and
released him after the 1990 season. He signed with Atlanta, and in 1991 he
seemed to have a breakthrough, going 12-3, 3.79 at AAA Richmond, although with
a WHIP of 1.42. The Braves weren’t overly impressed either, and traded him to
the Cubs in late September, in time for him to make his major league debut for
Chicago that season. He went 1-0, 2.08, 0.92 WHIP in 4.1 innings, but the Cubs
released him that December. No one signed him that winter, and it appeared that
his career might be over at age 23. He went to Japan for 1992, signed with
Seattle in late August, was released again in January without actually pitching
for the Mariners, and went to Montreal as a free agent in 1993. He pitched
fairly well out of the bullpen, in a year split between AA and AAA, but was
allowed to become a free agent after the season and signed with Florida. He
finally got a chance for a major league career with the Marlins, spending one full
season and two nearly-full seasons in the majors. He had a good year in 1994, a
mediocre one in 1995, and a bad one in 1996, after which he was traded to
Atlanta. He did not make the Braves in 1997, instead being placed on waivers
and selected by the Mets. Most of 1997 was spent in the minors; he again became
a free agent after the season and moved on to Philadelphia. He was with the
Phillies for two years and pitched pretty well as a LOOGY. Perez was traded to
Houston in late March of 2000, got off to a poor start, and was released in
July. He did not give up, signing with the Dodgers for 2001, getting released
in April, pitching in Mexico that season, signing with Arizona for 2002,
getting released again in late March, and signing with Baltimore. By late June
he had battled his way back to the majors and again did well as a LOOGY. It was
his last hurrah, however, as the Orioles released him after the season and his
playing career came to an end. He played for eleven different organizations,
six major league teams, and in Mexico and Japan, but pieced together a pretty
decent career: 14-15, 4.44, 1.41 WHIP in 282 innings over 337 games. He is a
cousin to Melido, Pascual, and Carlos Perez. His mother and sister passed away
in a plane crash in 2001. His son, Leurys Vargas, is a first baseman who has
spent three seasons in rookie ball for the Mariners. Yorkis Perez was living in
the Dominican Republic at last report.
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