Tilly
Walker (1887)
Eddie Waitkus (1919)
Hawk Harrelson (1941)
Paul Jata (1949)
Doyle Alexander (1950)
Frank White (1950)
Mike Piazza (1968)
Luis Lopez (1970)
Aaron Fultz (1973)
Pat Neshek (1980)
Jordan Schafer (1986)
Cody Martin (1989)
Eddie Waitkus (1919)
Hawk Harrelson (1941)
Paul Jata (1949)
Doyle Alexander (1950)
Frank White (1950)
Mike Piazza (1968)
Luis Lopez (1970)
Aaron Fultz (1973)
Pat Neshek (1980)
Jordan Schafer (1986)
Cody Martin (1989)
Cody Martin was drafted by Minnesota in the 20th round in 2010,
but did not sign.
Outfielder/first
baseman Paul Jata did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system in
1976. He was born in Astoria, New York, went to high school on Long
Island, and was drafted by Detroit in the fifth round in 1967. His minor
league numbers don't stick out, but he was always very young for his league,
reaching AA at age 20 and AAA at age 21. He made the Tigers out of spring
training in 1972 at age 22 but was used mostly as a pinch-hitter/defensive
replacement, getting only 71 at-bats through July 19. At that point he
was sent to the minors, coming back for three games as a September call-up.
Given his age and his role, he didn't do so badly: .230/.296/.257
in 74 at-bats. Unfortunately, those would be his major league career
numbers. He split 1973 between AA and AAA and had what may have been his
best year in the minors. After the season, he was traded to Minnesota for
Jim Nettles. He did not play in either 1974 or 1975 for reasons that we
could not find. He played in AA Orlando in 1976 but appeared in only 22
games, batting .242/.351/.306. His playing career ended after that.
It's kind of an odd career, and one wishes to know more about it.
However, no further information about Paul Jata was readily available.
Left-handed reliever Richard Aaron Fultz played for the Twins in
2004. He was born in Memphis, went to high school in Munford, Tennessee,
attended North Florida Community College, and was drafted by the Giants in 1992
in the sixth round. He pitched pretty well in rookie ball that year and in
Class A in 1993, but was traded to the Twins in August of 1993 with Andres
Duncan and Greg Brummett for Jim DeShaies. After just over two years (1994 and
1995) in the Twins system, Fultz was released, and he went back to the Giants.
He generally had to repeat levels in the minors, with the result that he did
not reach AAA until 1998. Fultz was not particularly impressive in AAA in
either 1998 or 1999, but made the Giants with a strong spring training in 2000.
Fultz spent three years with the Giants as a middle reliever, posting ERAs in
the mid-fours, but was allowed to become a free agent after 2002 and signed
with Texas. He did not pitch particularly well for the Rangers, and was again
allowed to become a free agent, signing with the Twins for the 2004 campaign.
Fultz appeared in 55 games for the Twins, going 3-3 with a 5.04 ERA and a 1.46
WHIP in 50 innings. The Twins placed him on waivers after the season, and he
was selected by Philadelphia, for whom he had his best year in 2005, going 4-0
with a 2.24 ERA and a 0.97 WHIP in 72.1 innings. He did not repeat his success
in 2006, and again became a free agent, signing with Cleveland for 2007. He did
a good job for the Indians, going 4-3 with a 2.92 ERA in 37 innings, but was
again released after the season. He has since played in the Detroit, Colorado,
and Cincinnati organizations, as well as playing in Taiwan. Fultz played a
little independent ball in 2009 before retiring in June. At last report, Aaron
Fultz was the pitching coach for the Clearwater Threshers in the Florida State
League.
Right-handed reliever Patrick John Neshek was with the Twins
from 2006-2010. He was born in Madison, Wisconsin, went to high school in Park
Center, Minnesota, and was drafted in the 45th round out of high school by the
Twins in 1999. He did not sign, choosing instead to go to Butler University.
The Twins kept watching him, and drafted him again in 2002 in the sixth round.
He spent roughly a year at each minor league level, and pitched well at all of
them, posting a WHIP below 1.00 in each of his first two minor league seasons.
He came up to the Twins in July of 2006, and continued to pitch very well,
becoming the Twins’ top set-up man. In 2007, he was one of five players who was
in the running for the final spot in the all-star game, losing to Hideki
Okajima. Neshek then began to battle injuries, undergoing Tommy John surgery,
and missed most of 2008 and all of 2009. He came back in 2010, beginning and
ending the season in Minnesota but spending most of it in Rochester, where he
was decent but no more than that. The Twins waived him in March of 2011
and he was claimed by San Diego. He was up and down a few times in 2011;
he’s was again decent but no more in AAA and not very good in the majors.
A free agent after the season, he signed with Baltimore for 2012 and pitched
very well in AAA but did not get promoted. He was purchased by
Oakland in early August and was awesome in 24 appearances, striking out sixteen
in 19.2 innings while posting an ERA of 1.37 and a WHIP of 0.81.
Unfortunately, he could not sustain it in 2013. He wasn't awful,
but he wasn't particularly good, either. A free agent after the season,
he signed with St. Louis and was not considered to have particularly good odds
of making the team. He not only made the team, he had an awesome year,
going 7-2, 6 saves, 1.87 ERA, 0.79 WHIP in 67.1 innings (71 games). He
also made his first all-star team that year. Despite that, the Cardinals
allowed him to become a free agent, and he signed with Houston for 2015.
He has been very good for them for two seasons now. As a Twin, Pat
Neshek was 11-6, 3.05, 1.01 WHIP. He appeared in 132 games and pitched
129.2 innings. He turns 35 today. Who knows how long it will last,
but if he can stay healthy, there's no apparent reason why Pat Neshek can't be
successful for at least a few years yet.
Outfielder Jordan James Schafer played in sixty-eight games for
the Twins from 2014-2015. He was born in Hammond, Indiana, went to high
school in Winter Haven, Florida, and was drafted by Atlanta in the third round
in 2005. He started slowly, not doing much in rookie ball in 2005 or in
Class A in 2006, but broke through in 2007, hitting .372 in low A and .294 in
high A, where he spent most of the season. He had a solid year in AA in
2008 and started 2009 as the Atlanta Braves' starting center fielder. He
didn't hit, however, and was sent to AAA in June, where he played in only nine
games before getting hurt and missing the rest of the season. He did
nothing in the minors in 2010 and wasn't doing much in 2011 when he was
promoted to Atlanta and made the starting centerfielder again in late May.
He hit better than he'd done in 2009, but not a lot better, and was
traded to Houston in a deadline deal in late July. He spent a month in
AAA and then became the starting centerfielder for the Astros, where he
continued to not hit much. He was still the starter in 2012, but still
didn't hit, and lost the job in early August. He was waived after the
season and went back to Atlanta, this time as a reserve. He hit a little
better in that role, but was doing nothing in 2014 when he was waived again and
selected by Minnesota in early August. He was the Twins starting left
fielder the rest of the season and had the best stretch of his career, hitting
.285 with an OPS of .707. That was enough to convince the Twins to keep
him around for the start of the 2015 season, but he went back to being who he
had been, batting only .217 in 69 at-bats before being released in mid-June.
He did not sign with anyone the rest of the season, but signed with the
Dodgers in 2016 with the idea of becoming a pitcher. He appeared in
thirty-nine minor league games, mostly in relief at AA. It was kind of a
mixed bag: his ERA was 3.91, but his WHIP was 1.45. On the other
hand, he did strikeout 57 batters with only 18 walks in 48.1 innings. His
numbers as a Twin (in 199 at-bats) were .261/.313/.327. There possibly
could be something there as a pitcher, but he turns thirty today, and one
wonders how long the Dodgers or anyone else will continue to work with him.
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