Joe Battin (1853)
Freddy Parent (1875)
Rabbit Maranville (1891)
Al Schacht (1892)
Pie Traynor (1898)
Hal Trosky (1912)
George Case (1915)
Ike Delock (1929)
Ron Musselman (1954)
John Hobbs (1955)
Cory Snyder (1962)
Roberto Hernandez (1964)
Damion Easley (1969)
Jason Grilli (1976)
Freddy Parent (1875)
Rabbit Maranville (1891)
Al Schacht (1892)
Pie Traynor (1898)
Hal Trosky (1912)
George Case (1915)
Ike Delock (1929)
Ron Musselman (1954)
John Hobbs (1955)
Cory Snyder (1962)
Roberto Hernandez (1964)
Damion Easley (1969)
Jason Grilli (1976)
Al Schacht played in the majors for three years, but was better
known as "The Clown Prince of Baseball".
George Case was the first base coach for the Twins in 1968.
On this Veterans' Day, we would like to thank all current and
former members of the military for their service.
Right-hander Ralph Ronald
Musselman did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for a couple
of months in 1987. Born and raised in Wilmington, North Carolina, he
attended Clemson and was drafted by Seattle in the fifth round in 1977.
He had apparently been rather highly regarded, as he has been drafted twice
previously. He struggled early in his career, spending three years in
class A and not having much success until his third season there, when he
became mostly a relief pitcher. He started to climb after that, getting
to AAA in 1981. After a solid year in the Salt Lake City bullpen in 1982,
Musselman made his major league debut for Seattle in August and was not awful
for the last month and a half of the season. After that season, however,
he was traded to Texas for Pat Putnam. He moved back to starting for AAA
Oklahoma City, but was unsuccessful. He went back to the bullpen in 1984
and pitched better, but was sold to Toronto in early June. He appeared in
36 games for the Blue Jays over the next two seasons and again was not
awful. He was a free agent after the 1985 season, signed with Cleveland,
was released in spring training, signed back with Toronto, and was back in the
minors for 1986. He had his best year in the minors for Syracuse that
season, making 20 starts and 13 relief appearances, but by then he was 31 and
no longer a prospect. A free agent again after the season, the Twins
signed Musselman for 1987 and sent him to AAA Portland. He was pretty
awful there, going 3-10, 6.62 in 14 appearances, 10 of them starts. The
Twins sent him to the Orioles in mid-June as the player to be named later in a
deal that netted the Twins Ricky Jones. He did fairly well in AAA
Rochester, but did not make it back to the majors and ended his playing career
after the season. As a big leaguer, he was 4-2, 3.73, 1.51 WHIP in 89.1
innings. He appeared in 48 games, 4 of them starts. After leaving
baseball, he returned to Wilmington and went into the landscaping
business. More recently, he is pursuing a career as a realtor in the Wilmington
area. He is the father of professional golfer Lucas Glover, but divorced
Glover's mother many years ago and has had little contact with Glover since.
Left-hander John Douglas Hobbs appeared in four games for the
Twins in 1981. He was born in Philadelphia, went to Lynchburg College,
one of two big leaguers the school has produced (Lefty Thomas). He was
drafted by Seattle in the seventh round in 1978. He spent six seasons in
the minors, and frankly, it’s hard to see why, as he never had much success
above low Class A. He did strike out a lot of guys, though. After
nearly two high-A seasons in which he went 18-16, 4.91, 1.74 WHIP, he was
promoted to AA for the first time in 1980. His combined numbers for the
1980 season were 9-14, 4.39, 1.50 WHIP, and he was unsurprisingly left
unprotected in the Rule 5 draft. The Twins saw that he struck out 124
batters in 160 innings, and saw that they were desperate for pitchers, so they
drafted him. He was in AAA Orlando most of the year and went 11-7, although
with a 4.08 ERA and a 1.47 WHIP. That was good enough for the Twins to
bring him up to the majors and give him four appearances. In 5.2 innings,
he went 0-0, 3.18, 1.94 WHIP, allowing 2 runs on 5 hits and 6 walks.
Those are his career numbers, as he never got back to the big leagues. He
spent two more undistinguished seasons in Orlando, then his playing career came
to an end after the 1983 campaign. After leaving baseball he was employed
by Univision, starting as a regional sales representative and eventually
becoming head of the Dallas sales office. He then joined the Hispanic
Broadcasting Corporation in 1999 and oversaw its growth from 37 to 72 stations.
It merged with Univision in 2003 to become Univision Radio and Hobbs came
with them, become executive vice president/director of corporate sales.
He joined the Spanish Broadcasting System (SBS) in March of 2013 as
executive vice president of corporate sales, staying there through 2015.
At last report, he was the president of reVOLVER podcasts,
"a leader in on-demand audio geared towards multicultural
consumers."
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