Billy Sunday (1862)
Everett Scott (1892)
Roy Campanella (1921)
Joe Morgan (1930)
Manny Jimenez (1938)
Larry Haney (1942)
Bobby Tolan (1945)
Bob Boone (1947)
Dickie Noles (1956)
Mike Winters (1958)
Gary Disarcina (1967)
Mario Valdez (1974)
Clay Condrey (1975)
Ryan Howard (1979)
Jeff Gray (1981)
Jonathan Sanchez (1982)
Michael Tonkin (1989)
Everett Scott (1892)
Roy Campanella (1921)
Joe Morgan (1930)
Manny Jimenez (1938)
Larry Haney (1942)
Bobby Tolan (1945)
Bob Boone (1947)
Dickie Noles (1956)
Mike Winters (1958)
Gary Disarcina (1967)
Mario Valdez (1974)
Clay Condrey (1975)
Ryan Howard (1979)
Jeff Gray (1981)
Jonathan Sanchez (1982)
Michael Tonkin (1989)
The Joe Morgan listed above is not Hall of Famer Joe Morgan. The
Joe Morgan born today is the Joe Morgan who once managed the Red Sox.
Larry Haney is the cousin of ex-Twin Mike Cubbage.
Mike Winters has been a major league umpire since 1990.
First baseman/outfielder
Mario A. Valdez did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for
about four months in 2000. He was born in Ciudad Obregon, Mexico, went to high
school in Hialeah, Florida, and was drafted by the White Sox in the
forty-eighth round in 1993. He had some fine seasons in the minors, hitting
.330 with 13 homers in a 1996 split between A and AA and .330 with 20 homers in
Calgary in 1998. He was in the majors for a little less than half of 1997,
allowing Frank Thomas to spend time at the DH spot. He got 115 at-bats, hitting
.243/.350/.330. Despite his 1998 AAA season, he never got another chance with
Chicago and was allowed to become a free agent after the 1999 campaign. The
Twins signed him and sent him to AAA Salt Lake, where he hit .366 with 18
homers through the end of July, at which point he was traded to Oakland for
Danny Ardoin. He got a September call-up with the Athletics in 2000 and started
2001 in Oakland. He was used largely as a pinch-hitter and hit .278 in 54
at-bats, but was sent back to AAA in June and never got back to the majors. He
stayed in the Athletics’ organization through 2002, played in AAA for San Diego
in 2003, went to Japan in 2004, then went to Mexico, where he continued to hit
well. He played sparingly in 2013 and 2014, however, and does not appear
to have played at all in 2015, so his playing career is probably over. There
were surely reasons he didn’t play more in the majors, but it seems like he
could have helped somebody if he’d been given a chance. At last report,
Mario Valdez was living in Sonora, Mexico.
Right-handed reliever Clayton Lee Condrey did not play for the
Twins, but was on their disabled list in 2010. He was born in Beaumont, Texas,
went to high school in Navasosta, Texas, and then attended McNeese State, the
same college attended by ex-Twin Danny Ardoin. He signed with San Diego as a
free agent in 1998. He was strictly a relief pitcher through 2001, pitching
well in the low minors but not so well above Class A. He never pitched as many
as ninety innings in a season in those years, averaging around 55 innings. He
became a starter in 2002 and did well, going 10-4, 3.50, 1.26 WHIP for AAA
Portland. He made his major league debut in late August and continued to do
well, posting an ERA of 1.69 and a WHIP of 1.05 in 26.2 innings. Condrey began
2003 as the Padres’ fifth starter, but flopped and was sent back to AAA in May.
In late March of 2004, Condrey was sent to Philadelphia as part of a
“conditional deal.” He had a couple of mediocre years at AAA for the Phillies,
but they did not give up on him, instead shifting him back to the bullpen for
2006. Now 30, he suddenly flourished there, spending nearly half of 2006 and
almost all of 2007 in the majors. He had two full seasons in the majors in 2008
and 2009 and did very well, posting a combined ERA of 3.16 in 111 innings. A
free agent after the 2009 campaign, he signed with Minnesota but was injured in
spring training, missing the entire season except for 9.1 innings on an aborted
minor league rehab assignment. That brought his playing career to an end.
He apparently is now giving private pitching instruction to young players
through OOSinker Pitching Lessons.
Right-handed reliever Jeffrey Michael Gray pitched for the Twins
in 2012. He was born in Texas City, Texas, went to high school in
Wildwood, Missouri, attended Missouri State University, and was drafted by
Oakland in the thirty-second round in 2004. He became a reliever for good
in 2006 and was rather up and down in his minor league career. He first
reached the majors as a September call-up in 2008 and got over two months in
the majors in 2009. He did pretty well in 2009, but was traded to the
Cubs after the season. He started the year in Chicago but was in AAA by
early May and spent the rest of the year there. He got his first full
season in the majors in 2011, but with two different teams: the White Sox
had signed him as a free agent in November of 2010, waived him in mid-May, and
he was claimed by Seattle. He did not have a very good year, was waived
again, and was claimed by Minnesota for 2012. He appeared in 49 games and
was 6-1, which is the good news. The bad news is that he posted an ERA of
5.71 and a WHIP of 1.54. He was again a free agent after the season,
signed with the White Sox, went to AAA, and was released in mid-July, bringing
his playing career to an end. It may not have been a great career, but he
appeared in 115 games over five big league seasons, which is not bad for a
thirty-second round draft choice. There are a lot of people in the world
named Jeff Gray, and several of them are involved in baseball in some capacity.
No information about what our Jeff Gray is doing now was readily
available.
Right-handed reliever Michael Harvey Tonkin as pitched for the
Twins in 2013 and 2014. He was born in Glendale, California, went to high
school in Palmdale, California, and was drafted by Minnesota in the thirtieth
round in 2008. He was primarily a starter through 2010 and did not do
badly in that role, but became a relief pitcher in 2011. He did not reach
AA until 2013, but was promoted to AAA that same season and ended the year in
the majors. He pitched very well for the Twins in 11.1 innings, going
0-0, 0.79, 1.06 WHIP with three walks and ten strikeouts. He started 2014
in the majors and pitched very well in April, but stumbled in May and was sent
to AAA. returning as a September call-up. He split 2015 pretty evenly
between AAA and the majors, pitching extremely well in AAA and not badly in
Minnesota. He was with the Twins for all of 2016 and started the season
quite well, but ultimately did not have a good season, although he did
strikeout quite a few batters. So far, Michael Tonkin has appeared in 125
games for the Twins. He is 3-2, 0 saves, 4.31 ERA and 1.40 WHIP with 125
strikeouts in 125.1 innings. He turns twenty-seven today. He has a
good chance to be in the Twins' bullpen at the start of 2017, but he's probably
going to have to pitch better than last year if he wants to stay there.
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