Heinie Pietz (1870)
Frank O'Rourke (1894)
Jerry Gardner (1920)
Wes Westrum (1922)
Sixto Lezcano (1953)
Dave Righetti (1958)
Walt Weiss (1963)
John Burkett (1964)
Matt Williams (1965)
Pedro Astacio (1969)
Robb Nen (1969)
Jose Parra (1972)
Carlos Villaneuva (1983)
Frank O'Rourke (1894)
Jerry Gardner (1920)
Wes Westrum (1922)
Sixto Lezcano (1953)
Dave Righetti (1958)
Walt Weiss (1963)
John Burkett (1964)
Matt Williams (1965)
Pedro Astacio (1969)
Robb Nen (1969)
Jose Parra (1972)
Carlos Villaneuva (1983)
Jerry Gardner spent most of his life in baseball as a
minor-league player and manager and as a scout.
Right-hander Jose Miguel
Parra pitched for the Twins in 1995 and 1996. He may not have spent a lot of
time in the majors, but he stretched that time over several years. Born in
Jacagua, Dominican Republic, Parra was signed by the Dodgers as a free agent in
1989 at age 16. He had a good year in 1990 in the Gulf Coast League, but struggled
quite a bit after that. Despite posting an ERA near five in just over a season
at AAA, the Dodgers gave him about a month in the big leagues in June of 1995.
At the end of July, Parra was traded to the Twins along with Ron Coomer, Greg
Hansell, and Chris Latham for Mark Guthrie and Kevin Tapani. Parra was in the
Twins' starting rotation through the end of 1995, and was in Minnesota for the
bulk of 1996, beginning the year in the rotation and going to the bullpen after
five starts. His time in Minnesota did not go well: he posted a 6.77 ERA in
131.2 innings. He was no better in AAA Salt Lake in 1997, and the Twins
released him after that season. Parra did not give up, however; he went to
Korea for a year, and was in Japan for another year. In 2000, he found himself
back in the majors with Pittsburgh. It would be wonderful to report that he
went on to big league success, but in reality he pitched about the same for the
Pirates as he had for Minnesota, and was back in the minors a month later. He
spent 2001 in the Mexican League, but in 2002 was back in the big leagues,
getting a month with Arizona. He posted a 3.21 ERA in 16 relief appearances,
but had a WHIP of 1.71. Returned to the minors, he went back to Mexico for
2003, but came back again in 2004, getting another month in the majors with the
Mets. Parra again had a 3.21 ERA, but again had a high WHIP, and went back to
AAA. He was back in Japan for 2005, and then ended his playing career. It took
a long time, but he pitched in 82 major league games, which is something a lot
of people wish they could say. He also is tied for an all-time batting record:
most walks in a career without an official at-bat (2, tied with Ernie Rudolph).
Jose Parra is currently the pitching coach for the DSL Tigers.
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