Tom Hughes (1878)
Irv Noren (1924)
Minnie Minoso (1925)
Vin Scully (1927)
George Thomas (1937)
Dick McAuliffe (1939)
Bill Freehan (1941)
Otto Velez (1950)
Mike Easler (1950)
Rick Anderson (1956)
Joe Price (1956)
Dennis Burtt (1957)
Howard Johnson (1960)
Bob Hamelin (1967)
Mariano Rivera (1969)
Brian Wolfe (1980)
Guillermo Quiroz (1981)
Irv Noren (1924)
Minnie Minoso (1925)
Vin Scully (1927)
George Thomas (1937)
Dick McAuliffe (1939)
Bill Freehan (1941)
Otto Velez (1950)
Mike Easler (1950)
Rick Anderson (1956)
Joe Price (1956)
Dennis Burtt (1957)
Howard Johnson (1960)
Bob Hamelin (1967)
Mariano Rivera (1969)
Brian Wolfe (1980)
Guillermo Quiroz (1981)
Outfielder George Edward
Thomas played for the Twins for the second half of 1971. He was born in
Minneapolis, went to high school in Bloomington, and went to the
University of Minnesota. He was signed by Detroit as a free agent in 1957
and was classified as a “bonus baby”, which meant he had to be on the major
league roster all that season. It was a wasted year for Thomas, as he got only
one at-bat. Sent back to the minors in 1958, he hit decently, but not
outstandingly for the next few seasons. In 1960, he hit .275 with 13 homers in
AA Birmingham. That was enough to get him to the majors with the Tigers in 1961
but he was used almost exclusively as a pinch-runner, appearing in seventeen
games through late June but getting only six at-bats. At that point, he was
sold to the Los Angeles Angels, where for the next two years he saw a decent
amount of playing time as a fourth outfielder. He hit .280 in that role in
1961, but nowhere close to that in the rest of his time with the Angels. In
mid-June of 1963 he was traded back to Detroit in a trade that involved future
Twin Frank Kostro. Continuing in a reserve role, he had a good year in 1964,
hitting .286 with 12 homers, but slumped in 1965 and was traded to Boston after
the season. He was used primarily as a pinch-hitter and had a couple of
outstanding years in that role, hitting .347 from 1969-1970 in 150 at-bats.
When he started at 1-for-13 in 1971, however, Thomas was released by the Red
Sox in late June. The Twins signed him and continued him in the pinch-hitting
role, as he played in 23 games but got only 30 at-bats. He hit .267/.300/.353,
not bad for a pinch-hitter, but after the season, in his words, “they asked me
not to come to spring training”. He remained involved in baseball for a while,
and was the head coach at the University of Minnesota from 1979-1981.
Later, he went into business selling audio/video software packaging.
At last report, George Thomas was spending his summers in Wisconsin,
about an hour from the Twin Cities, and spending his winters in Florida.
Right-hander Richard Arlen Anderson never played for the Twins,
but was a minor league pitching coach for them for several years and was their
major league pitching coach from 2002-2014. He was born in Everett, Washington
and went to high school there. He then attended the University of Washington
and was drafted by the Mets in the 24th round in 1978. It would be interesting
to hear him talk about his playing days; he had good numbers throughout his
minor league career, but got very few chances in the majors. Anderson was at
AAA for the Mets for over five years, never posting an ERA over four and twice
posting an ERA under three, before getting a chance in the majors. He was with
the Mets for about two months in 1986 and did well, going 2-1 with a 2.72 ERA
in 49.2 innings. In March of 1987, however, the Mets traded Anderson to Kansas
City. Anderson started the season with the Royals, but was soon sent back to
AAA. This must be when he decided that pitching to contact was key--he struck
out 12 in 13 innings for Kansas City, but had an ERA of 13.75. In 1988 he was
again mostly in AAA, getting just over a month with the Royals. His playing
career ended after the season, and he was immediately hired by the Twins as their
pitching coach in the Gulf Coast League. Anderson worked his way up the Twins'
minor league system, becoming their major league pitching coach in 2002.
He held the job through 2014. His reputation grew as the Twins
pitching staff prospered and diminished as the staff struggled. It
is difficult to know how much of either the successes or the failures of the
Twins pitchers were attributable to Rick Anderson, but he had enough successes
that one would think he could get another job in baseball if he chooses to do
so. So far, however, it does not appear that he has chosen to do so. It
may be that he simply has had enough and is ready to retire, and there's
certainly nothing wrong with thtat.
Right-hander Dennis Allen Burtt was with the Twins for all of his
major league career, which consisted of eight games in 1985-1986. He was born
in San Diego, attended Santa Ana College, and was drafted by Boston in the
second round of the January draft of 1976. Mostly used as a starter in the
minors, he largely topped out at AA. He posted an ERA of around five with a
WHIP over 1.5 in three years at AAA for Boston. Burtt became a free agent after
the 1984 season, and was signed by Minnesota. He did not pitch a lot better at
Toledo in 1985, but he won 14 games, so he got a September call-up. He actually
pitched pretty well in 28.1 innings, going 2-2 with a 3.81 ERA and a 0.95 WHIP.
Burtt started 1986 with the Twins, but after three appearances was sent back to
AAA. Minnesota released him after the season, and he signed on with the
Dodgers, pitching for their AAA team for three years. He pitched for Detroit's
AAA team in 1990, and then retired, although he pitched briefly in an
independent league in 1996. As a Twin, Dennis Burtt was 2-2 with a 5.64 ERA in
30.1 innings. He was a minor league pitching coach for a while, then left
baseball and went into the financial services industry. He is currently on the
board of directors of Sunflower Presents and is a registered representative
with Transamerica Financial Advisors. He also is a volunteer pitching
coach for Stagg High School in Stockton and a volunteer youth golf coach for
The First Tee of San Joaquin, California. In addition, he is a recruiter
for WealthWave, whose vision is "To disrupt the status-quo of the financial
industry so families can dream again".
Right-hander Brian Thomas Wolfe never appeared for the Twins,
but was in their organization for several years. Born in Fullerton, California,
he attended high school in Anaheim and was drafted by the Twins in the sixth round
in 1999. Initially a starting pitcher, he was converted to relieving in
2003. He had his ups and downs in the minors, with the record revealing more
downs than ups. He flopped at AA in 2003, was hurt much of 20o4, and was not
pitching well at AA in 2005 when the Twins released him in May. He signed with
Milwaukee, and pitched well in A and AA the rest of the season. The next
January, however, the Brewers traded Wolfe to Toronto for Corey Koskie. He
pitched poorly in 2006, but seemed to put something together in 2007, posting
an ERA of 1.04 and a WHIP of 0.92 in 26 innings for AAA Syracuse. Wolfe was
brought up the big leagues at the end of May, and was with the Blue Jays for
the rest of 2007 and about half of 2008. He pitched much better for them than they
had any right to expect, although in limited duty. He posted an ERA under three
and a WHIP of around one in 67.1 innings. In 2009, however, he lost whatever he
had found; he pitched poorly in AAA and worse in a couple of months in the big
leagues. He moved on to Japan in 2010, playing for the Nippon Ham Fighters, for
whom he pitched well through 2013. He was pitching well in 2014, too, but
in June he underwent Tommy John surgery. He made a couple of appearances
in Japan in 2015 and made four starts there in 2016, pitching quite well--4-0,
3.04, 1.27 WHIP. He turns thirty-six today. I don't know how
healthy he is, but if he is healthy, one would think he can pitch in Japan
again in 2017.
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