Nig Clarke (1882)
Eddie Robinson (1920)
Ray Herbert (1929)
Haywood Sullivan (1930)
Sammy Esposito (1931)
Stan Bahnsen (1944)
Art Howe (1946)
Mike Proly (1950)
Bud Bulling (1952)
Mo Vaughn (1967)
Rick Helling (1970)
Kevin Cameron (1979)
Ryan Pressly (1988)
Eddie Robinson (1920)
Ray Herbert (1929)
Haywood Sullivan (1930)
Sammy Esposito (1931)
Stan Bahnsen (1944)
Art Howe (1946)
Mike Proly (1950)
Bud Bulling (1952)
Mo Vaughn (1967)
Rick Helling (1970)
Kevin Cameron (1979)
Ryan Pressly (1988)
Right-hander Michael James
Proly did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system in 1977. He was
born in Jamaica, New York, went to high school in Mineola, New York, attended
St. John’s, and was drafted by St. Louis in the ninth round in 1972. He was
mostly a relief pitcher in the minors and did pretty well other than a stumble
in 1975, his first season in AAA. He did not strike out very many, however, and
while he made his major league debut in 1976, appearing in 14 games, the
Cardinals left him unprotected after the season. Minnesota selected him in the
rule 5 draft, and while the records don’t mention a trade, something was obviously
worked out, because Proly pitched for AAA Tacoma in 1977. He did not pitch
well, going 9-12, 4.57, 1.55 WHIP. A free agent after the season, he signed
with the White Sox and apparently figured something out. He had a strong
half-season in AAA for the Sox, then came up to the majors and continued to
pitch well. He was a solid pitcher for the White Sox through 1980, then was
traded to Philadelphia just before the 1981 season. He pitched pretty well in
relief for them, too, but was released just before the 1982 season. The Cubs
signed him, and he was a solid contributor to their bullpen for two years.
Despite that, the Cubs released him early in the 1984 season. He signed with
Toronto, was sent to AAA, pitched poorly, and his career was suddenly over. He
pitched in seven major league seasons, appeared in 267 games, had an ERA of
3.23, and never had an ERA over four, yet was released twice and given up on
entirely after 21 poor innings in AAA. Mike Proly is currently a financial
advisor for MetLife Financial Services in Greenville, South Carolina.
Catcher Terry Charles "Bud" Bulling was in the Twins'
minor league system at the beginning of his career, playing in fifteen games
for them in 1977. Born in Linwood, California, Bulling went to California
State--Los Angeles and was drafted by the Twins in the 14th round in 1974. In
1976, he hit .310 at Class A. He followed that up by hitting .285 at AA Orlando
in 1977 and got his first call-up to the big leagues, playing in 15 games. It
would be four years before got there again. In 1978, he only hit .247 at
Orlando, and at the end of spring training in 1979 Bulling was sold to Seattle.
He had two good years in AAA Spokane, and then was the Mariners' reserve
catcher in 1981 and 1982, getting 154 at-bats both years. He became Gaylord
Perry's personal catcher and caught Perry's 300th win. He began 1983 with
Seattle, but after playing five games he was sent to AAA, never to return to
the majors. He finished out the season in Salt Lake City and then ended his
career. As a Twin, Bulling hit .156 in 32 at-bats. Terry "Bud"
Bulling passed away on March 8, 2014 in Salem, Oregon after a long battle with
prostate cancer.
Right-handed pitcher Ricky Allen Helling never pitched for the
Twins, but was in their minor league system for a brief time in 2004. He was
born in Devils Lake, North Dakota, went to high school in Fargo, and then
attended Stanford. He was drafted in the first round by Texas in 1992. He had a
very good year in AA in 1993, then spent the next three years bouncing back and
forth between the majors and AAA. In the first two of those years, he did not
pitch particularly well in either place, but he had an excellent year in 1996
for Oklahoma City. In September of that year, Helling was traded to Florida.
The following year, 1997, was Helling's first full year in the majors. He was
in the bullpen most of the year with the Marlins, but in mid-August he was
traded back to Texas and returned to the starting rotation. He stayed with the
Rangers through 2001, putting in four solid years. He made 33 to 35 starts each
year and always pitched between 215 and 220 innings. He won 20 games in 1998.
He became a free agent and moved to Arizona for 2002, where he again was a
solid member of the rotation. Again a free agent after the season, Helling
signed with Baltimore, but he had a poor year and was released in August.
Florida signed him and sent him to the bullpen, where he did a fine job in 11
appearances. The Twins signed him for 2004, but he battled injuries, made six
minor-league starts, and was released in early June. He was signed by Texas,
was in their minor-league system for a month, and was released again. He then
went to Milwaukee, going back and forth between AAA and the majors for two more
years before ending his career after the 2006 season. He was never a star, but
he made 30 or more starts five years in a row, which is a pretty useful
pitcher. He is in the Texas Rangers' all-time top ten in wins, starts, innings,
and strikeouts. At last report, Rick Helling was a special assistant to the
Major League Baseball Players Association. He is also an assistant
football coach at Minnetonka High School.
Right-handed pitcher Kevin John Cameron never played for the
Twins, but he was drafted by them. A native of Joliet, Ill., he attended Joliet
Catholic Academy and then went to Georgia Tech. He was drafted by the Twins in
the 13th round in 2001. A relief pitcher throughout his minor league career,
Cameron had a very good year in the Appalachian League in 2001, but then was
injured and missed all of the 2002 campaign. He came back to pitch quite well
for four years in the Twins' minor league system, posting ERAs under three each
year from 2004 through 2006. He was left off the Twins' forty-man roster,
however, and was selected by San Diego in the 2006 Rule 5 draft. He stayed with
the Padres all of 2007, posting an encouraging 2.79 ERA but walking 36 in 58
innings. He started 2008 in San Diego, but control continued to be a problem,
and he was sent down to the minors in early May. He remained in the minors the
rest of the year while battling injuries. A free agent after the season,
Cameron moved to Oakland, again splitting the year between the majors and AAA.
That seems to have been the end of his career; he was a free agent after the
season, signed with San Francisco, but did not make the team and his playing
career came to an end. At last report, Kevin Cameron was an independent
valuation and advisory professional in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Right-hander Thomas Ryan Pressly has been with the Twins since
2013. He was born in Dallas, went to high school in Flower Mound, Texas,
and was drafted by Boston in the eleventh round in 2007. He was a starter
until 2012 and did okay in the low minors, but less well in high A. He
began to make the conversion to reliever in 2012 and had a fourteen very good
relief appearances in AA that season. Still, he was twenty-four and did
not have much record of success above low A, so the Red Sox left him
unprotected and Minnesota claimed him in the Rule 5 draft. He stuck with
the Twins for all of 2013 and did fairly well. He started 2014 in
Rochester, but came back to Minnesota in late July and did fairly well again.
He started 2015 in Minnesota and again pitched fairly well, but was
injured in early July and missed the rest of the season. He came back in
2016 and again did--fairly well. As a Twin, he is 14-12, 3.55, 1.33 WHIP
with 152 strikeouts in 208 innings (173 appearances). He turns
twenty-eight today. Middle relievers can have teams give up on them quickly,
but assuming there's no apparent reason Ryan Pressly cannot be part of a major
league bullpen for the next few years.
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