George Pinkney (1859)
Silver King (1868)
Elmer Flick (1876)
Max Carey (1890)
George Trautman (1890)
General Crowder (1899)
Schoolboy Rowe (1910)
Don Mossi (1929)
Gene Cook (1932)
Jim McAndrew (1944)
Jack Zduriencik (1951)
Rocket Wheeler (1955)
Lloyd McClendon (1959)
Donn Pall (1962)
Warren Morris (1974)
Silver King (1868)
Elmer Flick (1876)
Max Carey (1890)
George Trautman (1890)
General Crowder (1899)
Schoolboy Rowe (1910)
Don Mossi (1929)
Gene Cook (1932)
Jim McAndrew (1944)
Jack Zduriencik (1951)
Rocket Wheeler (1955)
Lloyd McClendon (1959)
Donn Pall (1962)
Warren Morris (1974)
George Trautman was the president of the National Association of
Professional Baseball Clubs from 1947 until his death in 1963.
Gene Cook was the general manager of the Toledo Mud Hens from
1978-1998. He is credited with convincing Jamie Farr to wear a Mud Hens
cap on M*A*S*H.
Jack Zduriencik was the general manager of the Seattle Mariners
from 2008-2015.
Rocket Wheeler has been a manager in the low minors for
twenty-four seasons. He was the manager of the Carolina Mudcats in the
Atlanta organization in 2016.
Second baseman Warren
Randall Morris was with Minnesota for about a week at the beginning of the 2002
season. Born in Alexandria, Louisiana, he attended high school there and then
went to LSU. To the extent he is remembered, it is for a walkoff home run he
hit to win the 1996 College World Series. Morris was drafted by Texas in the
fifth round in 1996. He played for the U. S. Olympic team that year, and so did
not begin his professional career until 1997. He hit over .300 with
double-digit home runs in each of his first two minor league seasons, but was
traded to the Pittsburgh organization midway through the second one, in 1998.
In 1999, Morris won the starting second baseman job for the Pirates, and would
hold it for two years. He had a strong rookie year, hitting .288 with 15 homers
and finishing third in Rookie of the Year voting. In 2000, however, he slumped
to .259 with three home runs, and in 2001 he lost the second base job to Pat
Meares. Morris spent part of that 2001 season in AAA, where he again hit well,
but was released before the 2002 season. Minnesota signed him and gave him
seven at-bats in the majors (he went 0-for-7) before sending him to AAA
Edmonton. In mid-June, the Twins traded him to the Cardinals organization for a
player to be named later (Seth Davidson), and in mid-July he was selected off
waivers by the Red Sox' chain. A free agent again after the 2002 campaign, he
went to the Tigers, starting in AAA but coming to the majors in early June. He
was the Tigers' regular second baseman for most of the second half of the year,
and responded by hitting .272. He lost the job in 2004 to Omar Infante, and
spent the season in AAA Toledo. He was with the Brewers' organization for much
of 2005 and finished the year in AA with Cleveland. He had minor league offers
to play in 2006, but decided to call it a career. At last report, Warren
Morris was an investment banker with Red River Bank in Alexandria,
Louisiana. He also was working with a variety of Christian-oriented sports
organizations.
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