Dave Brain (1879)
Pinch Thomas (1888)
Cliff Heathcote (1898)
Flint Rhem (1901)
Jean Yawkey (1909)
Johnny Dickshot (1910)
Ray Kelly (1914)
Jack Brickhouse (1916)
Walter Haas (1916)
Dick Stigman (1936)
Sandy Valdespino (1939)
Jumbo Ozaki (1947)
Tim Stoddard (1953)
Atlee Hammaker (1958)
Neil Allen (1958)
Rob Dibble (1964)
Scott Kazmir (1984)
Franklin Morales (1986)
Pinch Thomas (1888)
Cliff Heathcote (1898)
Flint Rhem (1901)
Jean Yawkey (1909)
Johnny Dickshot (1910)
Ray Kelly (1914)
Jack Brickhouse (1916)
Walter Haas (1916)
Dick Stigman (1936)
Sandy Valdespino (1939)
Jumbo Ozaki (1947)
Tim Stoddard (1953)
Atlee Hammaker (1958)
Neil Allen (1958)
Rob Dibble (1964)
Scott Kazmir (1984)
Franklin Morales (1986)
Jean Yawkey was the wife of Tom Yawkey and was owner of the
Boston Red Sox from 1978 until her death in 1992.
Ray Kelly was a baseball writer in Philadelphia for fifty years.
Jack Brickhouse was a broadcaster for the Chicago Cubs from
1948-1981.
Walter Haas was the owner of the Oakland Athletics from 1980
until his death in 1995.
Better known as a professional golfer, Jumbo Ozaki played professional
baseball in Japan for three seasons, pitching for two seasons and playing
outfield for one.
Right-hander Richard Lewis
Stigman pitched for Minnesota for four years, 1962-1965. A native of
Nimrod, Minnesota, he attended high school in Sebeka, Minnesota and signed with
Cleveland as a free agent in 1954. Stigman was in Class D for three
years. The first two were pretty awful, but in 1956 he went 17-9 with a
1.44 ERA in 213 innings for Class D Vidalia. That earned him a
promotion to AA, where he pitched well for two years. He was decent in
AAA in 1959 (in one game he pitched 10 2/3 hitless innings) and made the
Indians out of spring training in 1960, not returning to the minors until his
major league career was over. Stigman got off to a good start in 1960,
even making the all-star team as a rookie, but faded badly in the second
half. He missed the first two months of 1961, and did not pitch very well
when he was available. On April 2, 1962, Stigman was traded to Minnesota
with Vic Power for Pedro Ramos. He started 1962 in the bullpen, pitched
well there, and was moved into the starting rotation in mid-July. He continued
to pitch well, leading the league in winning percentage that year. He was
in the rotation for two more years, pitching a total of 431 innings in those
two years and still pitching quite well. In spring training of 1965, he
lost his spot in the starting rotation to Jim Perry and moved back to the
bullpen. He was decent, but no more, and on April 6, 1966 Stigman was
traded with a player to be named later (Jose Calero) to Boston for Russ Nixon
and Chuck Schilling. The Red Sox put him in their rotation, but after seven
mostly mediocre starts moved him to the bullpen, where he finished out the
year. Stigman was traded to Cincinnati in the off-season and was in AAA
for 1967, where he was adequate but nothing more. He finished the
year in the Philadelphia organization, and then his playing career ended.
As a Twin, Dick Stigman was 37-37, 3.69 in 138 games, 85 of them starts.
He had a WHIP of 1.24 and an ERA+ of 101. In 1965-66, Stigman set a
record for making ten consecutive starts without a decision, a record which has
since been tied but not broken. After leaving baseball, he went into
business in the Twin Cities area. At last report, Dick Stigman was living
in Burnsville and making occasional appearances at baseball-related events,
including the Twins' Fantasy Camp. A city park in Nimrod has been named
in his honor.
Hilario (Borroto) "Sandy" Valdespino was a left-handed
hitting outfielder who played for Minnesota from 1965-1967. Born in San
Jose De Las Lajas, Cuba, he signed with Washington as a free agent in
1957. He was nicknamed "Sandy" by a minor league manager
who thought he resembled Sandy Amaros. Valdespino produced rather
pedestrian numbers for several years, but then started to figure some things
out, hitting .284 for AAA Dallas-Ft. Worth in 1963 and jumping to .337 with 16
homers for AAA Atlanta in 1964. In 1965 Valdespino played his first full
season in the majors, being used primarily as a pinch-hitter and occasional
outfielder--his first 13 appearances in the big leagues were as a pinch-hitter.
He was an odd choice for the role, as he was a small man with little
power. He hit .261 that year, and did start two games of the World
Series, hitting a key double in game one. He was used in a similar
role in 1966, but did not hit and was sent back to the minors in late
June. He once again hit very well in AAA and was called back to the Twins
in September. Valdespino was once again with Minnesota for a full season
in 1967, but did not get any more chances to play, and did not hit well in the
chances he got. That off-season he was left off the forty-man roster and
was chosen by Atlanta in the Rule 5 draft. Apparently something was
worked out, because in late June he was sent back to AAA after hitting .233 as
a pinch-hitter and reserve outfielder for the Braves. He was traded to
Houston in December of 1968, traded to Seattle in August of 1969, and was sold
to Kansas City in July of 1970. Much of that time was spent in the
minors, although he did log some major league time with each of those
teams. He remained in the Royals' organization through 1972, and then his
playing career came to an end. As a Twin, Sandy Valdespino hit
.220/.269/.284 in 450 at-bats. He did some coaching in the minors before
leaving baseball. At last report, Sandy Valdespino was living in Las
Vegas.
Right-hander Neil Patrick Allen has been the Twins' pitching
coach since 2015. Born and raised in Kansas City, he was drafted by the
Mets in the eleventh round in 1976. He was a starter throughout his minor
league career and did pretty well, although he stumbled when promoted to AAA in
mid-1978. Despite that, he made the Mets as a reliever at the start of
1979. He became the Mets closer in 1980 and did pretty well, although he
never racked up big save totals. He had a poor start in 1983, lost the
closer role to Jesse Orosco, and was traded to St. Louis in mid-June. He
never closed again, but went on to pitch several more years. He pitched
well through 1984, but did not do well in 1985 and was sold to the Yankees in
mid-July. He pitched well for them the rest of the year, but was a free
agent after the season and signed with the White Sox. He started the
season in the bullpen but moved into the rotation in May and did well but got
hurt in late July. He came back to the rotation in 1987 but could not
duplicate his success and was released in late August, signing with the Yankees
in September. He went back to the bullpen and was a good pitcher again,
staying through the 1988 season. He was a free agent after the season and
signed with Cleveland but made only three appearances with them, spending most
of the year in AAA. That brought his playing career to an end, but he
stayed in the game as a pitching coach. He was in the minors through 2014
with the exception of 2005, when he was the bullpen coach for the Yankees.
He became the Twins' pitching coach in 2015 and remains in that position
at this writing.
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