Billy Sullivan (1875)
Rosey Rowswell (1884)
Candy Jim Taylor (1884)
Frank Lane (1896)
Carl Reynolds (1903)
Paul Blair (1944)
Danny Thompson (1947)
Mark Souza (1954)
Ernie Camacho (1955)
Cecilio Guante (1960)
Tim Naehring (1967)
Kent Mercker (1968)
Rich Becker (1972)
Rosey Rowswell (1884)
Candy Jim Taylor (1884)
Frank Lane (1896)
Carl Reynolds (1903)
Paul Blair (1944)
Danny Thompson (1947)
Mark Souza (1954)
Ernie Camacho (1955)
Cecilio Guante (1960)
Tim Naehring (1967)
Kent Mercker (1968)
Rich Becker (1972)
Rosey Rowswell was a broadcaster for Pittsburgh from
1936-1954. Bob Prince considered Rowswell his mentor.
Candy Jim Taylor was a star player and manager in the Negro
Leagues for many years.
Frank Lane was the general manager of the White Sox (1948-55),
St. Louis (1956-57), Cleveland (1958-60), Kansas City (1961), and Milwaukee
(1971-72).
Infielder Danny Leon
Thompson played for Minnesota from 1970-1976. He was born in Wichita,
attended high school in Capron, Oklahoma, and went to college at Oklahoma
State. Thompson was drafted by the Twins in the first round in
1968. He had a couple of good years in the lower minors, hitting .302 at
AA Charlotte in 1969. He was hitting only .247 in 1970 at AAA Evansville
when he was called up to the Twins, putting the minors behind him for
good. He became the Twins' regular second baseman, replacing an injured
Rod Carew, but unfortunately he couldn't hit like Carew, batting only .219 that
year. Thompson became a reserve in 1971, but got another crack at
starting in 1972. He had his best year as a big leaguer, batting
.276. He even got minor consideration for the MVP award that year, finishing
23rd in the voting. It would turn out to be the only year he got even 400
at-bats in the majors. He was still the mostly-regular shortstop in 1973,
but missed significant time to injuries and hit only .225. Before the
1974 season, Thompson was diagnosed with leukemia. He continued to play
baseball, however, and remained the Twins' primary shortstop
through 1975, although he lost significant time to players like Jerry
Terrell, Luis Gomez, and Sergio Ferrer. His batting gradually came back
in those years, and after hitting .270 in 1975 Thompson regained
the everyday shortstop job. He was the still the regular in
1976 when he was traded on the first of June to Texas along with Bert Blyleven
for Mike Cubbage, Jim Gideon, Bill Singer, Roy Smalley, and $250,000. As
a Twin, Danny Thompson hit .251/.289/.316 in just over two thousand
at-bats. Thompson was used as a utility player in Texas for the remainder
of the year, and then his playing career was over. Sadly, Danny Thompson
passed away from leukemia on December 10, 1976. The following year,
Harmon Killebrew helped found the Danny Thompson Memorial Golf Tournament,
which is held in late August each year in Sun Valley, Idaho. Since it's
founding, the tournament has raised over ten million dollars for leukemia
and cancer research.
Left-hander Kenneth Mark Souza did not play for the Twins, but
was in their minor league system for two seasons. He was born in Redwood
City, California, and was drafted by Kansas City in the first round of the
January draft in 1974. He both started and relieved in his first pro
season, but was primarily a relief pitcher after that. He struggled in
his first couple of pro seasons, but turned in a fine year in 1976 at Class A
Waterloo when he was still only twenty-two. The Twins chose him in the
minor league portion of the Rule 5 draft and sent him to AA Orlando for 1977,
where he went 5-4, 4.67, 1.41 WHIP in 28 appearances (81 innings). He was
apparently injured after that, because he missed all of the 1978 season, and
after that season the Twins released him. He signed with Oakland and was
in their minor league system from 1979-1981, not pitching particularly
well. His best year with the Athletics was 1980, when he went 7-5, 3.35
in 41 appearances (86 innings) for AAA Ogden, but with a WHIP of 1.52. He
spent about a month in the majors that year, going 0-0, 7.71 in five
appearances (seven innings) for Oakland. At last report, Mark Souza was
the pitching coach at Eastlake High School in Sammamish, Washington and
also worked at Evergreen Ford in Issaquah, Washington.
Outfielder Richard Godhard Becker played for Minnesota in the
mid-1990s. He was born in Aurora, Illinois, and went to high school
there. He was drafted by the Twins in the third round in 1990. He
hit pretty well in the low minors, batting .316 with Class A Visalia in 1992,
but also showed a propensity for striking out, doing so approximately 120 times
each year in 1992 and 1993. Despite that, he made his major league debut
in September of 1993. Becker started the 1994 season as the Twins'
regular center fielder, but the Twins also had a guy named Puckett who could
play center, so Becker was sent back to AAA at the end of April despite
the fact that he was hitting .303. He hit .316 at Salt Lake the rest of the
season, and came back to the big leagues in September. He started 1995 in
Salt Lake, but was promoted to Minnesota in June and was once again the
starting center fielder. He didn't do much that year, but in 1996, Becker
had his first full year in the majors and made the most of it, hitting .291
with 12 homers and 31 doubles. It would be his best season: in
1997, he dropped to .264 with 10 homers and 130 strikeouts, and that
off-season he was traded to the Mets for Alex Ochoa. The change did not
do him good; placed in a reserve role, he batted only .190 and was placed on
waivers in mid-June. He was chosen by Baltimore and finished the season
there, but did not do much better and was released. He came back some
after that, not doing too badly as a reserve outfielder for Milwaukee, Oakland,
and Detroit during the 1999 and 200o seasons. Becker went back to the
minors in 2001, playing AAA for Detroit and Florida, and played in the Northern
League in 2002 before ending his career. As a Twin, Rich Becker hit
.267/.349/.379 in nearly fifteen hundred at-bats. At last report, Rich
Becker was working as a firefighter in North Fort Myers, Florida.
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