Horace Wilson (1845)
Jim Keenan (1858)
Curt Welch (1862)
Billy Evans (1884)
Herb Pennock (1894)
Bill Adair (1913)
Allie Reynolds (1917)
George Sobek (1920)
Randy Jackson (1926)
Billy O'Dell (1933)
Dick Bogard (1937)
Jim Barr (1948)
Larry McWilliams (1954)
Lenny Dykstra (1963)
Lenny Webster (1965)
Jayhawk Owens (1969)
Alberto Castillo (1970)
Bobby Jones (1970)
Kevin Sefcik (1971)
Lance Berkman (1976)
Cesar Izturis (1980)
Alex Gordon (1984)
Duke Welker (1986)
Liam Hendriks (1989)
Max Kepler (1993)
Jim Keenan (1858)
Curt Welch (1862)
Billy Evans (1884)
Herb Pennock (1894)
Bill Adair (1913)
Allie Reynolds (1917)
George Sobek (1920)
Randy Jackson (1926)
Billy O'Dell (1933)
Dick Bogard (1937)
Jim Barr (1948)
Larry McWilliams (1954)
Lenny Dykstra (1963)
Lenny Webster (1965)
Jayhawk Owens (1969)
Alberto Castillo (1970)
Bobby Jones (1970)
Kevin Sefcik (1971)
Lance Berkman (1976)
Cesar Izturis (1980)
Alex Gordon (1984)
Duke Welker (1986)
Liam Hendriks (1989)
Max Kepler (1993)
Horace Wilson was an American professor English at Tokyo
University. He is credited with introducing baseball to Japan in either
1872 or 1873.
Billy Evans was the youngest umpire in major league history,
starting his career at age 22. He was an American League umpire from
1906-1027. He would later become general manager of the Cleveland Indians
and the Detroit Tigers, and was president of the Southern Association from
1942-1946.
Bill Adair was a long-time minor league player (1935-1956) and
manager (1949-1973). He also was the scout credited with signing Andre
Dawson and Tim Raines.
George Sobek was a long-time scout for the White Sox, credited
with signing Denny McLain, Steve Trout, and Mike Squires. He also played
in the NBA and was a long-time college basketball referee.
Another long-time scout, Dick Bogard played in the minors for
six years, managed for three, and was a scout for nearly thirty years, mostly
for Houston and Oakland. He is credited with signing Walt Weiss, Jason
Giambi, and Ben Grieve.
Jim Barr was drafted six different times before finally
signing. Minnesota drafted him in the sixth round of the January
Secondary draft in 1970, but he did not sign.
Catcher Leonard Irell
Webster played for the Twins in 1989-1993 and had a longer career than you may
realize. He was born in New Orleans, went to high school in Lutcher,
Louisiana, and then attended Grambling State University. The Twins drafted
him in the 21st round in 1985. Webster really didn't do a whole lot in
the minors--his best year was probably 1988, when he hit .288 with 11 homers in
his second full year at Class A Kenosha. He got September callups every
year from 1989 through 1991, also spending a couple of weeks in June with the
Twins in 1991. He had two full seasons with Minnesota, 1992 and 1993, as
the backup catcher to Brian Harper. He had a little over 100 at-bats each
season and showed the vagaries of small sample size, hitting .280 in 1992 and
.198 in 1993. Montreal acquired him from the Twins in March of 1994
in what is described as a "conditional deal." Webster then
spent a few years bouncing around: he was the backup catcher for the
Expos in 1994, the backup for Philadelphia in 1995, back to being the backup in
Montreal in 1996, and then on to Baltimore for 1997. He stayed a little
while in Baltimore, reaching part-time status and getting over 300 at-bats for
the only time in his career in 1998. He was released at mid-season in 1999,
however, finished out the season in Boston, and went back to Montreal for the
2000 season. He ended his playing career after that. As a Twin,
Lenny Webster hit .254/.324/.370 in 284 at-bats. At last report, he was a
coach with the Marquis Grissom Baseball Association, located in Mableton,
Georgia, which provides athletes in underserved communities the
opportunity to compete in a competitive baseball league.
Catcher Claude Jayhawk Owens did not play for Minnesota, but was
drafted by them. He was born in Cincinnati and went to high school
there. He then attended Middle Tennessee State before being drafted by
the Twins in the second round in 1990. He put up fairly pedestrian
numbers in three years in their minor league system, which led to Owens being
left unprotected in the expansion draft. Colorado took him, and after he
hit .310 in 174 at-bats in Colorado Springs in 1993 they brought him to
the big leagues. He played sparingly, however, hit .209 in only 86
at-bats, and spent most of 1994 and 1995 back in Colorado Springs. He
continued to be pretty average, but in 1996 he was called up to the majors in
late April and spent the rest of the season with the Rockies as the
right-handed part of a platoon with Jeff Reed. He again failed to hit and
never got back to the majors again. Owens was in Colorado Springs all of
1997, came back to the Twins' organization for the start of 1998, hit .205 in
AAA Salt Lake, finished the season in the Cincinnati organization, stayed in
the Reds' chain for 1999, and then his career came to an end. After that,
he was a minor league manager and coach, mostly in the Cincinnati organization,
a career that came to an end in 2007. He was inducted into the Middle
Tennessee Blue Raider Hall of Fame in 2012. At last report, Jayhawk Owens
was living in the Denver area and was a project manager for Baker Concrete, one
of the largest sub-contractors of concrete in the nation.
Right-hander Matthew Scott "Duke" Welker did not play
for the Twins, but was part of their organization for about six weeks in 2013.
He was born in Kirkland, Washington, went to high school in Woodinville,
Washington, attended Seminole State College in Seminole, Oklahoma and the
University of Arkansas, and was drafted by Pittsburgh in the second round in 2007.
He pitched well in seven starts in rookie ball in 2007, then struggled in
the Sally League in for three years. The Pirates never gave up on him,
though, moving him to the bullpen in 2010, and in 2011 he had a fine year for
Class A Bradenton, although he did so at age twenty-five. He followed
that up with a good 2012 split between AA and AAA. He had a good season
in AAA in 2013 and made his major league debut that season, making two
appearances for Pittsburgh in late June and retiring all four batters he faced.
In early October of 2013, he was sent to Minnesota as the player to be
named later in the deal that also sent Alex Presley to Minnesota for Justin
Morneau. In mid-November of that year, however, he was traded back to
Pittsburgh for Kris Johnson. He was in AAA in 2014, but pitched poorly
and was eventually found to need Tommy John surgery, which he had in June.
The Pirates released him in July and it appeared that his playing career
had come to an end: It was reported that he was working toward getting a
bachelor's degree from Dallas Baptist University and was hoping to get a job in
specialty sales. Instead, he signed with the Giants and spent the summer
of 2016 with AAA Sacramento. He had an ERA of 3.86 in 31 games, but he
gave up 49 hits in 35 innings and had a WHIP of 1.86. He turns thirty-one
today. We wish him well, but that job in specialty sales is looking
better all the time.
Right-hander Liam Johnson Hendriks appeared in four games for
the Twins in 2011. He was born in Perth, Australia and signed with
Minnesota as a free agent in 2007. He pitched well in the GCL in 2007,
missed all of 2008, but came back to pitch well in 2009 and ever since.
His best year as a minor league was 2010, when he went a combined 8-4, 1.74,
0.84 WHIP with 105 strikeouts in 108.2 innings for Beloit and Ft. Myers at age
21. He began 2011 in New Britain and pitched very well, earning a
promotion to Rochester. His ERA in nine starts there was an unimpressive
4.56, but his WHIP was 1.12. He made four starts in Minnesota in 2011 and
did not look ready, but did not totally embarrass himself, either, going 0-2,
6.17, 1.50 WHIP with 16 strikeouts in 23.1 innings. He spent about half
of 2012 in Rochester, despite the fact that he had nothing to learn there, and
half of it in Minnesota, where he struggled. He began 2013 with Minnesota
but was shipped out after only two starts, one of which was fairly good.
He struggled with injury in Rochester and came back to Minnesota in
August, not doing very well. The Twins gave up on him after the season,
placing him on waivers. He was selected by the Cubs in mid-December but
was waived again ten days later, this time being claimed by Baltimore.
Baltimore waived him early in spring training in 2014 and he was again claimed,
this time by Toronto. He pitched very well for AAA Buffalo and got three
starts for the Blue Jays, with two of them very good and one of them very bad.
He was traded to Kansas City in late July with Erik Kratz for ex-Twin
Danny Valencia. He again pitched very well in AAA but had mixed results
in six appearances for the Royals. He was traded back to Toronto after
the 2014 season. The Blue Jays moved him to the bullpen in 2015 and he
had an outstanding year, going 5-0, 2.92, 1.08 WHIP in 64.2 innings (58 games).
He was traded to Oakland for 2016, and while he wasn't quite as good he
still had a fine season. As a Twin, Liam Hendriks was 2-13, 6.06, 1.59
WHIP in 156 innings. In 41 AAA starts, he is 17-15, 3.61, 1.14 WHIP in
254 innings. We don't know why the Twins never gave him a chance in the
bullpen, but it appears that he has found his role there.
Outfielder Maximilian Kepler made his debut with the Twins in
2015. Born and raised in Berlin, Germany, he was signed by Minnesota as a
free agent in 2009 at the age of sixteen. He was okay, but nothing
special, in his first couple of minor league seasons, although one should say
that he did quite well for his age. He had an outstanding year in 2012 in
Elizabethton at age nineteen. He was in Cedar Rapids in 2013 and Fort
Myers in 2014, again not doing badly but not being particularly impressive,
either. Impressive came in 2015, when he hit .322/.416/.531 for AA
Chattanooga and got a September call-up. He appeared in three games, two
as a pinch-hitter, and went 1-for-7. He started 2016 with Minnesota but
didn't play much and went down to Rochester in late April. He came back
on June 1 and was with the Twins the rest of the season. He didn't hit
for a high average, but he showed good power and drew a good number of walks,
batting .235/.309/.424 despite a poor September. He turns twenty-four
today and is expected to start in the right field for the Twins this season.
He still has things to prove, but there are certainly reasons to hope
that Max Kepler will be in the Twins outfield for several years to come.
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