Jouett Meekin (1867)
Dummy Taylor (1875)
John Titus (1876)
Tom Yawkey (1903)
Mark Scott (1915)
Joe Foy (1943)
Jack Billingham (1943)
Tom Shopay (1945)
Charley Walters (1947)
Rick Lysander (1953)
Alan Trammell (1958)
The birthday list (2009)
Dummy Taylor (1875)
John Titus (1876)
Tom Yawkey (1903)
Mark Scott (1915)
Joe Foy (1943)
Jack Billingham (1943)
Tom Shopay (1945)
Charley Walters (1947)
Rick Lysander (1953)
Alan Trammell (1958)
The birthday list (2009)
Tom Yawkey was the owner of the Boston Red Sox from 1933 until
his death in 1978.
Mark Scott was the host of “Home Run Derby”.
Third baseman Joseph
Anthony Foy did not play for the Twins, but was originally signed by
them. He was born in New York and went to high school in the Bronx.
He signed with the Twins in 1962. He hit .285 in Class D Erie, drawing
109 walks in 490 plate appearances. He was chosen by Boston in the 1962
minor league draft. Foy hit pretty well throughout the minors; his best
year was probably 1965, when he hit .302 with 14 home runs for AAA Toronto.
He was the regular third baseman for the Red Sox the next season, a
position he held for three years. He could not duplicate his minor league
success in the majors, although his numbers look better when viewed in the
low-offense context of the late 1960s. He hit .246 in his years with
Boston, but he continued to draw walks--his OBP in those years was .344.
He also hit double-digit home runs each season. Foy was taken
by Kansas City in the expansion draft and was the Royals' third baseman in 1969.
He hit .262 with an OBP of .354 and 11 homers for the expansion team.
After the season, however, Foy was traded to the Mets in the deal that brought
Amos Otis to Kansas City. He had a down year and was left unprotected
after the season. Washington chose him in the Rule 5 draft,
but Foy was released mid-way through the 1971 season, ending his
career. Even in his last years, when he was hitting in the .230s, he was
still drawing walks, posting OBPs around .370. After his career
ended, Joy Foy returned to the Bronx. He passed away from a heart attack
on October 12, 1989 at the age of 46.
Right-hander Charles Leonard Walters pitched in six games for
the Twins in 1969. He was born in Minneapolis and went to high school
there. Walters signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1966 after
attending a tryout camp. He pitched very well in the low minors, and was
jumped to the majors from Class A at the start of the 1969 season. He had
both started and relieved in the minors, but was placed in the bullpen with the
Twins. Walters was unscored upon in his first five appearances, giving up
only three hits in 5.1 innings. In his sixth appearances, however, he
gave up four runs on three hits and two walks in 1.1 innings. He was sent
back to the minors after that and never made it back to the big leagues.
He did not pitch particularly well in AA Charlotte, and in March of 1970 was
traded to Washington with Joe Grzenda for Brant Alyea. He did not pitch
badly in 1970 or 1971 in the minors, but had a down year in 1972 in
AA which ended his career. Charley Walters has for many years been a
sports columnist for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. The nickname
"Shooter" was given to him by Bob Allison.
Right-hander Richard Eugene Lysander pitched for the Twins from
1983-1985. He was born in Huntington Park, California, attended
California State--Los Angeles, and was drafted by Oakland in the 19th round in
1974. He was used as a starter in the low minors, but shifted to relief
on his promotion to AAA midway through the 1976 season. He struggled in
AAA in that role, was sent back to AA a couple of times, and returned
to starting in 1981. He made his major league debut in 1980, pitching in
five games for the Athletics without success. Lysander was traded to
Houston after the 1981 season, pitched in AAA for the Astros in 1982, and was
traded to the Twins in January of 1983 for Bob Veselic. He made the Twins
out of spring training in 1983 and was with them for all of that year and parts
of two others. He was used mostly out of the bullpen, although one of his
five starts was a memorable complete-game, eleven-hit shutout of
California. He pitched fairly well for them in 1983, then started
1984 in the minors but came up in late June and pitched fairly well
again. He did not pitch well in 1985, again spent some time in the
minors, and was released after the season. That pretty much ended his
career, but he pitched in the seniors league in 1989 and made a brief,
unsuccessful comeback in 1990, pitching ten games in AAA for Toronto.
Lysander's son, Brent, pitched in the Oakland organization in 2007 and 2008 and
was in independent ball in 2009. His daughter, Kelsey, was a star soccer
player at Notre Dame. At last report, Rick Lysander was living in La
Jolla, California and was involved with youth baseball there. He also was
taking part in various instructional camps and charitable events.
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