Walter Briggs (1877)
Cy Perkins (1896)
Hilton Smith (1907)
Bill Capps (1919)
Buck Elliott (1919)
Johnny Pesky (1919)
Connie Ryan (1920)
John Wockenfuss (1949)
Ron Hassey (1953)
Greg Cadaret (1962)
Pete Smith (1966)
Matt Stairs (1968)
Willie Banks (1969)
Craig Monroe (1977)
Anibal Sanchez (1984)
Denard Span (1984)
Yovani Gallardo (1986)
Cy Perkins (1896)
Hilton Smith (1907)
Bill Capps (1919)
Buck Elliott (1919)
Johnny Pesky (1919)
Connie Ryan (1920)
John Wockenfuss (1949)
Ron Hassey (1953)
Greg Cadaret (1962)
Pete Smith (1966)
Matt Stairs (1968)
Willie Banks (1969)
Craig Monroe (1977)
Anibal Sanchez (1984)
Denard Span (1984)
Yovani Gallardo (1986)
Walter Briggs was involved in the ownership of the Detroit
Tigers from 1920-1952, becoming sole owner in 1935.
Hilton Smith was a star pitcher in the Negro Leagues from 1931-1950.
Some observers considered him the equal of, if not better than, Satchel
Paige.
Bill Capps was a third baseman who played in the minors for
twenty years, fifteen of them at Class A or below.
Buck Elliott was an outfielder who played in the minors for
fourteen years, all but one of them at Class A or below.
Right-hander Willie
Anthony Banks pitched for the Twins in the early 1990s. He was born in
Jersey City and attended high school there. He was drafted by Minnesota
with the third pick of the 1987 draft. Banks was up and down in the
minors. He was very wild in his first two seasons, walking 169 batters in
190 innings. He pitched well for Class A Visalia in 1989, but less
well for AA Orlando in 1990 and AAA Portland in 1991. Banks made his big
league debut in 1991, making three not-very-good starts in August.
In 1992, however, he seemed to be putting things together: he went 6-1, 1.92
in eleven starts in Portland, and was called up to the majors and placed in the
Twins' starting rotation in early June. He lasted two months there, going
4-4, 4.62 before being sent to the bullpen for the rest of the season.
Banks was in the starting rotation for all of 1993, his first full season in
the majors. He went 11-12, 4.04, but with a WHIP of 1.54. After the
season, he was traded to the Cubs for Dave Stevens and Matt Walbeck.
Banks was in the Cubs' rotation in 1994 until he got hurt in August, but
did not pitch particularly well. Moved to the bullpen for 1995, he
pitched quite badly and was traded to the Dodgers in July. He made six
starts for the Dodgers, was placed on waivers, and was chosen by the
Marlins. He made nine starts for Florida, was waived again after the
season, and was chosen by Philadelphia. The Phillies released him in
March of 1996, and he did not play baseball that season. He signed with
the Yankees for 1997 and pitched well in AAA, getting a September call-up.
He got off to a poor start in 1998 and was traded to Arizona. He pitched
pretty well out of the bullpen for the expansion Diamondbacks, but he was
allowed to become a free agent after the season. Banks went to Japan for
1999, but in 2000 came back to play in the Mets' organization. He
returned to the Diamondbacks' organization for 2001, was released in August,
and was picked up by Boston. He actually pitched quite well out of the
Red Sox' bullpen, going 2-1, 2.72 with a WHIP of 1.11 for the rest of 2001 and
all of 2002 (49.2 innings). Boston let him go after 2002, however; he was
in AAA with the Yankees and Cubs in 2003, and was in independent ball in 2004
and 2005. Banks’ mother passed away in 2006, which plunged him into a
severe depression and contemplating suicide. Instead, however, he
returned to baseball, reaching out to his friend Tim Raines, manager of the
Newark Bears. Raines offered him a job as a pitcher/pitching coach, jobs
he held through 2012. At last report, Willie Banks was a coach and instructor
at the Toms River Baseball Academy in Toms River, New Jersey.
Outfielder Craig Keystone Monroe played for the Twins in
2008. Born in Texarkana, Texas, he attended high school there, then was
drafted by Texas in the eight round in 1995. His minor league numbers
were unimpressive until he started to develop power in 1998: he hit 17
homers in each of 1998 and 1999 and hit 20 homers in each of 2000 and
2001. Monroe made his major league debut in 2001, getting called up to
the Rangers in late July and staying the rest of the season. He batted
only 52 times in the majors, hitting .212, and was placed on waivers after the
season. He was selected by Detroit and hit .321 in AAA Toledo in 2002,
although with only ten homers. He also got 25 at-bats in the majors,
hitting .120. Monroe started 2003 in the minors, but was called up within
a few weeks and came to stay. He was the regular left-fielder and hit 23
homers, although he hit only .240. He remained a regular outfielder for
the Tigers until he was traded in August of 2007. His best average as a
Tiger was .293 in 2004; the most home runs he hit was 28 in 2006. That
was as good as it would get. Monroe was having a poor year in 2007 when
he was traded to the Cubs. The change of scenery did not help him, and he
was sent to Minnesota after the season "as part of a conditional
deal." Used mostly as a designated hitter/pinch hitter, Monroe hit
only .202/.274/.405 in 163 at-bats in 2008 and was released in August. He
signed with Pittsburgh for 2009 but was used sparingly and again did not
hit. He was released in July, bringing his playing career to an end.
Monroe is a cousin of Chicago Bears defensive back Nathan Vasher.
Monroe's mother's first name is Marilyn. At last report, Craig Monroe was
a baseball analyst for Fox Sports Detroit.
Outfielder Keiunta Denard Span played for the Twins from
2008-2012. He was born in Tampa and went to high school there. The
Twins drafted him in the first round in 2002. His minor league record is
okay, but not spectacular--he never really had a bad year, but he never really
had an outstanding year, either, although he did attract attention when he hit
.339 in 186 at-bats in Ft. Myers in 2005. He started 2008 with Minnesota,
but was sent down in late April when he was hitting .258 with no extra-base
hits. He hit .340 in 156 at-bats in Rochester, and was back in Minnesota
by the end of June. He became the regular right fielder in the absence of
Michael Cuddyer and ended the season hitting .294. In 2009, playing primarily
in center but all over the outfield to some extent, Span hit .311 and led the
league in triples with 10. The trade of Carlos Gomez made Span the
regular center fielder in 2010, but he did not respond well; while he again hit
ten triples, he hit only .264 with an OBP of .331. 2011 was no better; he
again hit .264 with an OBP of .328 in a concussion-plagued season.
He bounced back somewhat in 2012, batting .283 with an OBP of .342.
After the season, he was traded to Washington for Alex Meyer. He led
the league with eleven triples in 2013, but otherwise had a season that fits in
with the rest of his career. In 2014, however, he had his best season
since 2009, leading the league in hits and batting over .300. He was on
his way to another fine season in 2015 but missed nearly half the season with
back and abdominal injuries. A free agent after the season, he signed
with San Francisco for 2016 and was their regular center fielder, doing okay
but nothing special. As a Twin, Denard Span hit .284/.357/.389, with his
first two seasons being easily his best. He turns thirty-three today.
He's at the age where teams tend to take it one year at a time. A
bad year could end his career rather quickly, but it's also possible that he'll
go one year at a time for several more years. As they say, time will
tell. It always does.
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