Frank LaPorte (1880)
Babe Ruth (1895)
Jake Levy (1900)
Glenn Wright (1901)
Dale Long (1926)
Smoky Burgess (1927)
Augie Garrido (1939)
Richie Zisk (1949)
Larry Young (1954)
Bob Wickman (1969)
Chad Allen (1975)
Babe Ruth (1895)
Jake Levy (1900)
Glenn Wright (1901)
Dale Long (1926)
Smoky Burgess (1927)
Augie Garrido (1939)
Richie Zisk (1949)
Larry Young (1954)
Bob Wickman (1969)
Chad Allen (1975)
Pitcher Jake Levy had a minor league career that started in 1921
and lasted until 1945. He played under a variety of names, making it
difficult to determine his true record, but he won at least two hundred games.
He was also a good hitter, and early in his career played in the field
when he was not pitching.
Augie Garrido is the baseball coach at the University of Texas
and has the most coaching wins of anyone in Division I.
Larry Young was a major league umpire from 1983-2007.
You may have heard of that "Babe Ruth" fellow.
Outfielder John Chad Allen
played for Minnesota from 1999-2001. Born in Dallas, he went to high
school in Duncanville, Texas, and then attended Texas A & M. He was
drafted by the Twins in the fourth round in 1996. He played for the 1996
Olympic team, so his professional career didn't really get started until
1997. He had a solid year in Class A in 1997, followed by an undistinguished
year at AA in 1998. Despite that, he won the starting left fielder job
for the Twins in spring training in 1999. He did okay, hitting .277 with
ten homers, although his OBP was only .330. In 2000 he lost the starting
left field job to Jacque Jones and was back in the minors, although he came up
to Minnesota for the month of June. He had a fine year at AAA, hitting
.311 in Salt Lake. Allen was with the Twins for most of 2001 as a reserve
outfielder/designated hitter and was not awful, but not all that good,
either. He became a free agent after that season and signed with
Baltimore for 2002, but was released in mid-April. He signed with
Cleveland a month later and had another good year at AAA, but was again
released after the season. Allen moved on to Florida for 2003, to Texas
for 2004 and part of 2005, to St. Louis for the end of 2005, and to Kansas City
for 2006. He made brief appearances in the majors for the Marlins and the
Rangers. In 2007 he played for Orix in the Japanese League, then his
playing career ended. As a Twin, Chad Allen hit .275/.332/.401 in just
over seven hundred at-bats. He was named in the Mitchell Report as
someone who had used performance enhancing drugs. Allen said he had taken
them to recover from a knee injury, and provided the commission with
information on internet drug mills. Chad Allen was the Twins' AA batting
coach, for New Britain in 2013-14 and in Chattanooga in 2015, and has been the
batting coach for the AAA Rochester Red Wings since 2016.
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