Arlie "The Freshest Man
on Earth" Latham (1860)
Doc Casey (1870)
Ralph Miller (1873)
Fred Lieb (1888)
Rosy Ryan (1898)
Jimmie Crutchfield (1910)
Sid Hartman (1920)
Bob Locker (1938)
Wayne Granger (1944)
Bobby Bonds (1946)
Jim Kern (1949)
Steve Stroughter (1952)
Mickey Hatcher (1955)
Harold Baines (1959)
Mike Pagliarulo (1960)
Kim Batiste (1968)
Robert Fick (1974)
Vladimir Nunez (1975)
Dan Perkins (1975)
Kevin Youkilis (1979)
Doc Casey (1870)
Ralph Miller (1873)
Fred Lieb (1888)
Rosy Ryan (1898)
Jimmie Crutchfield (1910)
Sid Hartman (1920)
Bob Locker (1938)
Wayne Granger (1944)
Bobby Bonds (1946)
Jim Kern (1949)
Steve Stroughter (1952)
Mickey Hatcher (1955)
Harold Baines (1959)
Mike Pagliarulo (1960)
Kim Batiste (1968)
Robert Fick (1974)
Vladimir Nunez (1975)
Dan Perkins (1975)
Kevin Youkilis (1979)
Ralph Miller was the first major league player to live to be a
hundred years old.
Fred Lieb was a sportswriter who covered baseball for seventy
years.
Jimmie Crutchfield was a star outfielder in the Negro Leagues.
Sid Hartman is a sportswriter/broadcaster who has been covering
sports in Minnesota since the earth cooled.
Right-handed reliever
Wayne Allan Granger was co-closer with Dave LaRoche in 1972. He was born
in Springfield, Massachusetts, went to high school in Huntington,
Massachusetts, and then attended Springfield College, the same school attended
by ex-Twin Glenn Adams. Granger signed with St. Louis as a free agent in
1965. He was a starter that year, but shifted to the bullpen in
1966. He pitched quite well in the minors, reaching AAA in 1967. In
1968, after posting a 2.16 ERA and a 0.76 WHIP in 25 AAA innings, Granger made
his big league debut in early June. He pitched very well the rest of the
season, going 4-2, 2.25 with four saves in 44 innings. He was traded to
Cincinnati after the season and did very well there for three years. He
led the league in saves with 35 in 1970 and led the league in appearances in
1969 and 1971. He twice received consideration for the MVP award and
finished eighth in Cy Young voting in 1970. After the 1971 season,
Granger was traded to Minnesota for Tom Hall. He continued to pitch very
well, going 4-6, 3.01 with 19 saves and a 1.24 WHIP for the Twins in
1972. After the season, though, Granger was on the move again, traded to
St. Louis for John Cumberland and Larry Hisle. After that, he seemed to
kind of hit the wall, and while he had a couple more decent years, he was never
a top reliever again. Granger did not pitch particularly well for the
Cardinals and was traded to the Yankees in August of 1973. The Yankees
released him in late March of 1974 and Granger signed with the White Sox.
He spent much of 1974 at AAA, and did not do well in the majors when he did
pitch there. Released after the season, Granger signed with Houston for
1975 and was decent, but no more. He was released after the season and
signed with Montreal for 1976. He was with the Expos for the first half
of the season and was okay, but not very good, and was sent to the
minors. The Expos released him in February of 1977, he signed with
Atlanta, and was released again in March. Granger pitched in Mexico in
1977, apparently did not play in 1978, and then tried to come back with
Montreal in 1979 but was ineffective in AAA, ending his playing career.
Wayne Granger was inducted into the Cincinnati Reds' Hall of Fame in 1982 and
will be inducted into the Western Massachusetts Baseball Hall of Fame in 2016.
After leaving baseball, he worked for a sporting goods company, then at a
boat dealership, and then started a billiard business that lasted for fourteen
years, until his retirement. He was living in Florida at last report.
Outfielder Stephen Lewis Stroughter did not play for the Twins,
but was in their minor league system for a couple of months in 1981. Born
and raised in Visalia, California, he attended the College of the Sequoias and
was drafted by San Francisco with the sixth pick of the 1971 June Secondary
draft. He hit pretty well in the minors but his power was inconsistent at
first, plus he struck out a lot, so he did not get to AA until 1974 and did not
leave Class A behind for good until after the 1975 season. After that
season, when he hit .301 with 15 homers for Fresno at age 23, he was sold to
California. He had two fine years at AA El Paso and then went to AAA Salt
Lake City, where he hit .325/.419/.535 in 1978. Not only did that not
earn him a call-up to the majors, Stroughter was released at the end of spring
training in 1979. He was out of baseball until the middle of June, when
Seattle signed him. He had a couple of solid years at AAA Spokane in 1979
and 1980, but was traded to Minnesota after the 1980 season for Mike
Bacsik. In 82 at-bats at Toledo, he hit .247/.317/.411 and then was sold
back to Seattle at the end of May. He finished the season in Spokane,
then finally made his major league debut at the start of the 1982 season.
He was used almost exclusively as a bench player, getting only 40 at-bats by
May 19. He did not impress in those at-bats and was sent back to AAA Salt
Lake City. He was back with the Mariners for the month of July, but got
only seven more at bats, hitting .170/.235/.255 for the season. Those
would be his career major league numbers; he was in AAA for Toronto and in
Japan in 1983, and then his playing career ended. He appears to have been
limited defensively, but he hit .303/.377/.503 in 1,818 AAA at-bats. Much
of that was in the Pacific Coast League, but it’s still hard to think he
couldn’t have helped somebody if he’d been given the chance. After
baseball, Steve Stroughter returned to Visalia, where at last report he was an
“independent entertainment professional.”
Outfielder/first baseman/third baseman Mickey Vaughn Hatcher
played for the Twins from 1981-1986. Hatcher was born in Cleveland, but
went to high school in Mesa, Arizona and attended the University of Oklahoma,
where he also played football. He was drafted by the Dodgers in the fifth
round in 1977. He hit very well in the minors--his career minor league
batting average is .339 in 1,403 at-bats. He split 1979 and
1980 between AAA and the majors, but his minor league success did not
immediately translate to the majors, as he hit only .243 in 177 at-bats.
In late March of 1981, Hatcher was traded to Minnesota with Kelly Snider
and Matt Reeves for Ken Landreaux. While he only had one season in which
he played in over 120 games (1984), Hatcher was a semi-regular, at least, in
his six years with the Twins. He was generally used in the outfield,
playing mostly in center in 1981, splitting time in the two corner outfield
positions in 1982, playing mostly in right in 1983, and moving to left for
1984-1986. He topped .300 in consecutive years, 1983-1984. As
a Twin, he hit .284/.315/.383 in 2,366 at-bats (672 games). Despite hitting
.278 in 1986, Hatcher was released by the Twins in March of 1987. He
signed with the Dodgers and played for them for four years as a reserve.
He continued to hit for a high average in his first three years, but in the
fourth year he dropped to .212. He played briefly for AAA Albuquerque in
1991, and then his playing career came to an end. Hatcher remained in
baseball, coaching for the Texas Rangers in 1993 and 1994, managing and
coaching in the minors, and coaching for the Dodgers in 1998. He became
the batting coach of the Angels in 2000, a job he held until mid-May of 2012,
when he reportedly clashed with Albert Pujols. He was with the Dodgers as
a special assistant to the general manager for the rest of that season, but was
not retained for 2013. At last report, Mickey Hatcher was still living in
the Los Angeles area. He has been a part of the Twins Fantasy Camp in
recent years.
Third baseman Michael Timothy Pagliarulo played for the Twins in
the early 1990s. Born in Medford, Massachusetts, he attended the University
of Miami and then was drafted by the Yankees in the sixth round in 1981.
His batting averages in the minors were nothing special, but he hit for power
(41 homers from 1982-1983) and drew a high number of walks. He was
actually having a poor year in AAA Columbus in 1984 when he was brought up to
the majors in early July to replace Toby Harrah. He remained the Yankees'
third baseman through June of 1989. He never hit for average, but he hit
105 home runs in a Yankee uniform. When Pagliarulo hit in the .230s, his
power numbers made him acceptable to the Yankees, but in 1988 both his power
and his average dropped, and the next year he was traded to San Diego.
His power never did come back, but he was able to raise his batting average,
hitting .254 as the mostly-regular third baseman for the Padres in 1990.
He became a free agent after the season and signed with Minnesota.
Platooned with Scott Leius in 1991, Pagliarulo hit .279 for the World Champion
Twins. He missed much of 1992 with injury, but came back in 1993 and was
hitting .292 in late August when he was traded to Baltimore for a player to be
named later (Erik Schullstrom). He finished the year at .303. As a
Twin, Mike Pagilarulo hit .272/.317/.376 in 723 at-bats (246 games). He
was a free agent in 1994 and played in Japan. He came back in 1995 as a
platoon third baseman for Texas, but hit only .232, and his playing career came
to an end. Mike Pagliarulo was the owner of the website
dugoutcentral.com. He then became a principal in an international sports
consulting company called The Baseline Group as well as the founder of a
nonprofit corporation called the Baseball Institute of Development, which
collaborates with leading experts from various fields of sports and medicine to
provide qualified resources and develop solutions to advance athletic
performance knowledge. One of the officers of the Baseball Institute
of Development is Dan Gladden. In 2013 Pagliarulo became the batting
coach for Indianapolis in the Pittsburgh organization, but he was replaced
after the 2014 season by ex-Twin Butch Wynegar. This season, he will
replace Barry Bonds as the batting coach of the Miami Marlins.
Pagliarulo’s son, also named Mike, played baseball for Dartmouth College.
Right-hander Daniel Lee Perkins was with the Twins for much of
1999. A native of Miami, Perkins was drafted by Minnesota in the second
round in 1993. His minor league numbers are not particularly
impressive: a career ERA of 4.98 and a career WHIP of 1.50. He did
have an excellent year at Ft. Myers in 1996, going 13-7, 2.96 with a 1.19 WHIP
in 136 innings. Perkins reach AAA late in 1998 and got attention by going
5-0 in seven starts; however, his ERA was 4.82 and his WHIP 1.46, leading one
to believe he benefited from good run support. Still, he began 1999 in
the Twins' bullpen, and became a member of the starting rotation for most of
May and June. In all, he made twelve starts and seventeen relief
appearances, going 1-7, 6.54 with a 1.85 WHIP. He was relatively effective
as a reliever, with a 3.55 ERA and a 1.46 WHIP, but was disastrous as a
starter. Oddly, he was much more effective against lefties:
right-handers hit him at a .363/.419/.606 clip that year. 1999 would be
Perkins' only year in the majors; after an awful 2000 at AAA Salt Lake the
Twins let him go. He signed with Cleveland, but made only one start at AA
Akron before ending his career. No information about what has happened to
Dan Perkins since that time was readily available.
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