Bud Fowler (1847)
Blondie Purcell (1854)
Jerry Denny (1859)
Patsy Donovan (1865)
Jake Flowers (1902)
Buddy Myer (1904)
Lloyd Waner (1906)
Ken O'Dea (1913)
Tom Gorman (1919)
Clint Courtney (1927)
Hobie Landrith (1930)
Don Blasingame (1932)
Rick Reichardt (1943)
Rick Renick (1944)
Charles Hudson (1959)
Fieldin Culbreth (1963)
Abraham Nunez (1976)
Curtis Granderson (1981)
Stephen Drew (1983)
Brandon League (1983)
Mickey Storey (1986)
Blondie Purcell (1854)
Jerry Denny (1859)
Patsy Donovan (1865)
Jake Flowers (1902)
Buddy Myer (1904)
Lloyd Waner (1906)
Ken O'Dea (1913)
Tom Gorman (1919)
Clint Courtney (1927)
Hobie Landrith (1930)
Don Blasingame (1932)
Rick Reichardt (1943)
Rick Renick (1944)
Charles Hudson (1959)
Fieldin Culbreth (1963)
Abraham Nunez (1976)
Curtis Granderson (1981)
Stephen Drew (1983)
Brandon League (1983)
Mickey Storey (1986)
Bud Fowler was the first African-American to play professional
baseball, playing in the minors in 1878 and from 1884-1894.
Tom Gorman was a National League umpire from 1951-1977.
His son Brian is currently a major league umpire.
Fieldin Culbreth has been a major league umpire since 1993.
His full name is Fieldin Henry Culbreth III.
Mickey Storey was drafted by Minnesota in the 22nd round in
2007, but did not sign.
Infielder/outfielder Warren
Richard Renick played for the Twins from 1968-1972. Born and raised in
London, Ohio, he attende Ohio State and was signed by Minnesota as a free agent
in 1965. Renick did not show a whole lot of promise in the minors,
although he did hit 20 homers at Class A Wilson in 1967. He was hitting
.247 with ten homers at AAA Denver in 1968 when he was called up in mid-July to
try to fill a void at shortstop. Renick held the starting shortstop job
for about a month, but when he hit no better than the others the Twins had
tried he went to the bench. Renick stuck in the majors, though, staying
with Minnesota for the next four full seasons. He was used primarily at
third base and left field the rest of his time in the big leagues. Renick
never got 200 at-bats in a season, never batted higher than .245, and never hit
more than seven home runs in a season. After the 1972 season, Renick
played six years at AAA, four with the Twins and two in the Montreal
organization. As a Twin, Rick Renick hit .221/.302/.373 in 553 at-bats
over 276 games. For his last five seasons at AAA, Renick was a
player-coach. His playing career ended after the 1978 season, and he
became a coach for Kansas City from 1979-1981. He managed in AA for
Montreal from 1982-1984, and then became a major league coach for the Expos
from 1985-1986. Renick was a coach for the Twins from 1987-1990, then
managed at AAA for the White Sox from 1991-1996. Renick coached in the
majors for Pittsburgh from 1997-2000, for the Expos in 2001, and for Florida in
2002. Rick Renick appears to currently be living in retirement in
Sarasota, Florida. His son, Josh, played in the minor leagues from 2001
through 2007, spending 2001-2003 in the Twins organization. He later
became an assistant coach for Tennessee Wesleyan College and at last
report was an instructor with The K Zone, a baseball instructional facility in
Smyrna, Tennessee.
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