Fred Pfeffer (1860)
Oscar Stanage (1883)
Joe Fitzgerald (1897)
Charlie Root (1899)
Sammy Baugh (1914)
Hank Sauer (1917)
Pete Reiser (1919)
Vic Voltaggio (1941)
Cito Gaston (1944)
Kurt Russell (1951)
Tim Lollar (1956)
Frank Wren (1958)
Danny Ainge (1959)
John Smiley (1965)
Dan Masteller (1968)
Bill Mueller (1971)
Raul Chavez (1973)
Scott Downs (1976)
Robb Quinlan (1977)
Oscar Stanage (1883)
Joe Fitzgerald (1897)
Charlie Root (1899)
Sammy Baugh (1914)
Hank Sauer (1917)
Pete Reiser (1919)
Vic Voltaggio (1941)
Cito Gaston (1944)
Kurt Russell (1951)
Tim Lollar (1956)
Frank Wren (1958)
Danny Ainge (1959)
John Smiley (1965)
Dan Masteller (1968)
Bill Mueller (1971)
Raul Chavez (1973)
Scott Downs (1976)
Robb Quinlan (1977)
Joe Fitzgerald had a long association with the
Minnesota/Washington franchise, serving as bullpen catcher from 1945-1947,
coach from 1948-1956, and scout from 1957 until he passed away in 1967.
Hall of Fame quarterback Sammy Baugh was an infielder in the
minors for St. Louis in 1938, batting .200 in the American Association and the
International League.
Vic Voltaggio was an American League umpire from 1997-1996.
Actor Kurt Russell spent three years in the low minors
(1971-1973), batting .292 in 356 at-bats.
Frank Wren has been the general manager of the Baltimore Orioles
and the Atlanta Braves.
NBA star Danny Ainge was a third baseman for Toronto from
1979-1981.
Left-hander John Patrick
Smiley pitched for the Twins in 1992. He was born in Phoenixville,
Pennsylvania and went to high school in Graterford, Pennsylvania. He was
drafted by Pittsburgh in the twelfth round in 1983. He struggled early in
his minor league career and was moved to the bullpen in 1986. He had a
very good year in relief, posting an ERA of 3.10 and a WHIP of 1.16 in 90
innings in Class A. That got him a September call-up, and the next year
he stayed in the majors, never going back to AA or AAA. Smiley was used in
relief in 1987 and did not do a whole lot, but he joined the starting rotation
in 1988 and stayed in a major league rotation for ten years. He was in
the Pirates' rotation through 1991. His last year with Pittsburgh was his
best, as Smiley went 20-8, 3.08 in 207.2 innings. He made his first
all-star appearance that year, finished third in Cy Young voting, and was
fourteenth in MVP balloting. In March of 1992, Smiley was traded to the
Twins for Midre Cummings and Denny Neagle. He had an excellent year for
the Twins, going 16-9, 3.21 with a 1.12 WHIP and setting a career high with 241
innings. He became a free agent after the season and signed with
Cincinnati. Smiley struggled in 1993, dealing with both injuries and
ineffectiveness. He bounced back in 1994 and had three consecutive years
with ERAs under four and WHIPs under 1.30. He made the all-star team for
the second time in 1995 He had a poor year in 1997, and an injury shortly
after his mid-season trade to Cleveland led Smiley to retire
after the 1997 season. John Smiley was never a superstar, but he was a
solid rotation starter for several years. At last report, he was living
in Collegeville, Pennsylvania.
First baseman/outfielder Dan Patrick Masteller was with the
Twins for a little over half of the 1995 season. He was born in Toledo,
attended Michigan State, and was drafted by Minnesota in the eleventh round in
1989. He did not show much power in the minors, but hit over .300 for
three consecutive years, most of which were in AAA Salt Lake. He was in
the third of those years when he was brought up to Minnesota in late June of
1995. The left- handed hitter was used almost exclusively against
right-handed pitching, sharing first base with Scott Stahoviak and also playing
a little corner outfield. Masteller played in 71 games that season,
getting 198 at-bats. He hit .237/.303/.343 with three homers and 21
RBIs. Released after the season, he was signed by Montreal and again hit
for a high average in AA, but apparently no one was impressed; he was let go in
mid-season and finished the year in the independent North Atlantic
League. 1996 was to be Masteller's last season in organized baseball.
At last report, Dan Masteller was a vice president with the Charles
Schwab Corporation in San Francisco.
Left-hander Scott Jeremy Downs did not play for the Twins, but
was in their farm system briefly in 1999. Born and raised in Louisville,
he attended the University of Kentucky and was drafted by the Cubs in the third
round in 1997. He pitched pretty well in their system for two seasons,
but in November of 1998 he was the player to be named later in the deal that
sent Mike Morgan to the Cubs. He pitched 19.2 innings in New Britain and
9.2 innings in Ft. Myers, doing poorly for the former and well for the latter,
when he was sent back to the Cubs on May 21 of 1999 along with Rick Aguilera
for Kyle Lohse and Jason Ryan. He made the Cubs starting rotation at the
start of the 2000 season, but did not do well and was traded to Montreal at the
July trading deadline for Rondell White. He made one start for the Expos
and then went down with an injury, missing the entire 2001 season. He
spent most of the next three years in the minors, making one major league start
in 2003 and 12 in 2004. After that season, he was released by the then
Washington franchise and signed with Toronto. He started the season in
the minors but made it back to the big leagues for good in mid-May of 2005 and
began a transition to the bullpen. He began pitching better immediately,
and started pitching really well as a LOOGY in 2007. He was a free
agent after the 2010 season, signed with the Angels, and continued to
pitch well. He stayed with the Angels until late July of 2013, when he
was traded to Atlanta. His numbers with the Braves were not particularly
good, but as often happens with a LOOGY, a few bad outings make his performance
look worse than it was. He started 2014 with the White Sox, but the bad
outings became more common and he was released at mid-season. He signed
with Kansas City a few days later and pitched much better the rest of the way.
He signed with Cleveland for 2015 but was released at the end of spring
training and his playing career came to an end. It was a pretty good
career, though, especially when you consider that he really didn't put things
together until he was thirty-one. No information about what Scott Downs
has done since his release was readily available.
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