Jack Herbert (1877)
Mysterious Walker (1894)
Bill McGowan (1896)
Shanty Hogan (1906)
Tommy Davis (1939)
Manny Sanguillen (1944)
Al Fitzmorris (1946)
Bill Plummer (1947)
Fernando Arroyo (1952)
Luis Leal (1957)
Shawon Dunston (1963)
Tim McIntosh (1965)
Cristian Guzman (1978)
Aaron Hill (1982)
Mysterious Walker (1894)
Bill McGowan (1896)
Shanty Hogan (1906)
Tommy Davis (1939)
Manny Sanguillen (1944)
Al Fitzmorris (1946)
Bill Plummer (1947)
Fernando Arroyo (1952)
Luis Leal (1957)
Shawon Dunston (1963)
Tim McIntosh (1965)
Cristian Guzman (1978)
Aaron Hill (1982)
Jack Herbert was a minor league manager in the early
1900s. Among the teams he managed were the Pekin Celestials, the Cedar
Rapids Rabbits, and the Cairo Egyptians.
Bill McGowan was an American League umpire from 1925-1954.
He worked the first all-star game and worked eight World Series.
Right-hander Fernando
Arroyo pitched for the Twins from 1980-1982. Born and raised in
Sacramento, he was drafted by the Tigers in the tenth round in 1970. He
pitched very well in the low minors, stumbled in his first year at AAA in 1974,
but had a 2.62 ERA and 1.16 WHIP there in 11 starts in 1975 when he was
promoted to Detroit in late June. He didn't do so badly for a
23-year-old: 2-1, 4.56 in 53.1 innings, mostly in relief. Back in
AAA in 1976, he had a poor year, but he still made the Tigers out of spring
training in 1977 and was in the starting rotation by mid-May. He was
8-18, but had an ERA of 4.17 and a WHIP of 1.33. Unfortunately, no one
could see past the eighteen losses, and Arroyo was in AAA for most of 1978 and
1979. He was not particularly good there in 1978, but had a strong year
in 1979. After the 1979 season, though, Arroyo was traded to Minnesota
for Jeff Holly. He made eight starts in AAA Toledo and went 6-1, 1.62,
resulting in a promotion to the Twins in early June. He started in the
bullpen, but was in the starting rotation in July and August. He did
fairly well there, going 4-5, 4.39 as a starter, but was removed from the
rotation in September. He was in the rotation for almost all of 1981 and
again wasn't too bad, going 7-10, 3.93 with a 1.39 WHIP. Arroyo began
1982 in the bullpen, but did not pitch well there, was in the minors by the
first of May, and was released in mid-May. As a Twin, Fernando Arroyo
went 13-17, 4.30 in 234.1 innings over fifty games, thirty of them
starts. Oakland signed him, but he did not pitch well there either and
was released again in late July. The White Sox picked up Arroyo a couple
days later. He was in AAA with them through 1984. He was sold to
Yucatan in the Mexican League after the season, and pitched for them in
1985. He hooked on with Oakland for 1986, making one last appearance in
the majors before his playing career ended. After that, Fernando Arroyo
was a minor league manager and pitching coach for many years. In 2008,
he was the pitching coach of the Lotte Giants of the Korean League, but he
appears to have held that position for only one season. In 2010, Fernando
Arroyo was inducted into the Mexican American Hall of Fame. At last
report, he was living in Vero Beach, Florida and was the president and CEO of
ARMTRAK, which markets a teaching aid to show young baseball and softball
players the proper throwing angle to improve command and to help avoid arm
injury and which Arroyo is credited with inventing.
Utility player Timothy Allen McIntosh did not play for the
Twins, but was in their farm system in 1994. Born and raised in
Minnetonka, Minnesota, he attended the University of Minnesota and was drafted
by Milwaukee in the third round in 1986. Initially an outfielder, he
converted to catching in 1987. He hit .302 with 20 home runs at Class A Beloit
in 1987, but was still in Class A in 1988, presumably to work on catching
skills. He continued to produce good averages with double-digit home run
power throughout his time in the minors, reaching AA in 1989 and AAA in
1990. He made his major league debut in 1990 as well, getting five
at-bats as a September call-up. He got another September call-up in 1991,
getting eleven at-bats this time, and started 1992 in the majors. He was
in the majors most of the season, but was seldom used, catching fourteen games,
playing the outfield in ten, and playing first base in seven. He started
1993 with the Brewers as well, but had only one at-bat when he was put on
waivers and claimed by Montreal in mid-April. He stuck with the Expos
until late July, again as a seldom-used reserve, then finished the year in the
minors. He was a free agent after the season and signed with Minnesota
for 1994. He had a really good year at AAA Salt Lake, batting .338 with
18 homers and an OPS of .914, but despite the fact that the Twins catchers that
year were Matt Walbeck and Derek Parks, he never got a call-up to the majors.
He was sold to the Nippon Ham Fighters for 1995, then came back to play
in the Yankees’ system in 1996. He got three more at-bats in the majors
that season, which would prove to be his big league swan song. He hung
around for a few more years, playing in AAA for the Cubs in 1997 and for
independent Sacramento in 1999, then was done for good. He has remained
in baseball since. Most of those years have been as a scout, which is his
current position with the Los Angeles Angels. His wife Laura has a
television show, "Bringing It Home with Laura McIntosh".
For his career, Tim McIntosh hit .179/.211/.274 in 117 at-bats over five major
league seasons. He appeared in 71 major league games, starting only
twenty.
Shortstop Cristian Guzman was with the Twins from
1999-2004. Guzman was born and raised in Santo Domingo, Dominican
Republic, he signed with the Yankees as a free agent in 1994. He did not
enter American organized baseball until 1996. Guzman was in the low
minors for the Yankees for two years and was okay, but nothing special.
In February of 1998, Guzman was traded to Minnesota along with Brian Buchanan,
Eric Milton, Danny Mota, and cash for Chuck Knoblauch. He spent one
year at AA New Britain, where he was again decent but nothing special, and then
was named the Twins starting shortstop in 1999, a position he held through
2004. He was clearly not ready that year--at age 21, he hit .226 with an
OPS of .543. He improved from there, of course; Guzman's best season as a
Twin was 2001, when he hit .302, made the all-star team, and finished 16th in
MVP voting. He led the league in triples three times as a Twin. In
his six years with Minnesota, Guzman hit .266/.303/.382 with 61 triples and 102
stolen bases. Guzman became a free agent after the 2004 season and signed
with Washington. He had a poor year in 2005 and missed all of 2006 and
part of 2007 with injuries. He played well for the Nationals after that,
hitting .305 from 2007 on and making another all-star team in 2008.
He was having another solid season in 2010 when he was traded to Texas at the
July deadline. He played poorly in Texas, hitting just .152 and battling
injuries, and became a free agent. He sat out the 2011 season, signed
with Cleveland for 2012, but had trouble staying healthy and was released
during spring training, ending his playing career. At last report,
Cristian Guzman was living in New Jersey.
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