Herman Long (1866)
Kid Elberfeld (1875)
Jake Stahl (1879)
Claude Hendrix (1889)
Ben Cantwell (1902)
Pete Quesada (1904)
Roxie Lawson (1906)
Bill Deegan (1935)
John Stephenson (1941)
Jeff Bittiger (1962)
Mark Leiter (1963)
Doug Strange (1964)
Ricardo Rincon (1970)
Kevin Ohme (1971)
Steve Pearce (1983)
Hunter Pence (1983)
Kid Elberfeld (1875)
Jake Stahl (1879)
Claude Hendrix (1889)
Ben Cantwell (1902)
Pete Quesada (1904)
Roxie Lawson (1906)
Bill Deegan (1935)
John Stephenson (1941)
Jeff Bittiger (1962)
Mark Leiter (1963)
Doug Strange (1964)
Ricardo Rincon (1970)
Kevin Ohme (1971)
Steve Pearce (1983)
Hunter Pence (1983)
Air Force General Pete
Quesada was one of the original owners of the expansion Washington Senators.
He also was the first head of the Federal Aviation Administration.
Bill Deegan was an
American League umpire from 1971-1980.
Right-hander Jeffrey Scott
Bittiger pitched in three games for the Twins in 1987. He was born in Jersey
City and went to high school in Seacaucus, New Jersey. Bittiger was drafted by
the Mets in the seventh round in 1980. His minor league numbers were fairly
solid–his best year was 1982 with AA Jackson, when he went 12-5, 2.96 with a
WHIP of 1.22 and 190 strikeouts in 164 innings. He was promoted to AAA in 1983
and spent three seasons at AAA Tidewater, where his numbers may not have been
eye-popping but were not too bad, either. The Mets traded Bittiger to
Philadelphia prior to the 1986 season. He won 13 games at AAA and pitched well
enough to get a September call-up, but the Phillies gave up on him and released
him after the season. He signed with Atlanta, was released at the end of spring
training, and signed with Minnesota in mid-April of 1987. He spent most of the
season at AAA, but was called up in September and started a game during the
Twins’ stretch run, defeating the White Sox and giving up only a run on six
hits in seven innings. He then made two poor relief appearances, however, and was
released after the season. As a Twin, Jeff Bittiger was 1-0, 5.40, giving up
five runs on eleven hits in 8.1 innings. His one good start must have impressed
Chicago, however, as the White Sox signed him for 1988. Bittiger got the most
big-league playing time of his career that season; after seven excellent starts
at AAA, he came up to Chicago in mid-May and stayed the rest of the season. He
was mostly used in relief, although he made occasional starts. He was
unexceptional, but decent enough for the White Sox to keep him in AAA for 1989.
He was in AAA almost all season, making only two appearances in the majors but
having another fine season at AAA. The White Sox traded him to the Dodgers
after the season. He moved on to the Indians organization for 1991, the
Athletics’ system for 1992, and the Royals’ chain for 1993, not doing too badly
but never getting another chance in the majors. He played in the Northern
League in 1994, went back to the Oakland organization for 1995, and then played
for the Fargo-Moorhead Red Hawks in the Northern League from 1996-2002. Jeff
Bittiger is a scout for the Oakland Athletics. He is also a player personnel
consultant for the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks, as well as being on the staff of
the Lehigh Valley Baseball Academy. His son was a shortstop for Fairleigh
Dickinson University.
Left-hander Kevin Arthur
Ohme was drafted by the Twins, but did not play for them. Born in Palm Beach,
Florida, he was drafted by Minnesota in the ninth round in 1993. He was in the
Twins’ farm system for seven seasons, used mostly in relief, although he made
11 starts for AA Hardware City in 1995. He pretty much topped out at AA,
posting an ERA of 3.85 in two seasons there. He had three seasons for AAA Salt
Lake, with an ERA over five in the first two. Even the third season, 1999, when
his ERA was 3.83, was deceiving, as he had a WHIP of 1.52 that year. The Twins
let him go after 1999 and he went to Japan for two years, playing for the
Nippon Ham Fighters. He came back to the United States in 2002 and signed with
St. Louis. Ohme had two undistinguished years at AAA Memphis, but in 2003 he
appeared in two major league games for the Cardinals, giving up no runs on
three hits in 4.1 innings. The Cardinals did not re-sign him after that season,
but he went to spring training with the Angels for 2004. That spring, he
injured his elbow and needed Tommy John surgery. It did not work out, and Kevin
Ohme’s playing career ended. He is one of the few players to retire with a
major league ERA of 0.00. He also got a hit in his only major league at-bat,
giving him a lifetime average of 1.000. Kevin Ohme is currently the Minister of
Recreation for the First Baptist Church of Brandon, Florida. He also coaches
youth baseball.
Outfielder/first baseman
Steven Wayne Pearce did not play for the Twins, but went to spring training
with them in 2012. Born and raised in Lakeland, Florida, he attended
Indian River Community College in Fort Pierce, Florida, then went to the
University of South Carolina. He was drafted by Pittsburgh in the eighth
round in 2005. He hit well in the low minors. He started 2007 in
Class A, then went to AA, then to AAA, and finished the year in the majors as a
September call-up, hitting .294. He shuttled back and forth between AAA
and the majors for the rest of his time with the Pirates, playing in 185 major
league games over five seasons. He was mostly a first baseman in the
minors, but played mostly outfield for Pittsburgh. He hit fairly well in
AAA, but was never put into a major league lineup regularly to show what he
could do. A free agent after the 2011 season, he signed with Minnesota
for 2012, but was released in late March. That started an eventful year
for him: he signed with the Yankees, was sold to Baltimore in early June,
was selected off waivers by Houston in late July, was sold to the Yankees in
late August, and was selected off waivers by Baltimore again in late September.
He remained with Baltimore in 2013 and got almost a full season in the
majors, although that full season consisted of 119 at-bats. He actually
did fairly well, hitting .261 with an OPS of .782. At that time, we
wrote, "One wishes he had gotten a chance to show what he could do in the
majors as a regular, but he's thirty-one now, so the chances are that won't
happen." Well, he wasn't quite a regular in 2014, but he played in
102 games, and he showed us what he could do, hitting .293 with 21 homers and
an OPS of .930. He was essentially a utility player in 2015, starting
games in left field, right field, first base, second base, and DH. He
could not repeat his 2015 success, batting only .218 with 15 homers and an OPS
of .711. A free agent after the season, he signed with Tampa Bay and was
having a fine season as a part-time player for them when he was traded to Baltimore
on August 1. He did little for the Orioles in limited playing time and
was again a free agent. He signed with the Blue Jays and has started four
of their six games at this writing. He turns thirty-four today.
What we said last year still applies: A slump could probably end
his career at any time, but it's also possible that he'll be around for a few
more years yet.
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