Alexander Cartwright
(1820)
Cap Anson (1852)
Tom Needham (1879)
Jake Daubert (1884)
Buzz Arlitt (1912)
Solly Hemus (1923)
Tsutomu Wakamatsu (1947)
Denny Walling (1954)
Craig Worthington (1965)
Marquis Grissom (1967)
Gary Bennett (1972)
Ryan Raburn (1981)
Jed Lowrie (1984)
Deolis Guerra (1989)
Cap Anson (1852)
Tom Needham (1879)
Jake Daubert (1884)
Buzz Arlitt (1912)
Solly Hemus (1923)
Tsutomu Wakamatsu (1947)
Denny Walling (1954)
Craig Worthington (1965)
Marquis Grissom (1967)
Gary Bennett (1972)
Ryan Raburn (1981)
Jed Lowrie (1984)
Deolis Guerra (1989)
Alexander Cartwright was instrumental in developing the rules
for the game of baseball.
Buzz Arlitt was a star in the low minors from 1934-1941, and
probably would have been for several more years had World War II not
intervened. He had a career average of .319 with a slugging average of
.480, but never played above Class C.
Tsutomu Wakamatsu was a star in Japan from 1971-1989, making the
all-star team eleven times. His career average of .319 is second to Leron
Lee on the all-time list of players with at least four thousand at-bats.
Right-hander Deolis
Alexander Guerra did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system for
several years. He was born in San Felix, Bolivar, Venezuela and signed
with the Mets as a free agent in 2005 at the age of sixteen. He had a
good year in low A in 2006 but a poor year in high A in 2007. Following that
season, he was traded to the Twins along with Carlos Gomez, Philip Humber, and
Kevin Mulvey for Johan Santana. He spent several years in the Twins
system not doing much. He never posted an ERA under four in any season
and was generally over five. The Twins promoted him to AA in 2009 and
that's pretty much where he stayed through 2012. He was a starter through
2010, then moved to the bullpen. He missed most of 2013 due to an injury,
finally got a full season in AAA in 2014, and then became a free agent, signing
with Pittsburgh. Amazingly, he had a tremendous year in the bullpen for
AAA Indianapolis, going 2-1, 4 saves, 1.23 ERA, 0.79 WHIP in 36,2 innings (25
appearances). The Pirates decided he'd finally found something and
promoted him to the majors in late June. He started out well, throwing
seven shutout innings over four appearances, but got progressively worse and
was sent down after a July 30 debacle in which he gave up six runs in an inning
and a third. That outing made his numbers look a lot worse than they
would otherwise. He was chosen by the Angels in the rule 5 draft and had
a fine 2016 season for them, going 3-0, 3.21, 1.11 WHIP. He started 2017
in AAA for some reason but came up quickly and has made one appearance for the
Angels at this writing. He's twenty-eight today. It's hard to know
what to make of him, but his 2016 should get him a few more chances to stick in
the big leagues.
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