Germany Smith (1863)
Tommy Dowd (1869)
Charlie Hemphill (1876)
Charlie Smith (1880)
Dave Bancroft (1891)
Roy Hofheinz (1912)
Preston Gomez (1923)
Tom Hutton (1946)
Milt Wilcox (1950)
Doug Clarey (1954)
Floyd Chiffer (1956)
Don Mattingly (1961)
Greg Brummett (1967)
Dan Smith (1969)
Todd Hollandsworth (1973)
Tommy Dowd (1869)
Charlie Hemphill (1876)
Charlie Smith (1880)
Dave Bancroft (1891)
Roy Hofheinz (1912)
Preston Gomez (1923)
Tom Hutton (1946)
Milt Wilcox (1950)
Doug Clarey (1954)
Floyd Chiffer (1956)
Don Mattingly (1961)
Greg Brummett (1967)
Dan Smith (1969)
Todd Hollandsworth (1973)
Judge Roy Hofheinz was the leader of a group
that brought an expansion team to Houston.
Dan Smith was drafted by Minnesota in the
twenty-second round in 1987, but did not sign.
Second baseman Douglas
William Clarey was drafted by the Twins, although he never played for
them. Born in Los Angeles, Minnesota selected Clarey in the sixth round
of the 1972 draft. He was in the Twins’ organization for three years,
never rising higher than Class A and never hitting more than .237. After
the 1974 season, Clarey was chosen by St. Louis in the minor league
draft. He didn’t hit much in the Cardinals’ organization, either, but in
1976 he was brought up to the majors twice, totalling a little over three
weeks. He made his major league debut on his birthday, one of thirty-six
players to have done so. He never started a game, going 1-for-4 in
nine games as a reserve. His hit, though, was a game-winning pinch-hit
sixteenth-inning homer. Late in spring training of 1977, he was traded to
the Mets for Benny Ayala. He split that season between the Mets and
Brewers organizations, and in 1978 he was in AA for Baltimore. He hit 19
home runs that season and was still only 24, but apparently that did not make
much of an impression on anyone, because his playing career came to an end
after that season. At last report, Doug Clarey was living in Los Angeles.
He went into real estate for a while, then opened a gourmet pizza
restaurant , Cheech's Pizza, which is located less than three miles from Dodger
Stadium.
Right-hander Floyd John Chiffer did not play
for the Twins, but he was in their minor league system in 1985. He was
born in Glen Cove, New York, went to high school in Lakewood, California,
attended UCLA, and was drafted by San Diego in the fifth round in 1978.
He was a starter his first season in the minors, then switched to the bullpen.
He struggled until 1980, when he went 4-5, 2.18, 1.11 WHIP with nine saves in
62 innings (39 appearances) for AA Amarillo. He followed that up with a
strong 1981 in AAA Hawaii and was in the big leagues the following
season. He had a solid 1982, going 4-3, 2.95, 1.35 WHIP with four saves
in 79.1 innings (51 appearances). He started 1983 in the majors and does
not seem to have been pitching that badly, but he apparently got into the
doghouse, because he was sent back to AAA in mid-May, not returning until September.
He got about two more months in the majors in 1984, then was traded to
Minnesota for Ray Smith after the season. He went 9-7, 2.49 with a 1.28
WHIP in Rochester, pitching 79.2 innings (51 appearances), but despite the fact
that the Twins were using people like Curt Wardle and Rick Lysander in their
bullpen, he never got a call to the majors. He started 1986 in AAA for
Montreal but soon went to the Braves’ organization, where he stayed through
1987. His playing career ended after that season. For his major
league career, he was 5-5, 4.02, 1.48 WHIP in 130 innings (81
appearances). After that, Floyd Chiffer went into the pharmaceuticals
industry as a salesman. At last report, he was the ophthalmic
regional sales manager for Bausch & Lomb in the Los Angeles area.
Right-hander Gregory Scott Brummett made five
starts for the Twins in 1993. He was born in Wichita and attended Wichita
State, where his team won the College World Series and he was named tournament
MVP in 1989. San Francisco drafted him in the eleventh round in
1989. He pitched well in the low minors and in 1993 was jumped from Class
A to AAA. He pitched well in AAA, too, and had two stints with the Giants
that year, totalling a little over a month. On September 1 of that
season, Brummett became the player who was named later in a trade that also
brought Andres Duncan and Aaron Fultz to Minnesota for Jim DeShaies. The
Twins gave Brummett five September starts, in which he went 2-1, 5.74 with a
WHIP of 1.65. He began 1994 in AAA Salt Lake, but did not pitch very well
and moved on to Boston’s AAA team at mid-season. He pitched for Tyler in
the independent Texas-Louisiana League in 1996 and also played in the Mexican
League that season, but then his playing career came to an end. Greg Brummett
was inducted into the Wichita State Hall of Fame in 1995 and was inducted into
the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame in 2010. After his playing career ended
he went into coaching, spending four years as the pitching coach of North
Carolina-Charlotte and one year coaching at the Air Force Academy. Greg
Brummett was head baseball coach at Cloud County Community College in
Concordia, Kansas from 2004-2016. His son, Garrett, pitched in college
for Emporia State. No information about what Greg Brummett has done in
the last year was readily available.
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