Hi Myers (1889)
Allan Sothoron (1893)
Rogers Hornsby (1896)
Horace Stoneham (1903)
Enos Slaughter (1916)
John Rice (1918)
Greg Kosc (1949)
Willie Upshaw (1957)
Patrick Lennon (1968)
Frank Catalanotto (1974)
Chris Carpenter (1975)
Pedro Feliz (1975)
Benj Sampson (1975)
Luis Perdomo (1984)
Allan Sothoron (1893)
Rogers Hornsby (1896)
Horace Stoneham (1903)
Enos Slaughter (1916)
John Rice (1918)
Greg Kosc (1949)
Willie Upshaw (1957)
Patrick Lennon (1968)
Frank Catalanotto (1974)
Chris Carpenter (1975)
Pedro Feliz (1975)
Benj Sampson (1975)
Luis Perdomo (1984)
Horace Stoneham was the owner of the
Giants from 1936-1976.
John Rice was an American League umpire from
1955-1973.
Greg Kosc was an American League umpire from
1976-1999.
Outfielder Patrick Orlando
Lennon was in the Twins’ minor league system for a couple of months in
1995. Born and raised in Whiteville, North Carolina, he was named North
Carolina High School Athlete of the Year in 1986 and was drafted by Seattle
with the eighth pick of the 1986 draft. His early minor league
numbers were fairly pedestrian, but in 1991 he hit .329 with 15 homers at
AAA Calgary, earning him a September call-up. Lennon was apparently
injured much of 1992, as he had only 48 at-bats in AAA and two in the
majors. He became a free agent after 1992 and signed with Colorado.
He was released in April, signed and was out of baseball until July, when he
signed with Cleveland. A free agent again after the season, he went to
Boston for 1994, was released in July of 1995, and signed with the Twins.
He hit .400 in 115 at-bats, but the Twins still let him go after the
season. He spent a month in the big leagues in with Kansas City in 1996
and was released at the end of April. Lennon signed with Oakland and
finished the season in their minor league system. He started the 1997 in
AAA with the Atheletics, but was called up in mid-May and spent most of the
rest of the season in the majors, the most big-league playing time he ever got
(116 at-bats in 56 games). Lennon signed with Anaheim for 1998, was
released in spring training, and went to Toronto, where he got 33 major league
at-bats over two seasons before being released in June of 1999. He
finished the season for the Tigers’ AAA team, was in AAA for Montreal in 2000,
split 2001 between the Yankees’ AAA team and the Mexican League, split 2002 and
2003 between AAA and independent Long Island, and was a Long Island Duck in
2004 and 2005 before his playing career finally came to an end. He played
in the minors for twenty seasons, hitting .295 in nearly six thousand at-bats,
but got only 189 at-bats in the big leagues. At last report, Patrick
Lennon was an instructor for Play Like A Pro Baseball in North Hauppauge, New
York.
Left-hander Benjamin Damon Sampson pitched
for the Twins for parts of two season from 1998-1999. He was born in Des
Moines and went to high school in Ankeny, Iowa. Minnesota drafted him in
the sixth round in 1993. He pitched well in the low minors, but less well
as he went up the ladder. In parts of four AAA seasons, totally nearly
three hundred innings, he never had an ERA below five. Despite that, he
got two shots with the Twins, which is probably more of a statement about the
Twins’ pitching in the late 1990s than anything else. He got a September
call-up in 1998 following his best AAA season, when he went 10-7, 5.14 with a
WHIP of 1.55 for Salt Lake. He made the Twins out of spring training in
1999 and was their fifth starter. That lasted for three starts, by which
time Sampson had an ERA of 15.00. He stayed in the majors most of the
season, pitching out of the bullpen except for one start in early August.
He did not pitch well in either role, and was sent to the minors on August
19. He was in the organization three more years, pitching well in Ft.
Myers in 2001 and in New Britain in 2002, but flopped again when promoted to
AAA Edmonton later in 2002. The Twins finally let him go after that
season and he signed with Colorado, for whom he had a good year at
AA Tulsa. He then went to Taiwan for 2004 and to Italy for 2005 before
retiring as a professional player. Benj Sampson’s big-league numbers, all
with Minnesota, are 4-2, 6.83 with a WHIP of 1.78 in 88.1 innings. He
appeared in 35 games, six of them starts. After retirement, he went into
the business world. From 2006 to 2008, he was an account manager for USA
ScoreTables, working with high schools in Texas to install scrolling media into
gymnasiums, arenas, and stadiums. At last report, Benj Sampson was a
national accounts specialist for Learning Through Sports, Inc., which is a
leading publisher of digital game-based learning programs for K-12, as well as
being a key figure in the company’s STAR mentors program.
Right-hander Luis M. Perdomo was with the
Twins for about two months in 2012. He was born in San Cristobal,
Dominican Republic, and was signed by Cleveland as a free agent in 2003.
He apparently spent a couple of years in the Dominican Summer League, as b-r
doesn’t give any stats for him until 2006. A reliever his entire career,
his numbers in the low minors are pretty good. Still, he did not make AA
until mid-way through the 2008 season and was traded to St. Louis in late
July. He was left unprotected that off-season and was chosen by San Francisco
in the Rule 5 draft. The Giants kept him, but put him on waivers in early
April before he had played a game for them. San Diego claimed him and
kept him in the majors almost the entire season. He did not pitch
particularly well, however, going 1-0, 4.80, 1.52 WHIP in 35 appearances (60
innings). He did pitch well in AAA in 2010, but did not pitch well when
sent there again in 2011 and was allowed to become a free agent.
Minnesota signed him and sent him to New Britain. He pitched very
well there, continued to pitch well when promoted to Rochester, and spent
nearly two months in the majors, where he did okay in seventeen innings.
In 2013, however, his luck ran out. He did very poorly in Rochester
and was released in late August. He continued pitching, however, going to
the Mexican League in 2014 and to the Atlantic League in 2015-16. The
Atlantic League season has not yet started, so it is not known if he will pitch
there again this year (the Luis Perdomo who is pitching for San Diego is a
different pitcher who does not appear to be related). As a Twin, Luis
Perdomo was 0-0, 3.18, 1.59 WHIP in fifteen appearances. It's possible
that someone might give him another chance, but it's much more likely that they
won't.
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