Hal
Carlson (1892)
Del Webb (1899)
Cool Papa Bell (1903)
Ace Parker (1912)
Billy Hoeft (1932)
Ozzie Virgil (1932)
Dan Monzon (1946)
Carlos May (1948)
Pascual Perez (1957)
Greg Mathews (1962)
Jose Guillen (1976)
Carlos Pena (1978)
Del Webb (1899)
Cool Papa Bell (1903)
Ace Parker (1912)
Billy Hoeft (1932)
Ozzie Virgil (1932)
Dan Monzon (1946)
Carlos May (1948)
Pascual Perez (1957)
Greg Mathews (1962)
Jose Guillen (1976)
Carlos Pena (1978)
Del Webb was an owner of the New York Yankees from 1945-1964.
As you probably know, James "Cool Papa" Bell was a
star in the Negro Leagues. It was said that he was so fast he could turn
out the light and be in bed before the room got dark.
Ace Parker is a member of both the College Football and Pro
Football Hall of Fame. He was an infielder for the Philadelphia Athletics
in 1937-1938.
Left-hander Greg Mathews was drafted by Minnesota in the ninth
round of the January draft in 1982, but did not sign.
Daniel
Francisco Monzon was an infielder for the Twins for parts of the 1972 and 1973
seasons. He was born and raised in the Bronx, attended Buena Vista
University in Storm Lake, Iowa, and was drafted by Minnesota in the second
round of the June Secondary draft in 1967. He was in Class A for three
seasons, hitting very well in his first one and poorly in his next two.
He never did hit for power, but his average came up when he went to AA in 1970,
and he hit .305 in AAA Portland in 1971. He had played some outfield as
well as infield, and his versatility and improved batting got him a job as a
utility player on the Twins. He played two full seasons in Minnesota,
1972-1973, and was very much a reserve, playing in 93 games but batting only
131 times. He hit .244/.342/.275. He began 1974 in AAA with the
Twins and was traded to Montreal for Earl Stephenson in late May. Monzon
toiled in the minors for four more seasons, but never made it back to the
majors. He was in AAA for the Expos through 1975, then moved on to
the Houston organization, playing in AAA for them through 1977. He
did not hit much in any of those years, and after he hit .199 in 1977 his
playing career came to an end. He stayed in baseball, managing in the
minors through 1982 and then going into scouting. He was the Latin
American scouting coordinator for the Boston Red Sox when he passed away from
injuries resulting from an automobile accident on January 21, 1996 in Santo
Domingo, Dominican Republic.
No comments:
Post a Comment