Al Reach (1840)
Lip Pike (1845)
Tip O’Neill (1858)
Joe Judge (1894)
Martin Dihigo (1905)
Lindsey Nelson (1919)
Bill Sharman (1926)
Jim Marshall (1931)
W. P. Kinsella (1935)
Glenn Borgmann (1950)
John Montefusco (1950)
Bob Knepper (1954)
Kerwin Danley (1961)
Bill Haselman (1966)
Dave Hollins (1966)
Joey Eischen (1970)
Todd Walker (1973)
Miguel Tejada (1974)
Chris Young (1979)
Scott Hairston (1980)
Jason Kubel (1982)
Pat Dean (1989)
Neil Ramirez (1989)
Lip Pike (1845)
Tip O’Neill (1858)
Joe Judge (1894)
Martin Dihigo (1905)
Lindsey Nelson (1919)
Bill Sharman (1926)
Jim Marshall (1931)
W. P. Kinsella (1935)
Glenn Borgmann (1950)
John Montefusco (1950)
Bob Knepper (1954)
Kerwin Danley (1961)
Bill Haselman (1966)
Dave Hollins (1966)
Joey Eischen (1970)
Todd Walker (1973)
Miguel Tejada (1974)
Chris Young (1979)
Scott Hairston (1980)
Jason Kubel (1982)
Pat Dean (1989)
Neil Ramirez (1989)
Al Reach played major league baseball from
1871-1875. He later founded the A. J. Reach Company, which was the
largest sporting goods company in the United States at one time (it eventually
merged with Spalding). This company also published the Reach Guide, an
influential baseball publication, from 1883-1927.
Martin Dihigo was a star in the Negro
Leagues, winning 250 games as a pitcher and also winning two batting titles.
Lindsey Nelson was one of the most famous
broadcasters in the country at one time. He broadcast New York Mets games
from 1962-1978 and San Francisco Giants games from 1979-1981.
Basketball Hall of Famer Bill Sharman was a
minor league outfielder from 1950-1953 and in 1955, reaching AAA with St. Paul.
W. P. Kinsella has written several books on
baseball, most notably "Shoeless Joe" the book on which the movie
"Field of Dreams" was based.
Kerwin Danley has been a major league umpire
since 1998.
Catcher Glenn Dennis
Borgmann played in part or all of eight seasons for the Twins, from
1972-1979. He was born in Paterson, New Jersey and attended the
University of South Alabama. Minnesota drafted him in the first round of
the June Secondary draft in 1971. He advanced rapidly through the minors,
and after hitting .336 with 12 homers at AAA Tacoma in 1972, he got his first
taste of the majors, spending the second half of the 1972 as the Twins’ regular
catcher. He did not hit in the majors, though, and was back in Tacoma for
most of 1973, getting only a September call-up. Borgmann was back as the
regular catcher in 1974-1975, hitting .252 in the former year but only .207 in
the latter. After that, a combination of injuries and the emergence of
Butch Wynegar as the Twins’ catcher limited Borgmann’s playing time. He
caught in only 118 games total over the next four seasons. Borgmann
became a free agent after the 1979 season and signed with the White Sox.
He was in AAA most of the year, coming up to Chicago for the last two
months. In 1981, Borgmann signed with Cleveland, but he did not get back
to the major leagues and his playing career ended after that season.
After leaving baseball, he worked in the auto parts industry. At last report,
Glenn Borgmann had returned to his native New Jersey and was working for the
Meadowlands race track.
Infielder David Michael Hollins was with the
Twins for most of the 1996 season. He was born in Buffalo and attended
the University of South Carolina. Hollins was drafted by San Diego in the
sixth round in 1987. He was in the Padres’ organization for three
seasons, hitting for a good average with moderate power. He advanced a
level at a time, but was left unprotected after the 1989 campaign and was taken
by Philadelphia in the Rule 5 draft. He was with the Phillies all of the
1990 season but played sporadically and not very well, hitting .184. He
started 1991 in Philadelphia, still playing sparingly, and was sent down in
late April to get some playing time. He came back in mid-July and this
time was ready to stay a while. He was the regular third baseman the rest
of the way and hit .298. He never hit that high in a full season, but he
stayed in the .270s as a Phillie, and developed power, hitting 27 home runs in
1992 before settling in consistently in the teens for homers. Hollins
moved to first base in 1995 to make room for Charlie Hayes and was traded to
Boston in late July. He played in only five games for the Red Sox before
missing the rest of the season with an injury. A free agent after the
season, Hollins signed with Minnesota and went back to third base. He was
decent but unspectacular as a Twin, hitting .242/.364/.396 in 422
at-bats. Hollins was traded to Seattle in late August for a player to be
named later (David Arias, n/k/a David Ortiz, a true player to be named
later). He became a free agent after the season and moved to Anaheim,
where he stayed for two seasons. The first was a good one, the second not
so much, and he was traded to Toronto late in spring training of 1999. He
got off to a slow start and was released by the Blue Jays in late June.
The White Sox signed him, but kept him in AAA the rest of the season. In
2000, Hollins signed with Tampa Bay in January, was released in May, signed with
Baltimore in July, was released in August, and signed the same day with
Cleveland. All of that season was spent in the minors as was all but two
games of 2001. He signed back with Philadelphia in 2002 and was in AAA
with them most of the next two years, getting 17 at-bats in the majors.
His playing career ended after the 2003 campaign. He has remained in
baseball, serving as a coach at Binghamton in 2005 before becoming a scout
for the Phillies. He is also a spokesman for Chronic Care Solutions, a
diabetes medical supply company based in Clearwater, Florida. Dave
Hollins is a member of the Greater Buffalo Sports Hall of Fame.
His son, also named Dave but going by the nickname Bubba, is currently
playing for St. Bonaventure.
Infielder Todd Arthur Walker played for the
Twins in parts of five seasons from 1996-2000. He was born in
Bakersfield, California, went to high school in Bossier City, Louisiana, and
then attended LSU. He was drafted by the Twins with the 8th pick of the
1994 draft. He hit very well in the minors, with his best year coming in
1996 when he hit .339 with 28 homers for AAA Salt Lake, getting called up at
the end of August. He started 1997 as the Twins’ starting third baseman,
but was sent down in late May after hitting .194. He came back in late
August, played well in September, and replaced Chuck Knoblauch as the Twins’
second baseman in 1998. He had a strong season, hitting .316 with 12
homers. He was decent, although not as good, in 1999. His defense
was considered less than adequate, as was his attitude, and when he got off to
a slow start in 2000 he was sent back to AAA and then traded to Colorado with
Butch Huskey for Todd Sears and cash. As a Twin, he hit .285/.341/.413 in
1,374 at-bats. Walker resurrected his career in Colorado, batting over
.300 in about a year, but was traded again in mid-season, this time to
Cincinnati. He continued to hit, but again did not stay long, this time
becoming a free agent and signing with the Cubs prior to the 2004 season.
He was a Cub for two and a half years, continued to hit decently, and was
traded to San Diego in late July. The Padres released him in late March
of 2007. Walker signed with Oakland and didn’t hit badly for a bench
player, but he was released in mid-May, ending his playing career. Todd
Walker was inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame in July of 2009, was
named to the College World Series legends team in 2010, and was inducted into
the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in 2011. He also had his uniform number
retired at LSU. He was the head baseball coach at Calvary Baptist
Academy, a private high school in Shreveport, Louisiana, from 2012-2015.
At last report, he was a baseball analyst for the SEC network.
Outfielder/DH Jason James Kubel has been with
the Twins in 2004, from 2006-2011, and in 2014. He was born in Belle
Fourche, South Dakota, attended high school in Palmdale, California, and was
drafted by Minnesota in the twelfth round in 2000. He hit very well
throughout the minors. His best year was 2004, when he started by hitting
.377 with 6 homers in 138 at-bats in New Britain and followed that by hitting
.343 with 16 homers in 350 at-bats in Rochester. He made his major league
debut on August 31 of that year and continued to hit, batting .300 with two
home runs in 60 at-bats. Unfortunately, he then tore up his knee in the
Arizona Fall League. Kubel missed all of 2005, started 2006 in the
majors, was sent back to AAA for a month, and all-in-all had a poor year,
leading some to believe he might not make it back. He proved those people
wrong in 2007 and was a good major league player through 2012. 2009 was
his best so far, as he hit .300 with 28 home runs and finished 24th in MVP
voting. He had a down year in 2010, but still hit 21 homers and drove in
92 runs. He hoped to rebound in 2011, but battled injuries and played in
only 99 games. He became a free agent after the season and signed with
Arizona, for whom he had a solid season in 2012. He was hampered by
injuries again in 2013, had a poor season, and was traded at the August
deadline to Cleveland, for whom he continued to play poorly. A free agent
after the season, he signed with Minnesota for 2014. Twins fans hoped it
would be a successful reunion, but it was not to be and he was released in
mid-June, ending his playing career. It was a solid career, though:
as a Twin, Jason Kubel hit .269/.334/.449 with 105 home runs in 798
games. His brother-in-law, Michael Tonkin, is currently in the Twins'
organization. At last report, Jason Kubel was living in southern
California and was helping coach youth baseball.
Left-hander Patrick Michael Dean made his
debut with the Twins in 2016. He was born in Waterbury, Connecticut, went
to high school in Naugatuck, Connecticut, attended Boston College, and was
drafted by Minnesota in the third round in 2010. He struggled when
promoted to high-A in 2011 and had a rather undistinguished year there in 2012
as well. He didn't do much in AA in 2013 or 2014 either. His
numbers would indicate that he had no business being promoted to AAA, but he
was, and when he got there something clicked. He went 12-11, 2.82, 1.15
WHIP in 2015 and was 1-1, 3.00, 1.11 WHIP there in 2016 when he was called up
to the Twins in May. It did not go well for him. He made 19 appearances,
nine of them starts, and went 1-6, 6.28. He went to Korea for 2017 and is
pitching well there, going 4-2, 2.95 in his first nine starts. He turns
twenty-eight today. It seems unlikely that we'll see him in a big league
uniform, but he's still pitching and he's left-handed, so you never know.
Stranger things have happened.
Right-hander Neil Andrew Ramirez made eight
appearances for the Twins in 2016. Born and raised in Virginia Beach,
Virginia, he was drafted by Texas in the first round in 2007. He was in
Class A through 2010, not really doing very much, but he made six AA starts in
2011, did pretty well, and was promoted to AAA, where he did okay the rest of
the season. He had a poor 2012 but did well in 2013 back in AA. He went
to the Cubs as the player to be named later in the deal that sent ex-Twin Matt
Garza to Texas. He was promoted to the majors in late April of 2014 and
had an outstanding season in the Cubs bullpen, going 3-3, 1.44, 1.05 WHIP.
He missed half of the 2015 season due to shoulder injuries, but pitched
pretty well when healthy. It's been all downhill since then, though.
He was waived by the Cubs in late May of 2016, claimed by Milwaukee,
waived again two weeks later, and claimed by the Twins. He did okay in
his first five appearances for the Twins, but his last three were awful and he
finished the season in Rochester. As a Twin, he was 0-0, 6.14, 1.71 WHIP
in 14.2 innings. He signed with the Giants for 2017, was waived in early
May, was claimed by Toronto, was released ten days later, and signed with the
Mets two days after that, for whom he currently pitches. From 2014-2015
Neil Ramirez had an ERA or 1.87 and a WHIP of 1.11. Since then his ERA is
7.39 and his WHIP is 1.78. One suspects it's the shoulder, but whatever
the reason, he is clearly not the same pitcher he once was. He turns
twenty-eight today. We wish him well, but it seems likely he is running
out of chances.
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