Frank Snyder (1894)
Pinky Higgins (1909)
Terry Moore (1912)
George O’Donnell (1929)
Jerry Kindall (1935)
Fred Bruckbauer (1938)
Jim Holt (1944)
Gary Nolan (1948)
Terry Collins (1949)
Mark Connor (1949)
Mark Clear (1956)
Ed Nunez (1963)
John Jaha (1966)
Jeff Bagwell (1968)
Frank Thomas (1968)
Todd Hundley (1969)
Jose Berrios (1994)
Pinky Higgins (1909)
Terry Moore (1912)
George O’Donnell (1929)
Jerry Kindall (1935)
Fred Bruckbauer (1938)
Jim Holt (1944)
Gary Nolan (1948)
Terry Collins (1949)
Mark Connor (1949)
Mark Clear (1956)
Ed Nunez (1963)
John Jaha (1966)
Jeff Bagwell (1968)
Frank Thomas (1968)
Todd Hundley (1969)
Jose Berrios (1994)
Terry Collins was the manager of Houston from
1994-96, of Anaheim from 1997-99, and of the Mets from 2011 to the present.
Mark Connor pitched in the Twins’ minor
league system from 1971-1972 before he suffered a career-ending arm
injury. He has been a pitching coach for the Yankees, Arizona, Toronto,
Texas, and Baltimore. He also was the head baseball coach at the
University of Tennessee.
Right-hander George Dana
O’Donnell did not pitch for the Twins, but he was in their farm system briefly
in 1961. He was born in Winchester, Illinois and signed with the St.
Louis Browns as a free agent in 1949. His career shows how the minors
have changed over the years. He pitched well for two seasons in Class D
for the Browns, throwing 241 innings there in Appleton in 1950. He moved
to the Pittsburgh organization in 1951, winning 22 games and pitching 243
innings for Class B Waco. In 1953 he was pitching for Hollywood in the
Pacific Coast League and worked 281.1 innings. He started 36 games that
season and relieved in nine others. He began 1954 in the majors with the
Pirates, starting the year in the rotation but moving to the bullpen in
mid-June. He did much better as a reliever than as a starter, but he was
sent out in late July with a record of 3-9, 4.53 and a WHIP of 1.44.
Those would be his career numbers, as he never got back to the majors. He
stayed in baseball for several years after that, though, being used mostly as a
reliever while making occasional spot starts. He had some fine years at
AAA for Pittsburgh, regularly posting ERAs around three through 1957, but could
not get another chance. He moved on to the Dodgers’ organization in 1959
and came to the Twins in 1961. They sent him to AAA Syracuse, where he
made eight appearances and went 1-1, 6.75 in 16 innings. That brought his
playing career to an end. While his major league career doesn’t look like much,
he went 127-93 in the minors with an ERA of 3.44 and a WHIP of 1.25.
After leaving baseball, he went back to Winchester to work on the family grain
farm. He later worked as a hearing officer in the Illinois Driver’s
License Bureau, eventually becoming chief hearing officer. George
O’Donnell was retired and living in Springfield, Illinois when he passed away
on December 19, 2012 at the age of 83.
Infielder Gerald Donald Kindall was with the
Twins for most of two seasons in the mid-1960s. Born and raised in St. Paul, he
attended the University of Minnesota and was signed by the Cubs as a free agent
in 1956. He was signed as a “bonus baby”, meaning under the rules of the time
that he had to be kept in the major leagues for two years. He rarely played his
first season, getting only 55 at-bats, but was used a little more as a utility
infielder in 1957. He was clearly not ready for the big time, as he hit in the
.160s both years. He was sent to the minors for the next two years (with the
exception of six big-league at-bats in 1958), and did not hit there, either,
averaging .229 in AA and .236 in AAA. He started 1960 in AAA, but came up to
the majors in mid-May and stayed for six years. He was used as a reserve middle
infielder for the Cubs in 1960-1961, hitting in the .240s. After the 1961
season, Kindall was traded to Cleveland. He was their regular second
baseman in 1962, his first year as a regular, and appears to have been
very good defensively. Unfortunately, he hit .232, and was back to a
reserve role in 1963. He continued in that role until mid-June of 1964,
when he was part of a three-team trade in which the Twins got Kindall and Frank
Kostro, Cleveland got Billy Moran, and the Angels got Lenny Green and Vic
Power. He stayed a reserve that season, but in 1965 he was the Twins’ mostly-regular
second baseman. He again fielded well, but again did not hit, and after
batting .196 in the regular season he was replaced by Frank Quilici for the
World Series. His playing career came to an end after that season, and he
then embarked on a long and successful college coaching career at the
University of Arizona, where his teams won three College World Series
championships during his tenure from 1973-1996. The university’s baseball
field has been named in his honor. He has written numerous books and made
numerous videos to teach kids how to play baseball. At last report Jerry
Kindall was broadcasting baseball on the Big Ten Network. The rest of the
year, he lives in retirement in Tucson, Arizona. He is a member of the American
Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
Right-hander Frederick John Bruckbauer
appeared in one game for the Twins in 1961. He was born in New Ulm,
Minnesota, went to high school in Sleepy Eye, and attended the University
of Minnesota. He signed with Washington as a free agent in 1959. He
was in the low minors for two seasons, posting fair-to-middling results.
At the start of the 1961 campaign he found himself back in his home state of
Minnesota with the brand new Minnesota Twins. He made his debut on April
25, the first native Minnesotan to pitch for the Twins. He came into
a game against Kansas City at the start of the fourth inning with the
Twins trailing 7-2. He faced four batters, allowing three hits and a
walk. He was charged with three runs in a game the Twins would lose
20-2. That was also Bruckbauer’s major league swan song–he never appeared
in another big league game, giving him a lifetime ERA of infinity. He
went to AAA the rest of the season, having a mediocre year. He pitched
eight games of AA ball in 1962, and then his playing career was suddenly over
at the age of 24. He is the last pitcher to retire with an ERA of
infinity. His career was apparently cut short by injuries, primarily to
his shoulder. After leaving baseball, Bruckbauer moved to Madison,
Wisconsin and worked for John Deere for more than thirty years, then
retired to Naples, Florida. Fred Bruckbauer passed away in Naples on
October 14, 2007.
Outfielder James William Holt played for
the Twins from 1968-1974. Born and raised in Graham, North Carolina, Holt
signed with Kansas City as a free agent in 1965. He had a couple of good
years at Class A, but was left unprotected, and the Twins chose him in the
Rule 5 draft in November of 1967. He was in the majors all of 1968
but was used sparingly, batting .208 in 106 at-bats. Holt went back to
AAA in 1969 and hit .336 with 11 homers and 12 triples in Denver. That
got him a September call-up, and in 1970-1971 he was a semi-regular outfielder,
starting almost half of the Twins’ games and appearing in many others either as
a pinch-hitter or a defensive substitute. He hit around .260 in those
years, but did not show much power or much patience at the plate. Holt
went back to AAA in 1972 and again showed he was too good for that league,
hitting .333 at Tacoma and again getting a September call-up. In 1973
Holt got the most playing time of his career, starting 90 games in the outfield
and 24 at first base. He responded with the best year of his career,
hitting .297 with 11 homers and an OPS of .783. That was as good as it
would get for Holt, however; he became a part-time first baseman in 1974, and
in mid-August was traded to Oakland for Pat Bourque. He did little for
the Athletics (although he did have a key pinch-hit in the World Series), and
by 1976 was back in AAA. He hit .379 there but failed to impress anyone,
and his career ended. As a Twin, Jim Holt hit .272/.310/.352 in 1,444
at-bats. He returned to North Carolina and became a firefighter. He
helped start a company called Firequip, which produces a wide range of fire
hoses. At last report, Jim Holt had returned to his home town of Graham,
North Carolina.
Right-hander Jose Orlando Berrios made his
debut with the Twins in 2016. Born and raised in Bayamon, Puerto Rico, he
was drafted by Minnesota in the first round in 2012. He pitched very well
in two rookie leagues in 2012, came the closest he has come to struggling in
the minors in 2013 with Cedar Rapids (3.99 ERA, 1.40 WHIP), had an excellent
2014 split between Fort Myers and New Britain, and did very well in a 2015
split between Chattanooga and Rochester. He pitched very well in
seventeen starts in Rochester in 2016, but not as well in fourteen starts in
Minnesota. His numbers in those starts were, to be honest, terrible:
3-7, 8.02, 1.87 WHIP. A year ago, after four of those starts, we
wrote, "Despite his shaky start, the chances are still good that Jose
Berrios will have a successful major league career." That doesn't
make us Nostradamus, of course, but so far it looks accurate. After
thoroughly dominating the International League for six starts in 2017, he came
up to Minnesota and has been pretty dominating there, too. He is 3-0,
1.13, 0.81 WHIP with 39 strikeouts in 39.2 innings. We don't expect him
to sustain those numbers, of course, but it certainly appears that Jose Berrios
is on his way to that successful major league career.
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