Bob
Hope (1903)
George McQuinn (1910)
Loel Passe (1917)
Fred White (1936)
Fay Vincent (1938)
John Kennedy (1941)
Blue Moon Odom (1945)
Jamie Allen (1958)
Mike Stenhouse (1958)
Eric Davis (1962)
Charlie Hayes (1965)
Trever Miller (1973)
Jerry Hairston (1976)
Matt Macri (1982)
George McQuinn (1910)
Loel Passe (1917)
Fred White (1936)
Fay Vincent (1938)
John Kennedy (1941)
Blue Moon Odom (1945)
Jamie Allen (1958)
Mike Stenhouse (1958)
Eric Davis (1962)
Charlie Hayes (1965)
Trever Miller (1973)
Jerry Hairston (1976)
Matt Macri (1982)
Comedian and actor Bob Hope was a long-time part-owner of the
Cleveland Indians and was on their Board of Directors.
Loel Passe broadcast Houston Astros games from the team’s
inception through 1976. Along the way, he worked with two Hall of Fame
broadcasters, Gene Elston and Harry Kalas.
Fred White broadcast Kansas City Royals games from 1974-1998.
Fay Vincent was the commissioner of baseball from 1989-1992.
Third baseman Jamie Allen was drafted by Minnesota with the
tenth pick of the 1976 draft, but did not sign.
Outfielder/first
baseman Michael Steven Stenhouse played for the Twins in 1985. He was
born in Pueblo, Colorado, attended Harvard, and was drafted by Montreal in the
first round of the January Secondary draft in 1980. His father, Dave
Stenhouse, pitched for the Washington Senators in the 1960s. He hit very
well in the minors, but never got much of a chance in the big leagues. In
1982, Stenhouse hit .289 with 25 homers, 101 walks and an OPS of .949 in AAA
Wichita. His reward for that was to get one major league at-bat as a
pinch-hitter in the last game of the season. In 1983, he did even better
in Wichita, hitting .355 with 25 homers and 95 walks in 109 games, for an OPS
of 1.172. He was called up to the majors in late July but rarely played,
getting only 40 at-bats. Granted, the Expos had a pretty good team them,
with an outfield of Tim Raines, Andre Dawson, and Warren Cromartie with Al
Oliver at first base, but that’s still not much playing time for a guy with
that kind of record. In 1984 Cromartie and Oliver were gone, but
while the Expos kept Stanhouse on the roster for all but six weeks he
still didn’t play much, with nearly half of his appearances coming as a
pinch-hitter while the Expos played people like Jim Wohlford, Miguel Dilone,
Tony Scott, and Max Venable in the outfield and Terry Francona and Dan Driessen
at first. Stanhouse did not take advantage of his sporadic playing time,
hitting only .183 in 175 at-bats, although he did draw 26 walks. That was
as much as the Expos needed to see, though, as they traded him to Minnesota
that off-season for Jack O’Connor. The Twins gave Stenhouse his only full
season in the majors, but did not play him any more, preferring to use Mickey
Hatcher in left and Roy Smalley at DH. He batted on 179 times, hitting
.223/.330/.335. The Twins traded him to Boston for Charlie Mitchell after
the season. He was with the Red Sox for about two months and batted 21
times, playing in AAA the rest of the year. Stenhouse played in 1987 in
AAA for Detroit, then his playing career came to an end. His big league
numbers don’t look like much, but given his minor league record, one has to
wonder what he might have done if he’d ever been given a chance to play.
He toured with Bill Lee’s Grey Sox club for a while and did some broadcasting for
the Expos in 1996. At last report, Mike Stenhouse was the CEO of the
Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity, a free-enterprise public policy
think tank.
Infielder Matthew Michael Macri played 18 games for the Twins in
2008. Born and raised in Des Moines, Macri was drafted by Colorado in the
fifth round in 2004. He hit .333 his first pro season at Class A
Tri-City, but did not do as well again. He repeated AA, hitting .298
there in 2007, but was traded to Minnesota in mid-August of that year for Ramon
Ortiz. The Twins started him in AAA, and he was there the rest of his
time with the Twins with the exception of a couple of months in 2008. He
was in Minnesota from late May to late June of that year and later got a
September call-up. He hit well in that brief trial, going 11-for-34 for a
line of .324/.361/.441. He did nothing close to that in AAA, however,
hitting .251/.316/.433 there in about 1,200 at-bats. The Twins let him go
after the 2010 season, he signed with Colorado, and spent 2011 playing for AAA
Colorado Springs. He became a free agent after the season and his playing
career came to an end. At last report, Matt Macri was a senior account
executive for VTS, Inc. in the Chicago area.
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