Chief Bender (1884)
Bob Cerv (1926)
Bing Russell (1926)
Red Robbins (1928)
Jose Pagan (1935)
Tommy Helms (1941)
John Donaldson (1943)
Larry Hisle (1947)
Ron Oester (1956)
Charles Nagy (1967)
Hideki Irabu (1969)
Mike Redmond (1971)
Bob Cerv (1926)
Bing Russell (1926)
Red Robbins (1928)
Jose Pagan (1935)
Tommy Helms (1941)
John Donaldson (1943)
Larry Hisle (1947)
Ron Oester (1956)
Charles Nagy (1967)
Hideki Irabu (1969)
Mike Redmond (1971)
Better known for his role as Deputy Clem
Foster on “Bonanza”, outfielder Bing Russell played minor league baseball from
1948-1949. He is the father of actor (and minor league player) Kurt
Russell and the grandfather of major league player Matt Franco.
Spencer “Red” Robbins was a minor league
player for fourteen years. He then spent many years in the Twins’
organization, most of them as a scout (1963-1986).
Infielder John David
Donaldson did not play for the Twins, but began his professional career in
their minor league system. Born and raised in Charlotte, North Carolina,
he signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1963. He played for Class A
Orlando that year, hitting .251, and was chosen by the Kansas City Athletics in
the first year player draft. He hit .315 at Class A in 1964, and was
promoted to AAA the next year. He struggled at first, but he hit .298 in
Vancouver in 1966, earning his first promotion to the majors in late
August. He started out 1967 batting .339 in Vancouver and was promoted to
Kansas City in early June. He was the regular second baseman the rest of
the way and hit fairly well, but when the team moved to Oakland the next year
he apparently left his bat behind. Donaldson slumped to .220, lost his
starting job, and was traded in June of 1969 to the Seattle Pilots. He
did not do much better there, started 1970 in the minors, and was traded to
Oakland in May. He was seldom used and spent all of 1971 at
AAA, being traded to Detroit in May. He was traded to Baltimore in
February of 1972 and sold to San Diego of April that year. Donaldson did
not get back to the majors until 1974. He was sent back to Oakland before
the 1974 season and started the year with the Athletics, but was sent back down
in early May and did not play in the majors again until the last game of the
season, when he was allowed to make a farewell appearance before ending his
playing career. After baseball, John Donaldson returned to Charlotte,
where owned a painting business and worked for a trucking company before
retiring in 2014. He was still living in retirement in Charlotte at last
report.
Outfielder Larry Eugene Hisle played for the
Twins from 1973-1977. Born and raised in Portsmouth, Ohio, Hisle was
drafted by Philadelphia in the second round in 1965. He began his career
with Huron, South Dakota, in the Northern League, where he hit .433 in 60
at-bat sin 1966. Moved up to Class A Clearwater in 1967, he hit .302 with
23 homers. He was jumped to the majors in 1968 and stayed for
two weeks, going 4-for-11, but the Phillies wanted him to play every day and sent
him to AAA San Diego, where he continued to hit. Hisle was the
regular center fielder for the Phillies in 1969 at age 22 and hit .266 with 20
homers, finishing fourth in the Rookie of the Year voting. In 1970,
however, he slumped to .205, and when he did no better at the beginning of 1971
he was sent to the minors in late May. He again bashed the ball
in the minors, and was only 24, but was traded to the Dodgers after the
1971 season. Hisle hit .325 with 23 homers for AAA Albuquerque in
1972, but not only did the Dodgers not promote him, they traded him to St.
Louis after the season. He never played with the Cardinals, however,
as they sent him to Minnesota with John Cumberland for Wayne Granger in
November. Hisle won a starting outfield job for the Twins in 1973 and held
it for five years. He played primarily left field for the Twins, but saw
a fair amount of action in center and also played right on occasion.
He had some fine years for the Twins, playing regularly except for 1975, when
he missed a couple of months with injuries. His best year as a Twin was
his last one, 1977, when he hit .302 with 28 homers and a league-leading 119
RBIs. He made his first all-star team that year and finished 12th in MVP
voting. Hisle became a free agent after the season and signed with
Milwaukee. He had an equally strong season with the Brewers in 1978,
hitting .290 with 34 homers and 115 RBIs. He made his second
all-star team that year and was third in MVP balloting. In April of 1979,
however, he suffered a torn rotator cuff and was able to
play only sporadically after that. Hisle kept trying to come back,
but finally ended his career after the 1982 season, having had only 274 at-bats
in the last four seasons. As a Twin, Larry Hisle hit .286/.354/.457 in 662
games. Hisle stayed in baseball, and was the hitting coach for the
Toronto Blue Jays from 1992-1995. He is currently employed by the
Milwaukee Brewers, for whom he is the Manager of Youth Outreach. He is
also the president of Major League Mentoring, a youth mentoring program in
Milwaukee. He appears to be working very hard in both positions.
Catcher Michael Patrick Redmond was with the
Twins from 2005-2009. He was born in Seattle, went to high school in
Spokane, Washington, and attended Gonzaga University. He signed with
Florida as a free agent in 1992. He showed no power in the minors, never
hitting more than four home runs in a season. His averages were decent
but not outstanding, ranging from the .250s to the .280s. He reached AA
in 1995, AAA in 1997, and made his debut in the majors at the end of May,
1998. He was always a part-time player, never getting more than 256
at-bats with the Marlins. Redmond did well in that role, however, hitting
over .300 four times. He stayed with Florida for seven seasons before becoming
a free agent after the 2005 campaign. Redmond signed with the Twins and
remained a part-time player, although he set a career high in at-bats in 2007
with 272. He again did a good job in a part-time role, hitting over .300
twice more. As a Twin, Mike Redmond hit .297/.339/.359 in 863
at-bats. He dropped to .237 in 2009, however, and was allowed to become a
free agent again. Redmond signed with Cleveland, again as a part-time
catcher, but was released in mid-July, ending his playing career. He was
the manager of the Miami Marlins from 2013 to May of 2015. The team did
not have much success in his tenure, but it is unclear how much that had to do
with Redmond's ability as a manager. He was elected to the West Coast
Conference Hall of Honor in 2016. He appears to have been out of baseball
in 2016, but Mike Redmond is the bench coach for the Colorado Rockies in 2017.
No comments:
Post a Comment