Dan Brouthers (1858)
Edd Roush (1893)
Turkey Stearnes (1901)
Mike Cuellar (1937)
Steve Braun (1948)
Orestes Destrade (1962)
Todd Greene (1971)
John Maine (1981)
Adrian Gonzalez (1982)
Sean Gilmartin (1990)
Edd Roush (1893)
Turkey Stearnes (1901)
Mike Cuellar (1937)
Steve Braun (1948)
Orestes Destrade (1962)
Todd Greene (1971)
John Maine (1981)
Adrian Gonzalez (1982)
Sean Gilmartin (1990)
I could not find out why Edd Roush's first
name was spelled with two d's. I did find out however, that he had a twin
brother whose name was Fred, not Fredd.
Outfielder Turkey Stearns was a star in the
Negro Leagues from 1923-1940, posting a slugging percentage of .619.
Mike Cuellar pitched in AAA in the Twins’
organization in 1961. He does not seem to have belonged to the Twins,
however. It may be that he was temporarily loaned to them, a practice
which was not uncommon in the 1960s.
Left-handed hitter Stephen
Russell Braun played for the Twins from 1971-1976. He was born in
Trenton, New Jersey, went to high school in Pennington, New Jersey, and was
drafted by the Twins in the tenth round in 1966. He was in rookie ball for
two years, doing nothing special, and then missed two years to military
service. He came back to hit .279 at Class A Lynchberg in 1970 and
started 1971 with the Twins. He was used mostly as a pinch hitter at
first, but gradually worked his way into a more-or-less regular role.
Braun is not the type of player normally thought of as a “utility player”, but
he played mutliple positions with the Twins, spending time in both the infield
and the outfield. He was primarily used as an infielder in 1971-1973, used
mostly at third but also starting games at second and short as well as a few in
the outfield. He was primarily a left fielder in 1974-1975, but played
some third and first. In 1976 he was mostly used at DH, but again saw
time in the outfield and at third base. At all of these positions, he was
a solid batter, regularly posting batting averages in the .280s and OBPs of
.360 or higher. His best year as a Twin was probably 1975, when Braun hit
.302 with 11 home runs and 66 walks. He was still a productive player in
1976, but the Twins left him unprotected in the expansion draft and he was
chosen by Seattle. Perhaps the Twins knew something, because even though
he was not yet thirty, 1977 was Braun’s last year as a regular. Used at
left field and DH, he was a disappointment to the Mariners and was traded to
Kansas City in June of 1978. He then embarked on a relatively long career
in which he was used primarily as a pinch-hitter. Braun was with the
Royals until he was released in June of 1980. He finished that season
with Toronto, then signed with St. Louis, where he played the final five years
of his career. He never got as many as 100 at-bats in any of his last six
seasons, but he remained relatively consistent, batting in the .270s in each
season from 1982-1984. As a Twin, Steve Braun hit .284/.376/.381 in
nearly 2500 at-bats. He remained in baseball after his playing career
ended, including some time as the hitting coach for the Cardinals. More
recently, he was hitting coach for the Trenton Thunder from 1999-2004. At
last report, he was an associate for Ignite Energy Associates in Trenton.
Left-hander Sean Patrick Gilmartin did not
play for the Twins but was in their minor league system in 2014. He was
born in Thousand Oaks, California, went to high school in Encino, attended
Florida State, and was drafted by Atlanta in the first round in 2011. He
pitched pretty well up through AA, but stumbled when reaching AAA for
seven starts in 2012. He continued to struggle in AAA in 2013 and after
the season was traded to Minnesota for Ryan Doumit. He spent half of 2014
in AA and half in AAA, doing better in AA and not all that badly in AAA.
The Twins left him unprotected in the Rule 5 draft and he was chosen by
the Mets. He had been a starter his entire career up to this point, but
the Mets put him in the bullpen and he did quite well there. He was in
the majors all of 2015 and was 3-2, 2.67, 1.19 WHIP in 57.1 innings (50
appearances). Despite that, he started 2016 in AAA and was up and down
all year, having three stints with the Mets but appearing in only fourteen
games. His numbers look terrible, but two bad outings skew them--take
those out, and his ERA is 2.40 instead of 7.13. He has made two
appearances with the Mets in 2017 and has been in AAA the rest of the time.
He turns 27 today. He's not any kind of star, but if someone would
put him a major league bullpen he wouldn't be the worst pitcher there.
Since the Mets don't seem to want to do that, it's our hope that he'll
find his way to a team that does.
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