Roger Bresnahan (1879)
Ernie Nevers (1902)
Dan Topping (1912)
Frank Thomas (1929)
Jimmy Stewart (1939)
Danny Morris (1946)
Dave Cash (1948)
Tom Austin (1951)
Mike Fuentes (1958)
Brian Gorman (1959)
Mike Davis (1959)
Odalis Perez (1978)
Bobby Keppel (1982)
Jose Reyes (1983)
Ernie Nevers (1902)
Dan Topping (1912)
Frank Thomas (1929)
Jimmy Stewart (1939)
Danny Morris (1946)
Dave Cash (1948)
Tom Austin (1951)
Mike Fuentes (1958)
Brian Gorman (1959)
Mike Davis (1959)
Odalis Perez (1978)
Bobby Keppel (1982)
Jose Reyes (1983)
Football great Ernie Nevers, born in Willow
River, Minnesota, pitched for the St. Louis Browns for parts of three seasons
(1926-1928).
Dan Topping was part-owner of the New York
Yankees from 1945-1966.
Tom Austin is a long-time college baseball
coach at Methodist University in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Outfielder Mike Fuentes was drafted by
Minnesota in the fifth round in 1980, but did not sign.
Brian Gorman has been a major league umpire
since 1993.
Right-hander Danny Walker
Morris pitched a total of six games for the Twins from 1968-1969. Born in
Greenville, Kentucky, Morris signed with the Twins as a free agent in
1964. He had an excellent year in Class A Wisconsin Rapids in 1965,
going 16-8, 2.16 with a WHIP of 1.00 in 225 innings. He struggled for a
while as he went up the minor league ladder, but had a good year in 1968 at AAA
Denver, going 16-15 with a 3.94 ERA and a 1.25 WHIP. He got a September
call-up that year and did well in limited duty, posting a 1.69 ERA in 10.2
innings. That was as good as it would get for Morris, however. He
was with the Twins for about three weeks in June of 1969, but did not pitch
well there or at Denver that season. He continued to struggle at AAA in
1970 in Evansville and 1971 in Portland. He had a good year at AA in
1972, but again had trouble in eight AAA appearances. He had arm problems
and wanted to spend more time with his family, so he retired from baseball
after that. His arm eventually healed and he believes he could have gone
back to pitching, but he simply had no desire to. As a Twin, Danny Morris
was 0-2, 2.81 in 16 innings. He appeared in six games, three of them
starts. His baseball card is somewhat valuable, as he appears on the same
"Rookie Stars" card as Graig Nettles. At last report, Danny
Morris and his daughter Cindy owned a bar in Petersburg, Indiana.
Right-hander Robert Griffin Keppel pitched
for the Twins for a little over half of 2009. Born in St.
Louis, he was drafted by the Mets in the first round in 2000. He was a
starting pitcher most of his minor league career. He appears to have battled
injuries much of the time, as his games and innings pitched numbers make
it appear that he may have missed at least a little time nearly every
season. His effectiveness went up and down; Keppel’s best year was
probably 2003, when he went 9-4, 2.97 with a WHIP of 1.20 in 109 innings.
He was released by the Mets in May of 2005 despite the fact that he had made
five pretty good starts at AAA Norfolk. He was out of baseball the rest
of the season, signing with Kansas City the next February. Keppel made eight
appearances (six starts) with the Royals in 2006, but did not pitch well either
there or at AAA and became a free agent after the season. He signed with
Colorado for 2007 and made four relief appearances for the Rockies in April,
but again had a poor year both there and at AAA. He moved on to the
Marlins organization for 2008, again pitched poorly, and signed with Minnesota
for 2009. In Rochester, he had his first good season in some time, going
3-3, 2.49 with a 1.15 WHIP in 55.2 innings before being called up to the Twins
in late June. He stayed the rest of the season, going 1-1, 4.83 with a
1.56 WHIP in 54 innings. He made 37 appearances, all in relief. The
Twins released him in January of last year. He signed with the
Nippon Ham Fighters in Japan in 2010, had a couple of fine seasons
there, missed most of 2012 due to injury, then made eight mostly poor starts
for Nippon Ham in 2013. He came back to the United States, signed a minor
league contract with Cincinnati for 2014, but apparently did not make the team
and his playing career came to an end. He and his wife publish a
magazine, "The 9s", which is a men's lifestyle publication.
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