Lefty Phillips (1919)
Max Surkont (1922)
Ernie Johnson (1924)
Richard Jacobs (1925)
Bob Miller (1926)
Ken Johnson (1933)
Joe Decker (1947)
Ron LeFlore (1948)
Salome Barojas (1957)
Wally Joyner (1962)
Calvin Schiraldi (1962)
Kevin Young (1969)
Chris Gomez (1971)
Kerry Wood (1977)
Joe Saunders (1981)
Jonathan Broxton (1984)
Justin Haley (1991)
Max Surkont (1922)
Ernie Johnson (1924)
Richard Jacobs (1925)
Bob Miller (1926)
Ken Johnson (1933)
Joe Decker (1947)
Ron LeFlore (1948)
Salome Barojas (1957)
Wally Joyner (1962)
Calvin Schiraldi (1962)
Kevin Young (1969)
Chris Gomez (1971)
Kerry Wood (1977)
Joe Saunders (1981)
Jonathan Broxton (1984)
Justin Haley (1991)
Lefty Phillips managed the California Angels
from 1979-1981.
Richard Jacobs was the owner of the Cleveland
Indians from 1986-2000.
The Bob Miller born today, although a
pitcher, is not the Bob Miller who pitched for the Twins.
Right-hander George
Henry ”Joe” Decker played for the Twins for four years in the
mid-1970s. He was born in Storm Lake, Iowa, went to high school in
Petaluma, California, and was drafted by the Cubs in the ninth round in
1965. He took a while to get started, pitching one year in rookie ball
and two at Class A. His first good season in the minors came in 1968, a
season split between A and AAA. He followed that up with a good year at
AAA Tacoma, making his major league debut as a September call-up in 1969.
He was with the Cubs for much of the next two years, sometimes starting,
sometimes relieving, but not pitching particularly well in either role.
Decker returned to the minors for most of 1972 and after the season was traded
to Minnesota with Bob Maneely and Bill Hands for Dave LaRoche. He was in
the Twins’ starting rotation the next two years and pitched pretty well,
winning 16 games in 1974 with a 3.29 ERA. He pitched 248.2 innings,
however, by far the most of his career. After that he struggled with
injuries and was never an effective pitcher again. The Twins released him
in June of 1976 and he signed with Detroit, finishing the year at AAA. He
signed with the Cubs for 1977, was released on Independence Day, and finished
the season in the Mexican League. Decker signed with Seattle for 1978 and
had a couple of decent years in AAA, making it back to the majors for about six
weeks in 1979. He was apparently out of baseball in 1980-1981, then
attempted a comeback in 1982, pitching in AAA for Seattle for two more seasons
before ending his playing career after the 1983 campaign. As a Twin, Joe
Decker was 29-34, 4.09. He pitched in 89 games, 80 of them starts, and
worked 503.1 innings. He continued to enjoy playing baseball, and pitched
in the Seniors League in 1989-1990. He moved to Fraser, Michigan, where
he passed away on March 2, 2003 following a fall down stairs. He is
buried in his original home town of Storm Lake, Iowa.
Infielder Christopher Cory Gomez played for
the Twins in 2003. He was born in Los Angeles, went to high school in
Lakewood, California, and attended Cal State–Long Beach. He was drafted
by Detroit in the third round in 1992. He did not hit particularly well
in the minors, but made the big leagues in mid-July of 1993. In 1994 he
hit .257 with 8 homers as a part-time middle infielder, which was good enough
for fourth in Rookie of the Year voting. He stayed with the Tigers in a
mostly regular middle infield role until June of 1996, when Gomez was traded to
San Diego. He was immediately installed as the regular shortstop for the
Padres, a position he held through 1998. He was not particularly good,
but he hit around .260 and so was considered good enough to keep the job.
In 1999, however, Gomez started dealing with injuries, and was out much of the
2000 season. He batted poorly in 2001 and was released in late June.
Tampa Bay signed him and he bounced back, hitting .302 the rest of the
way. He went back to his typical .265 in 2002 and was released after the
season. Minnesota signed him and he played in 58 games as a utility
infielder. His line was .251/.279/.354 in 175 at-bats. Gomez moved
on to Toronto for 2004 and had a good year, for him, batting .282 as a
part-time player. He went to Baltimore in 2005 and went on to have the
best years of his career. His playing time was limited, but as an Oriole
for nearly three seasons Gomez hit .302 in 520 at-bats. Despite that, the
Orioles put him on waivers, and he was selected by Cleveland in early
August. Gomez played for Pittsburgh in 2008, hitting .273, and then
became a free agent again. He signed with Baltimore again for 2009, but
was released at the end of spring training and his playing career was
over. His career covered 16 seasons, which is not bad for a guy with a
lifetime OPS of .685. At last report, Chris Gomez was a coach with OC Sun
Devils Baseball in Orange County, California.
Right-hander Justin Case Haley has, at this
writing, pitched in ten games for the Twins in 2017. He was born in
Sacramento, went to high school in Fair Oaks, California, attended Sierra
College and Cal State-Fresno, and was drafted by Boston in the sixth round in
2012. He reached AA in 2014, making six excellent starts. He
struggled in a full season of AA in 2015, but he pitched well in the Arizona
Fall League, was dominant in AA in 2016 and was still pretty good when promoted
to AAA that season. He was left unprotected from the Rule 5 draft after
the season and was chosen by the Angels. He was immediately sold to San
Diego, then traded to Minnesota for Miguel Diaz, who had been drafted by the
Twins in the same Rule 5 draft. He started the season with Minnesota and
has done okay in a groundskeeper role. He developed problems with his
shoulder at the end of April, went on the disabled list, was probably brought
back too quickly, and is back on the disabled list at this writing. In 18
innings so far, he has an ERA of 6.00 and a WHIP of 1.56. If you throw
out one terrible outing on May 7, however, his ERA is 4.08 and his WHIP is
1.30, numbers which aren't bad at all. Time will tell--it always
does--but there are certainly reasons to think Justin Haley can be an effective
major league pitcher.
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