George Weiss (1894)
Jack Smith (1895)
Karl Spooner (1931)
Dave Bristol (1933)
Tom Haller (1937)
Dave Goltz (1949)
Marty Barrett (1958)
Jim Deshaies (1960)
Hensley Meulens (1967)
Josh Byrnes (1970)
Mark Hendrickson (1974)
Jack Smith (1895)
Karl Spooner (1931)
Dave Bristol (1933)
Tom Haller (1937)
Dave Goltz (1949)
Marty Barrett (1958)
Jim Deshaies (1960)
Hensley Meulens (1967)
Josh Byrnes (1970)
Mark Hendrickson (1974)
George Weiss was the general manager of the New York Yankees
from 1948-1960.
Karl Spooner set the record, later tied by J. R. Richard, for
strikeouts in a major league debut with fifteen.
Dave Bristol managed four different teams from 1966-1980.
Josh Byrnes has been the general manager of Arizona and San
Diego and is currently the vice president of baseball operations for the
Dodgers.
Right-hander Dave Goltz
pitched for the Twins through most of the 1970s. He was born in Pelican
Rapids, Minnesota, went to high school in Rothsay, Minnesota. He was a
four-sport star, playing basketball, football, and participating in track as
well as playing baseball (he was all state in both basketball and
baseball). Goltz was drafted by Minnesota in the fifth round in
1967. He had two very good years in the low minors, then missed all of
the 1969 season due to military service and made only two appearances in
1970 due to injuries. He came back to have a fine 1971 campaign and was
doing fairly well in AAA in 1972 when he was called up to Minnesota in mid-July
to replace an injured Jim Kaat. He pitched extremely well the rest of the
way, going 3-3, 2.67 with a WHIP of 1.10 and an ERA+ of 121. The Twins
moved him to the bullpen for 1973, however, and he did not flourish in the
role. He was moved back to the rotation in late July and was extremely
inconsistent, mixing brilliant outings with horrible ones. The next year,
he was in the rotation from the beginning, and had the first of five
consecutive very good seasons for the Twins. His best years were
1977-1978, when he went a combined 35-21, 2.99 with a WHIP of 1.24 in 523.1
innings (303 0f which came in 1977, when he won 20 games and finished sixth in
Cy Young voting). He had double-digit complete games in each of those
five seasons, with a high of nineteen in 1977. He started to slip in 1979
and the Twins allowed him to become a free agent. It turned out to be a
good decision, as he never had as good a season again. Goltz had a poor
year in 1980, went to the bullpen in 1981, and when he was no better at the
start of 1982 he was released in late April. California signed him in
late May and he did somewhat better, but he did nothing in 1983 and was
released again in early July, ending his playing career. He won twenty
games once, got a World Series ring (with the Dodgers in 1981),
and set one record, although not a good one. Dave Goltz holds the record
for most runs allowed while getting a save, giving up eight runs while getting
a three-inning save against Cleveland on June 6, 1973. Gene Mauch once
was quoted as saying Goltz was the best starting pitcher he had ever
managed. As a Twin, Dave Goltz was 96-79, 3.48 with a 1.31
WHIP. He appeared in 247 games, 215 of them starts, and worked 1,638
innings. After retirement, Goltz returned to Minnesota. He is
currently an insurance agent, with offices in Fergus Falls and Rothsay,
Minnesota. He also was the baseball coach for Fergus Falls Community
College for two years.
Left-hander Jim Deshaies was with the Twins for most of 1993 and
all of 1994. Born and raised in Massena, New York, he attended LeMoyne
College in Syracuse, New York, one of six major league players that school has
produced. He was drafted by the Yankees in the twenty-first round in
1982. He put up some really good numbers in the Yankees’ system, reaching
AAA by 1984. He also made his major league debut that year, making two
starts for the Yankees in August. He did not have a good year in AAA in
1985, however, and was traded to Houston in mid-September as part of a deal for
Joe Niekro. It was a good move for Deshaies, as he was immediately placed
in the Astros rotation and stayed there for six years. He was pretty good
for five of those years; the best was 1989, when he went 15-10, 2.91 with a
WHIP of 1.15. He pitched poorly in 1991, however, and when contract
expired he was allowed to become a free agent. He signed with Oakland,
but was released in spring training of 1992. San Diego signed him in late
April, sent him to AAA, and brought him to the majors in early July, place him
in their starting rotation. He bounced back pretty well, but was a free
agent after the season, signing with Minnesota. He did okay in 1993, not
great but not terrible. The Twins fell out of the race, however, and in
late August Deshaies was traded to San Francisco for Andres Duncan, Aaron
Fultz, and a player to be named later (Greg Brummett). Deshaies was a
free agent after the season and returned to Minnesota for 1994. He was
much worse in his second go-round with the Twins, leading the league both in
home runs allowed and in earned runs allowed. As a Twin, he was 17-25,
5.71 with a WHIP of 1.46. He appeared in 52 games, all of them starts,
and pitched 297.2 innings. He became a free agent again and signed with
Philadelphia for 1995. He did well in AAA, but flopped in two starts with
the Phillies and was released in late July, ending his playing career. In
1986, he struck out the first eight batters of the game, setting a modern-day
record. He also holds the record for most at-bats without an
extra-base hit. Jim Deshaies was a television broadcaster for
the Houston Astros from 1997-2012 and is currently a broadcaster for the Chicago
Cubs.
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