Rube Benton (1890)
Fred Saigh (1905)
Dick Terwilliger (1906)
Wendell Smith (1914)
Lou Kretlow (1921)
Gus Zernial (1923)
Wayne Terwilliger (1925)
Charles Bronfman (1931)
Chuck Coles (1931)
Eddie Kasko (1932)
Rico Petrocelli (1943)
Takashi Nishimoto (1956)
Jeff Conine (1966)
Jim Edmonds (1970)
Daryle Ward (1975)
Chris Woodward (1976)
Luis Rodriguez (1980)
Jim Johnson (1983)
Fred Saigh (1905)
Dick Terwilliger (1906)
Wendell Smith (1914)
Lou Kretlow (1921)
Gus Zernial (1923)
Wayne Terwilliger (1925)
Charles Bronfman (1931)
Chuck Coles (1931)
Eddie Kasko (1932)
Rico Petrocelli (1943)
Takashi Nishimoto (1956)
Jeff Conine (1966)
Jim Edmonds (1970)
Daryle Ward (1975)
Chris Woodward (1976)
Luis Rodriguez (1980)
Jim Johnson (1983)
Fred Saigh was the owner of the St. Louis
Cardinals from 1947-1953, selling to Anheuser-Busch.
Wendell Smith was an African-American
sportswriter who was influential in the choice of Jackie Robinson as the first
African-American major league player.
Charles Bronfman was the owner of the
Montreal Expos from 1969-1991.
Takashi Nishimoto was a star pitcher in Japan
from 1977-1993.
Daryle Ward is the son of ex-Twin Gary Ward.
Willard Wayne Terwilliger,
known as “Twig”, did not play for the Twins, but was part of their organization
for several years. Unrelated to Dick Terwilliger, who was also born
on June 27, they are the only two people with the last name “Terwilliger” to
have played in the major leagues. He was born in Clair, Michigan,
attended Western Michigan University, and was signed by the Cubs as a free
agent in 1948. A second baseman, he had a fine year at AAA in 1949 and
made his major league debut that year, coming to the Cubs in early
August. He was the Cubs’ regular second baseman in 1950, but hit only
.242 with ten homers. He remained the Cubs’ regular second sacker at the
start of 1951, but when he hit no better he was traded to Brooklyn as part of
an eight-player deal. He was okay as a reserve the rest of the season, backing
up Jackie Robinson, but in 1952 he went down to AAA St. Paul, where he hit
.312. The Dodgers were obviously not impressed, because Terwilliger was
put on waivers after the season. Washington selected him and made him
their started second baseman for two seasons. Twig was sold to the New
York Giants for 1955. He split the next two seasons between New York and
AAA Minneapolis, then was in Minneapolis for all of 1957. He was traded
to Detroit for 1958, spent all of that season in the minors, and was taken by the
Kansas City Athletics in the Rule 5 draft. He was with the Athletics for
all of 1959, was in the minors for nearly all of 1960, and then turned to
managing and coaching (he made a few brief appearances in the minors all the
way through 1968, presumably when his team was short of infielders). His
minor-league managing career was in the Yankees’ organization in 1961, the
Washington chain from 1963-1968, Houston in 1973, Texas in 1975 and 1980, and
with independent Ft. Worth from 2003-2005. He was a major league coach
with Washington/Texas from 1969-1972 and 1981-1985, and the Twins from
1986-1994. He was a minor league coach with the St. Paul Saints from
1995-2002 and Ft. Worth from 2006-2010, when he finally retired at age
85. He is a member of the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame and has written an
autobiography, “Terwilliger Bunts One.”
Outfielder Charles Edward Coles did not play
for the Twins, but was in their farm system from 1961-1962. He was born
in Fredericktown, Pennsylvania and attended Waynesburg College in Waynesburg,
Pennsylvania, one of two major league players produced by that school (Dick
Gray). He signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers as a free agent in 1950.
He hit well in the minors through 1952, then missed two seasons due to the
Korean War. He was 24 when he returned. He continued to hit well
but could not get a chance above Class A in the Dodgers’ organization. He
played for independent Albuquerque in 1957, then moved to the Cincinnati system
in 1958. He hit .307 with 29 home runs in AA and got a September
call-up. He went 2-for-11 in five games, but it looked like, at age 27,
Chuck Coles might finally get his chance. It didn’t happen. He had
a terrible year in AA in 1959; one wonders if he might have been hurt, because
his numbers are completely out of line with the rest of his career. He
bounced back with a solid year in AA in 1960, but by then he was 29 and was no
longer considered a prospect. He came to the Twins’ organization in 1961
and had a solid year at Class A Charlotte, but that was as good as it would get
for him as a Twin. He split 1962 between Charlotte and Class B Wilson,
played for independent Tidewater in 1963, then ended his playing career.
In twelve minor league seasons, mostly in A and AA, Chuck Coles hit .293/.330/.466
with 176 home runs. After his playing career, he was employed as a
millwright in Jefferson, Pennsylvania. He passed away in Myrtle Beach,
South Carolina on January 25, 1996 at the age of 64. In 2009, Chuck Coles
was posthumously inducted into the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame.
Infielder Luis Orlando Rodriguez played for
the Twins from 2005-2007. Born and raised in Codejos, Venezuela, he
signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1997. He primarily played second
base and shortstop in the minors. He put up consistent but unspectacular
numbers in the minors, generally hitting around .270 and drawing a good number
of walks, but showing little power. He was in his third year of AAA when
he came up to the Twins in late May of 2005. He did about as well as
you’d expect a reserve infielder to do at the plate and got his only full
season in the majors in 2006. He was with the Twins for nearly all of
2007 as well, but his offense got worse every year, and since he was never
known for his defense, the Twins placed him on waivers after the season.
As a Twin, Luis Rodriguez hit .243/.311/.339. He played in 206 games and
had 445 at-bats. He signed with San Diego and in the majors with them for
the second half of 2008 and nearly all of 2009. He signed with Cleveland
for 2010, was released in late April, and signed with the White Sox. He
was in AAA for them all season, then signed with Seattle for 2011.
Surprisingly, he made the Mariners as a reserve infielder and split the season
between the majors and AAA. He was still in the Mariners organization in
2012 and had a fine year at AAA Tacoma, batting .296 with an OPS of .841, but
was not been recalled to the majors. A free agent after the season, he
signed with the Angels for 2013 and had a good season for AAA Salt Lake, but
again did not get a call-up. Once again a free agent, he played in Mexico
in 2014, played in Mexico and in the Atlantic League in 2015, and was back in
the Atlantic League with Bridgeport in 2016. He played winter ball, but
does not appear to be playing anywhere in 2017. His playing career is
presumably over, although he can probably play in winter ball a couple more
seasons if he wants to.
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