Bill Dinneen (1876)
Wid Conroy (1877)
Bill Lachemann (1934)
Ron Hansen (1938)
Rennie Stennett (1951)
Andy MacPhail (1953)
Cris Carpenter (1965)
Ross Gload (1976)
Jorge De La Rosa (1981)
John Curtiss (1993)
Andy MacPhail (1953)
Cris Carpenter (1965)
Ross Gload (1976)
Jorge De La Rosa (1981)
John Curtiss (1993)
The brother of Rene and Marcel Lachemann, Bill Lachemann is a long-time minor league manager, coach, and scout.
Andy MacPhail, of course, was the general manager of the Twins from 1985 through 1994, a period which included both of the Twins' World Series titles. He later worked for the Chicago Cubs and the Baltimore Orioles. He is currently the President of Baseball Operations for the Philadelphia Phillies. He is the son of baseball executive Lee MacPhail and the grandson of baseball executive Larry MacPhail.
Right-hander John Pickens Curtiss played for the Twins in part of the 2017 and 2018 seasons. He was born in Dallas, went to high school in Southlake, Texas, attended the University of Texas, and was drafted by Minnesota in the sixth round in 2014. He both started and relieved early on but was a full-time reliever by 2015. For the most part he pitched well in the low minors. He started 2017 in AA and was moved up to AAA, pitching very well both places. Well enough, in fact, that he was called up to Minnesota in late August and stayed the rest of the season. He made nine appearances and was unscored upon in six of them, but the other three were so ugly that he ended with an ERA of 8.31. He spent most of 2018 in AAA and again pitched well. He also made two appearances for the Twins early in the season and later got a September call-up. Again, he was unscored upon in six of his eight appearances, but the other two were bad enough that his ERA was 5.68. After the season he was traded to the Angels for Daniel Ozoria. He will start 2019 in AAA Salt Lake. As a Twin, John Curtiss was 0-1, 7.20, 1.53 WHIP in 15 innings (17 games). He turns twenty-six today. There's still time for him to develop into an effective major league pitcher, although obviously not an unlimited amount of it.
No comments:
Post a Comment