Tuesday, December 17, 2019

December 17

Cy Falkenberg (1879)
Ray Jablonski (1926)
Cal Ripken (1935)
Jerry Adair (1936)
Leo Cardenas (1938)
Bob Ojeda (1957)
Marvell Wynne (1959)
Curtis Pride (1968)
Alex Cintron (1978)
Chase Utley (1978)
Fernando Abad (1985)
Taylor Rogers (1990)


Cal Ripken was in the Orioles organization for many years, managing in the minors from 1961-1974, coaching in the majors from 1976-1986 and 1989-1992, and managing the big club from 1987-1988.  He had a son, also named Cal, who had a fairly decent major league career.
Shortstop Leonardo Lazaro (Alfonso) Cardenas was with the Twins from 1969-1971. Born in Matanzas, Cuba, Cardenas began his professional career in 1956 as a 17-year-old in the independent Arizona-Mexico League. He then went into the Cincinnati Reds' organization. He was in Class A Savannah for two years, then Class AAA Havana for a year and a half before getting called up to the majors in late July of 1960. He was installed as the starting shortstop at the age of 21, but did not hit and was reduced to part-time status. He started 1961 as the starter as well, but again went to the bench after a lack of offense. Given another chance at the starting job in late July, Cardenas went on a tear and ended the season hitting .308, the only year of his career he hit over .300. He remained Cincinnati's starting shortstop through the 1968 season. He hit .261 in his years with the Reds, which is much better than it sounds given the offensive context of his time, especially for a shortstop. He made the all-star team every year from 1964 through 1968 except for 1967, when he was injured part of the season. He also won a Gold Glove in 1965 and finished 21st in MVP voting. Cardenas also led the league in intentional walks in 1965 and 1966. After the 1968 season, Cardenas was traded to Minnesota for Jim Merritt. He gave the Twins three solid seasons, finishing 12th in MVP voting in 1969 and 21st in 1971, when he again made the all-star team. As a Twin, Cardenas hit .263/.325/.394 for an OPS+ of 98, and also provided fine defense. After the 1971 campaign, the Twins traded Cardenas to the Angels for Dave LaRoche. 1972 would be his last as a big league regular, as he hit just .223. Just before the 1973 season started, the Angels traded him to Cleveland, where he was used as a reserve. Cardenas moved on to Texas for 1974 and 1975, and then his career was over. At last report, Leo Cardenas was living in Cincinnati and making regular appearances at Reds promotional events.  He is a member of the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame.
Left-hander Fernando Antonio Abad was with the Twins for the first four months of 2016.  He was born in La Romana in the Dominican Republic and signed with Houston as a free agent in 2002.  B-r.com does not have any stats for him until 2006, when he was in the Domincan Summer League with the Astros.  He advanced pretty slowly, not reaching AA until 2009, and only pitching in five games of AAA in 2010, but then suddenly shot up to the majors at the end of July of 2010.  He did very well there, too, posting an ERA of 2.84 and a WHIP of 1.00 in 19 innings.  He apparently was used as  LOOGY, as nine of his twenty-two appearances were for less than an inning.  He was used similarly in 2011, but a few bad outings made his ERA skyrocket (it's hard to get your ERA down very fast when you only pitch a third of an inning at a time) and he missed the second half of the season due to injury.  He came back in 2012 and pitched fairly well for four months, but fell apart at the end of the season.  He's been a pretty good reliever since then, though, going to Washington in 2013, traded to Oakland before the 2014 season, and signing with the Twins in 2016.  He did quite well for the Twins, going 1-4, 2.65, 1.21 WHIP in 39 appearances (34 innings).  The Twins traded him to Boston on August 1 of 2016 for Pat Light.  His numbers for the Red Sox the rest of the season were not very good, but he came back in 2017 to have a fine year for them.  One would've thought that he would certainly be in a major league bullpen in 2018, but that's not what happened.  He signed with Philadelphia, was released in spring training, signed with the Mets, and then was suspended for use of a banned substance.  The Mets immediately released him and he pitched for Long Island in the Atlantic League.  He signed with the Giants for 2019, came back to the majors in mid-August, and pitched pretty well for the rest of the season.  He turns thirty-four today and is a free agent.  One certainly would expect him to sign with someone for 2020.
Left-hander Taylor Allen Rogers made his Twins debut in 2016.  Born and raised in Littleton, Colorado, he attended the University of Kentucky and was drafted by Minnesota in the eleventh round of 2012.  A starter through his minor league career, he pitched well throughout the low minors and had a solid season in AA in 2014.  He was okay, but nothing more, in AAA in 2015 but was very good in six starts in the Arizona Fall League after that season.  He began 2016 in Rochester, made one appearance with the Twins in April, then came up to stay in mid-May, pitching out of the bullpen.  He struggled in September but did all right overall.  He had a solid 2017 for the Twins and did even better in 2018.  A year ago, we said, "He's never been given a chance to be a closer--only two major league saves--but his numbers don't show any reason he couldn't be one."  Well, he was one in 2019 and it went pretty well--2.61 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, 90 strikeouts in 69 innings, 30 saves.  For his career, Taylor Rogers is 13-10, 3.04, 1.13 WHIP, 32 saves.  He turns twenty-nine today.  Things can always happen, but there's no obvious reason he can't remain a very good relief pitcher for several more seasons.

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