Adam Conley was drafted by Minnesota in the thirty-second round in 2008 but did not sign.
Left-hander Todd Michael Rizzo did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system in 2000. He was born in Media, Pennsylvania, went to high school in Concordville, Pennsylvania, and signed with the Dodgers as a free agent in 1992. He pitched in A ball for them that season, but did not do much and was released in June of 1993. He pitched in the Texas-Louisiana League in 1994 and caught the attention of the White Sox, who signed him for the 1995 season. Used exclusively in relief, he climbed the ladder at a pace of a level a season, posting good ERAs with high WHIPs. He was in AAA in 1997 and started 1998 in the majors. The Sox appear to have tried to use him as a LOOGY, but in a small sample size left-handers absolutely murdered him (11-for-19) while he did okay against righties (5-for-20). He went 0-0, 13.50 in 6.2 innings spread over nine appearances, which sounds worse than it was as all the runs scored on him came in three of the nine outings. Still, he was back in the minors by the end of April. He stayed there most of the rest of his career, getting one more brief shot at the majors for a week in July of 1999 with similar results. He became a free agent after the season and signed with Minnesota. Rizzo was with AAA Salt Lake all of the 2000 season, going 6-4, 3.39, 1.44 WHIP in 72.1 innings (62 appearances). He moved on after the season, pitching in the Dodgers’ and Giants’ organizations in 2001 and then playing for Camden in the independent Atlantic League from 2002-2006 with the exception of a stint in the Baltimore system in 2003. At last report, Todd Rizzo was an instructor for Maplezone Sports Institute in the Philadelphia area.
Right-hander Bartolo Colon made fifteen starts for the Twins in 2017. He was born in Altamira, Dominican Republic, went to high school in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic, and was signed by Cleveland in 1993. He pitched quite well in the minors and made the big club out of spring training in 1997. He was up and down a couple of times that year, but came up to stay at mid-season. He struggled that year, but came into his own in 1998, going 14-9, 3.71 and making his first of four all-star teams. He remained with the Indians through mid-season of 2002 and was a good pitcher all of that time, finishing fourth in Cy Young voting in 1999. He was then traded to Montreal and finished the season there, ending up sixth in Cy Young voting in 2002. He was traded to the White Sox for 2003, then signed as a free agent with the Angels in 2004. He won the Cy Young award in 2005 when he won twenty games for the only time in his career. He then struggled through some injury-plagued seasons, appearing in only forty-eight games from 2006-2009 and missing all of 2010. He came back with the Yankees in 2011 and then had two very good seasons for Oakland from 2012-13, finishing sixth in Cy Young voting in the latter season. He then went to the Mets for three seasons, making his fourth all-star team in 2016. It looked as if that would be his last hurrah, though. He signed with Atlanta for 2017, made thirteen mostly bad starts, and was released in mid-June. The Twins signed him in mid-July. He made a few good starts for them, but his numbers for Minnesota were 5-6, 5.18, 1.44 WHIP in 80 innings (15 starts). It looked like that might be it for him, but he signed with Texas for 2018. He pitched well there at first, but could not sustain it. He did not pitch in 2019 or in 2020, but he is pitching for Monclova in the Mexican League in 2021. He turns forty-eight today. There's nothing wrong with continuing to play baseball as long as you can find someone who'll let you play.
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