Jack Graney had a few unusual "firsts". He was the first major leaguer to bat against Babe Ruth. He was the first player to wear a number on his uniform. He as also the first player to become a broadcaster.
Outfielder Vic Harris was a long-time Negro League player and manager, leading the Homestead Grays to nine Negro National League pennants.
Chuck Thompson was a long-time broadcaster for the Baltimore Orioles.
Outfielder Carmen Cozza played in the low minors in 1952-1953, batting .242. He later became a college football coach, most notably at Yale. Upon his retirement in 1996, he held the record for most coaching victories in the Ivy League (179) and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2002.
Kazuhisa Inao is one of the greatest pitchers in Japanese baseball history.
Gerry Hunsicker is a long-time baseball executive, working for the Mets, the Astros, and the Rays.
First baseman Scott Matthew Ullger got 79 at-bats with the Twins in 1983. He was born in New York and attended St. John’s. He was drafted by Minnesota in the eighteenth round in 1977. The Twins never really settled on a position for him; he played shortstop and third base in 1977-1978, was a third baseman in 1979, and an outfielder from 1980-1982. He did not play first base at all until 1981, and then only 21 games’ worth. On offense, his best season was probably 1978, when he hit .320 with 20 homers at Class A Visalia. He also hit 20 home runs for AA Orlando in 1981, although he hit only .269; he also had a solid year for AAA Toledo in 1982. Ullger then got his only time in the big leagues as a player, spending the entire 1983 season as Kent Hrbek’s backup at first base. He got only 79 at-bats, hitting .190/.247/.241. He then went back to AAA Toledo for three years, doing a solid but unspectacular job for the Mud Hens. He moved to the Baltimore organization for 1987 and then his playing career ended. Ullger then became a minor league manager for the Twins, working in Visalia (1988-1990), Orlando (1991), Portland (1992-1993), and Salt Lake (1994). He was a part of the Twins’ major league coaching staff from 1995-2014, serving at various times as first base coach, third base coach, batting coach, and bench coach. At one time, he was considered a possible successor to Ron Gardenhire, but that turned out not to be the case, as he was let go at the same time as Gardy after the 2014 season. Unlike some other Twins coaches, he has not joined Gardenhire's staff in Detroit, and does not appear to have worked in baseball at all since 2014. It seems odd that someone who was been in baseball that long couldn't find a job in it someplace, but it's also possible that he decided he wanted to try something else or simply decided to retire. At last report he had moved to Visalia, California, where in 2020 he was inducted into the Visalia Baseball Hall of Fame.
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