Cum Posey, played for, managed, and owned the Homestead Grays in the Negro National League.
Paul Beeston has been president and CEO of the Toronto Blue Jays from 1989-1997 and from 2010-2016, at which time he became president emeritus.
First baseman/designated hitter Kendrys Morales was with the Twins for about six weeks in 2014. He was born in Fomento, Cuba. He played in Cuba through 2003, then defected, established residency in the Dominican Republic, and was signed by the Angels in December of 2004. His name was incorrectly listed as "Kendry", a mistake he lived with until prior to the 2011 season. He started 2005 in Class A and quickly proved he was too good to be there, being promoted to AA after twenty-two games. He started 2006 in AAA but spent half the season in the majors, making his debut in late May. He went back and forth between AAA and the majors through the 2008 season before coming up to stay in 2009. He had a fine season, finishing fifth in MVP voting, and was having another solid year in 2010 when he broke his leg stepping on home plate following a walkoff grand slam on May 29. He missed the rest of that season and all of 2011. He came back in 2012 and was again a good player, although perhaps not quite as good as he had been before his injury. After the season he was traded to Seattle for Jason Vargas. He spent 2013 with the Mariners and again put up solid numbers. He became a free agent after the season and went unsigned until early June, when he signed with Minnesota. He hit poorly and was traded back to Seattle in late July for Stephen Pryor. He was a free agent after the season and it looked like he might be done, but he signed with Kansas City and started hitting again. It's unclear what happened to him in 2014, but whatever it was it obviously went away, as he had two solid seasons for the Royals. A free agent after the 2016 campaign, he signed with Toronto and did okay from 2017-2018, although not as well as he had done in Kansas City. He was traded to Oakland just before the 2019 season, then was traded to the Yankees in mid-May. He has not hit for either team and was released by the Yankees in early July. He announced his retirement in February of 2020. As a Twin, he hit .234/.259/.325 in 154 at-bats. For his career, he hit .265/.327/.453. No information about what he has been doing more recently was readily available.
Left-hander Adalberto Mejia pitched in the Twins' organization since 2016. He was born in Donao, Dominican Republic and signed with the Giants as a free agent in 2011. He moved steadily up the Giants system, going to Class A in 2012, high-A in 2013, and AA in 2014. He had a rough year in 2014 but was off to an excellent start there in 2015 when his season was cut short, first by injury and then by a suspension for use of a banned stimulant. He did very well in eleven AA starts in 2016 and did okay in seven AAA starts when he was traded to Minnesota for Eduardo Nunez. He pitched well in four starts in Rochester and made one appearance with the Twins. He started the 2017 season in the Twins' rotation, was sent back to Rochester for a month after three starts, and came back to the Twins in late May. He was not particularly good, but he was not terrible, either. He spent most of 2018 in Rochester but made sporadic appearances with the Twins and did well in the limited chances he got. He was with the Twins for the first month of the 2019 season and had terrible numbers, then missed time due to injury. The Twins waived him in July. He was claimed by the Angels, waived again ten days later, claimed by St. Louis, was waived again about ten days after that, and was claimed by the Angels again. He signed with the White Sox for 2020 but was released in August. He signed with the Fubon Guardians in Taiwan for 2021. As a Twin he was 6-0, 4.63, 1.55 WHIP in 138 innings. He appeared in 40 games, starting 25 of them. He turns twenty-eight today. It's not impossible that Adalberto Mejia could still have a decent major league career, but the odds are definitely against it.
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