Barney Gilligan (1856)
Warren Brown (1894)
Gus Suhr (1906)
Frenchy Bordagaray (1910)
Sid Hudson (1915)
Eddie Einhorn (1936)
Bob Gebhard (1943)
Dick Colpaert (1944)
Larry Barnett (1945)
Gary Lavelle (1949)
Jim Dwyer (1950)
Darren Daulton (1962)
Luis Rivera (1964)
Luis Sojo (1965)
A. J. Burnett (1977)
Michael Restovich (1979)
Alex Meyer (1990)
Warren Brown was a long-time sportswriter, mostly in Chicago. He coined Babe Ruth's famous nickname, "The Sultan of Swat".
Eddie Einhorn was a part-owner of the Chicago White Sox. He was the founder of the TVS networks, which syndicated sports regionally and nationally in the days before twenty-four hour sports stations.
Larry Barnett was a major league umpire from 1969-1999.
Right-handed reliever Robert Henry Gebhard appeared in 30 games for the Twins over two years in 1971-1972. A native of Lamberton, Minnesota, Gebhard went to high school in Lamberton and then attended the University of Iowa. He was chosen by the Twins in the 44th round of the draft in 1965. A starter early in his minor league career, he pitched very well in 1965, but not so well in 1966. He was shifted to the bullpen after that, and reeled off four pretty good years, two in Class A, one in AA, and one in AAA. He did some starting in Portland in 1971, and did less well, but was still called up to the Twins for the final two months of the season. Gebhard battled injuries in 1972, and did not pitch well when he could pitch. He was back in AAA in 1973, continued to not pitch well, and was released after the season. Montreal signed Gebhard, put him back into the bullpen full time, and he responded with a couple of very good seasons at AAA Memphis. He made one final appearance with Montreal, in 1974, but retired after not getting back to the big leagues in 1975. As a Twin, Bob Gebhard was 1-3, 6.00 in 41 innings of relief. Gebhard has remained in baseball after his playing career ended, first as a coach and then as a member of the front office. He was an assistant general manager for the Twins from 1988 through 1991, and then became the first general manager of the Colorado Rockies, a position he held through 1999. He has also worked for St. Louis Cardinals and until 2009 was the general manager of the Arizona Diamondbacks. He suffered a mild heart attack in February of 2010, but appears to have made a full recovery. Bob Gebhard was a vice president and special assistant to the general manager for the Diamondbacks through 2016, then took a similar role for the St. Louis Cardinals in 2017 until his retirement in 2020. He was inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in 2021.
Right-hander Richard Charles Colpaert did not play for the Twins, but was briefly in their farm system, at least on paper. He was born in Fraser, Michigan, and signed with Baltimore as a free agent in 1961. He had a good year in 1962 as a reliever for Class D Appleton, then was selected by Pittsburgh in the first-year player draft. He spent the next ten years in the Pirates’ organization, putting up good ERAs every year but getting little chance for advancement. He reached AA in 1962 and stayed there through 1968. He made 245 appearances in AA, going 24-24 with a 3.41 ERA in 412 innings. Finally, in 1969, Colpaert was promoted to AAA, again posting good numbers but not getting moved up. His sole time in the big leagues was about three weeks in late July-early August of 1970, when he made eight relief appearances for the Pirates. He was 1-0, 5.91, 1.59 WHIP in 10.2 innings. After the 1972 season, he was sold to Kansas City, but was left unprotected and chosen in the Rule 5 draft by Cleveland. He had a poor year in AAA in 1973 and was traded to Minnesota with Bill Butler after the season for Mike Brooks and Jim Strickland. Before the 1974 season, however, the Twins sent him to Boston “in an unknown transaction.” It was known to the people involved, at least, because Colpaert started 1974 in AAA for the Red Sox. After 12 ineffective relief appearances, however, he was released in July, ending his playing career. His minor league numbers are not mind-blowing, especially when considered in the context of the 1960s, but he seems at least as good as a lot of other players who got a lot more of a shot than he did. He was a major league scout for many years after his playing career ended, including working for the Major League Scouting Bureau. He was living in Shelby Township, Michigan when he passed away on April 6, 2021.
Outfielder/DH James Edward Dwyer played for the Twins for part of the 1988, 1989, and 1990 seasons. He was born in Evergreen Park, Illinois, went to high school in Oaklawn, Illinois, and attended Southern Illinois University. He was drafted by St. Louis in the eleventh round in 1971. He was always a high-average hitter in the minors, posting an average of over .300 in every year in which he played more than eight games. He first reached the majors in 1973, but bounced back and forth between St. Louis and AAA until he was traded to Montreal in July of 1975. He finished the season with the Expos and did fairly well, but when he started poorly in 1976 he was on the move again, traded to the Mets in July. Most of his time there was spent in the minors and then he was once again traded, this time to the Cubs. Dwyer hit .332 with 18 homers and 12 triples for AAA Wichita for an OPS of 1.041 in 1977. All it got him was a release as soon as the season was over. Now heading into his age 28 season, he signed with St. Louis. Dwyer finally got his first full season in the majors, but it wasn’t all with the Cardinals; he was traded to San Francisco in mid-June. He didn’t get much chance to play with either team, and did not do much with the chances he had. In March of 1979, the Giants sold him to Boston. He was a part-time player for the Red Sox for two years and did fairly well, posting his best major league season up to that time. He became a free agent after the 1980 season and moved to Baltimore, where he finally found a home. He was never a regular, but he was a part-time outfielder for the Orioles for the next seven years, helping the Orioles win a world championship in 1983. He started an eighth year, 1988, with Baltimore, but played little and was traded in late August to the Twins for a player to be named later (Doug Kline). He finished the season with Minnesota, hitting .293 with 2 homers in 41 at-bats. Dwyer was with the Twins most of 1989 and again hit well, posting an average of .316 as a left-handed DH, but was traded back to Montreal in late August for a player to be named later (Alonzo Powell). He was traded back to the Twins that off-season for Jim Davins. Now 40, he got off to a slow start in 1990 and elected to retire in late June. As a Twin, Jim Dwyer hit .289/.387/.380 in 329 at-bats (145 games). He was never a star, and in fact was never a regular; the highest number of at-bats he got in a season was 260. Still, he was a big league ball player for all or part of eighteen seasons, and there are not a lot of people who can say that. After his playing days ended, Jim Dywer was a coach and manager in the Twins organization, coaching at Portland (1991), managing at Ft. Wayne (1992) and Kenosha (1993-1994), coaching at New Britain (1995-1996), serving as minor league hitting coordinator (1997-2005), and coaching at Ft. Myers (2006-2016) until his retirement. At last report, he was living in Cape Coral, Florida.
Outfielder Michael Jerome Restovich played for the Twins at various times from 2002-2004. He was born in Rochester, Minnesota, and went to high school there. Restovich was chosen by the Twins in the second round in 1997. He was tremendous in his first couple of minor-league years, which were spent in rookie and Class A ball. He was less tremendous, but still pretty good, at higher levels. He averaged over 20 homers a year in AAA from 2002-2004, a figure that is even more remarkable when you remember that he also was in the majors for a substantial part of those seasons. The Twins never gave Restovich anything approaching regular playing time in the big leagues, but he still hit .274/.364/.442 in 113 at-bats spread over three years. Despite all that, Minnesota put Restovich on waivers just before the 2005 season, and he was selected by Tampa Bay. The Devil Rays put him on waivers a week later, and he moved on to Colorado. Restovich was hitting .290 in part-time play for the Rockies when he was on the move again, this time going to Pittsburgh in mid-May. Restovich remained with the Pirates the rest of the season, his only full year in the majors, but was released once the season ended. He was with the Cubs in 2006 and Washington in 2007, getting brief appearances in the majors both years. He was signed by Philadelphia in November of 2007, but was released two weeks later. He went to Japan for 2008, then came back to the United States. Restovich played for Charlotte in the White Sox' organization in 2009 and for Albuquerque in the Dodgers’ chain in 2010, continuing to hit well. In 2011 he played in the White Sox and Diamondbacks organizations, but did not hit well, and his playing career came to an end. In eight AAA seasons, he hit .278/.346/.498 with 148 home runs. It's hard to understand why no one wanted to give him a chance to show what he could do in the majors, but no one did. After leaving baseball Michael Restovich went to law school and then joined his family's law firm. Restovich, Braun & Associates, in Rochester, Minnesota.
Right-hander Alex John Meyer appeared in two games for the Twins in 2015 and two more in 2016. Born and raised in Greensburg, Indiana, he attended the University of Kentucky and was drafted by Washington in the first round in 2011. He had a good year in Class A in 2012 but was traded to Minnesota after that season for Denard Span. He missed time in 2013 due to injury, but pitched well when he did pitch. He had a fairly good season in Rochester in 2014 but did not pitch well there in 2015, despite which he made two appearances for the Twins in June. It did not go well for him, as he gave up five runs on four hits and three walks in 2.2 innings. He had been a starter for his entire minor league career through 2014, but pitched mostly out of the bullpen in 2015, making 30 relief appearances and only eight starts. He made two more appearances with the Twins in 2016, which did not go much better, and then was traded to the Angels on August 1 with Ricky Nolasco and cash for Hector Santiago and Alan Busenitz. He got a September call-up, went into the rotation, and didn't do too badly. He spent about half of 2017 with the Angels and did well in twelve starts, but then was injured again and was unable to pitch in 2018. The Angels placed him on waivers after the 2018 season, but then signed him to a minor-league contract for 2019. Unfortunately, he was still unable to pitch and announced his retirement in June. As a Twin, he was 0-1, 14.21, 3.00 WHIP in 6.1 innings. He might have had a good career if he'd been able to stay healthy, but that's not the way it went. At last report, Alex Meyer had moved back to his hometown of Greensburg and was working in sales for BSN Sports. He is also the baseball coach of Greensburg Community High School.
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