Tom Burns (1857)
George Van Haltren (1866)
Ripper Collins (1904)
Dick Fowler (1921)
Dick Woodson (1945)
Grady Little (1950)
Jason Dickson (1973)
Jeriome Robertson (1977)
Josh Bard (1978)
Josh Bard was drafted by Minnesota in the thirty-fifth round in 1996, but did not sign.
Right-hander Richard Lee Woodson was with the Twins for four years, 1969-1970 and 1972-1973. He was born in Oelwein, Iowa, but attended high school in San Diego. He signed with the Twins as a free agent in 1965. He both started and relieved in the minors. He did not look like anything special in his first couple of years, but in 1967, used exclusively out of the bullpen, he went 5-2, 1.32 in 41 innings in Class A Orlando. Primarily a starter in 1968, he had another fine year, mostly at AA Charlotte, posting a 3.47 ERA and a 1.22 WHIP. He was with Minnesota all of 1969 and did fairly well. He was used mostly in relief, although he made ten starts, and went 7-5, 3.67 in 110 innings. Woodson started 1970 in the minors and did not do very well, but was called up to the Twins in late May anyway and did all right in 21 relief appearances. He was back in the minors for all of 1971, winning 16 games and pitching 221 innings for AAA Portland. Back in the majors in 1972, he had his best season, going 14-14, 2.72 in 251 innings. The number of innings may have taken a toll on his arm, however. His ERA rose by more than a full run in 1973, to 3.95, and an injury ended his season in mid-August. That off-season, he became the first player to go to arbitration, seeking a salary of $30,000 (the Twins offered $23,000--Woodson won). He got off to a poor start in 1974 and was traded to the Yankees in early May for Mike Pazik and cash. He again had to deal with injuries and an abbreviated season. He pitched ineffectively at AAA for the Atlanta and Texas organizations in 1975 and then his career was over. Woodson believed that his role as the first player to go to arbitration played a role in both his trade and the end of his career, although such a charge is difficult to prove. As a Twin, Dick Woodson was 33-30, 3.35. He appeared in 129 games, 73 of them starts, and pitched 561 innings. Woodson eventually became part-owner of a company which developed software to help companies track and monitor their assets. He retired at age 60 and at last report was living in Menifee, California, where he was volunteering with the elementary school reading program a couple of days a week.
For some reason I always remember getting a ton of these when I was collecting BB cards as a kid.