1987 Rewind: Game Four

MINNESOTA 8, SEATTLE 1 IN SEATTLE

Date:  Friday, April 10.

Batting stars:  Randy Bush was 3-for-4 with a home run and three RBIs.  Kirby Puckett was 2-for-4 with a home run, scoring twice and driving in two.  Steve Lombardozzi was 2-for-3 with a double and a walk, scoring twice and driving in one.

Pitching stars:  Mike Smithson pitched eight innings, giving up an unearned run on five hits and a walk with three strikeouts.  George Frazier pitched a perfect inning with one strikeout.

Opposition stars:  Jim Presley was 2-for-4 with an RBI.  Rey Quinones was 2-for-4.

The game:  Bush hit a two-run homer in a three-run fifth that put the Twins up 5-1.  The Twins had added three in the eighth, two scoring on a two-run homer by Gary Gaetti.

Of Note:  Al Newman started at shortstop in place of Greg Gagne and was 3-for-5 with a run.  Gaetti was 1-for-4.  Tom Brunansky was 0-for-4.

Record:  The Twins remained unbeaten, going to 4-0.  They were in first place, leading California by a game.

Notes:  Dan Gladden remained out of the lineup, with Brunansky in left and Bush in right...I don't remember Jim Presley as a home run hitter, but he hit 28 in 1985, 27 in 1986, and 24 in 1987.  Those were his only really productive years, though.  He hung on in Seattle through 1989, then bounced around a couple more seasons before ending his playing career.  He has stayed in baseball as a coach, and in 2016 was the batting coach for Round Rock.

Happy Birthday–October 7

Fleet Walker (1856)
Brickyard Kennedy (1867)
Bill Walker (1903)
Chuck Klein (1904)
Frank Baumholtz (1918)
Grady Hatton (1922)
Bud Daley (1932)
Phil Ortega (1939)
Jose Cardenal (1943)
Rich DeLucia (1964)
Evan Longoria (1985)

Moses Fleetwood "Fleet" Walker is credited as the first African-American to play major league baseball.  A catcher, he appeared in forty-two games for the Toledo Blue Stockings of the American Association in 1884, until rival owners and players demanded that he be removed from the roster.  In those forty-two games, he batted .263/.325/.316.

There do not appear to be any players with connections to the Twins born on this day.  I keep thinking that Bud Daley was a Twin, but apparently I get him confused in my mind with Bill Dailey.

Top 300 Twins of all Time: One Man’s opinion

It is year 5 of putting my pet project on the WGOM site, SBG put it on his old site a few years before this. Despite the worst record in 56 years of Minnesota Twins baseball, a few players did move up the rankings. Joe seems stuck for eternity between Oliva and Hrbek. He still needs one more decent year to crack the top4, but he's running out of time. Dozier rockets into the top30 on the strength of his outstanding 2016 season. Plouffe jumps 13 spots to 83. Sano jumps 39 spots to 123. Suzuki jumps 31 spots to #133 just ahead of his almost statistical equal (as a Twin) Terry Steinbach. All Star Eduardo Nunez goes from unranked last year all the way to 145. Ervin jumps over 100 spots to #156. Besides Nunez, other newcomers this year (that all are in the 250-300 range) are Grossman, Kepler, Buxton, Pressley, Polanco, Vargas

Staying put (or even falling backward) are Perkins, Hughes, Escobar, Danny Santana, Rosario, Gibson, Fien, Arcia, Milone

I stole most of the idea from when Gleeman started his top40 list years ago (book coming next year?) The below quote is his, and the rest is an excerpt from a book I put together at the 50 year mark. I’ve updated the list and stats through 2016.

“The rankings only include time spent playing for the Minnesota Twins. In other words, David Ortiz doesn’t get credit for turning into one of the best players in baseball after joining the Red Sox and Paul Molitor doesn’t get credit for being one of the best players in baseball for the Brewers and Blue Jays. The Twins began playing on April 11, 1961, and that’s when these rankings start as well.”

I used a variety of factors, including longevity and peak value. Longevity included how many years the player was a Twin as well as how many plate appearances or innings pitched that player had in those years. For peak value, I looked at their stats, honors, and awards in their best seasons, as well as how they compared to their teammates. Did they lead their team in OPS or home runs or ERA for starters or WPA? If so, that got some bonus points. I factored in postseason heroics, awards (gold gloves, silver sluggers, MVPs, Cy Youngs), statistical achievements (batting titles, home run leaders, ERA champs, etc), and honors (all star appearances), and I looked at team success as well. If you were the #1 starter on a division winning champ, that gave you more points than the #1 starter on a cellar dweller. I looked at some of the advanced stats like WPA, WAR (as calculated by fan graphs and baseball-reference.com), WARP (as calculated by Baseball Prospectus), and Win Shares (as calculated by Bill James). For hitters, I also looked at OPS and the old school triple crown statistics like batting average, home runs, stolen bases, and RBI (and not only where you finished within the AL in any given year, but where you appear on the top25 lists amongst all Twins in the last 50 years). For pitchers I looked at strikeouts, innings pitched, win/loss percentage, ERA as well as ERA+). If there was a metric that was used for all 54 years of Twins history, I tried to incorporate it. I tended to give more credit to guys who were starters instead of part time/platoon players, more credit to position players over pitchers (just slightly, but probably unfairly) and starters over relievers (and closers over middle relievers). There’s no formula to my magic, just looking at a lot of factors and in the end going with the gut in all tie-breakers. Up in the top10 I’m looking at All star appearances, Cy Young and MVP votes, batting average or ERA titles or top10 finishes, etc, and placement in the top25 hitting and pitching lists in Twins history as well. In the middle 100s, it’s more about who started a few more years or had 2 good seasons rather than 1 with possibly an occasional all-star berth or top10 finish in SB or strikeouts. Once you’re in the latter half of the 200s there are none of those on anyone’s resume, so its basically just looking at peak season in OPS+ or ERA+, WAR, Win Shares, and who started the most years, had the most at bats, or pitched the most innings. What the player did as a coach, manager, or broadcaster is not taken into consideration for this list, so Billy Martin, Tom Kelly or Billy Gardner weren’t able to make the top 300 since they were poor players and Frank Quilici didn’t improve his status due to his managing career.
Continue reading Top 300 Twins of all Time: One Man’s opinion

1987 Rewind: Game Three

MINNESOTA 5, OAKLAND 4 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Thursday, April 9.

Batting stars:  Tom Brunansky was 3-for-4 with a run and an RBI.  Kent Hrbek was 1-for-2 with a home run and two walks.  Dan Gladden was 1-for-1 with two RBIs.

Pitching star:  Juan Berenguer struck out four in three shutout innings of relief, giving up just one hit.

Opposition stars:  Mike Davis was 3-for-4 with a home run, a double, a walk, three RBIs, and two stolen bases.  Carney Lansford was 2-for-4 with a run.  Dennis Eckersley pitched 2.2 scoreless innings of relief, giving up one hit.

The game:  Hrbek homered in a two-run second that put the Twins up 2-0, but Davis homered in a two-run third to tie that tied it 2-2.    Davis' two-run double in the sixth made it 4-2 Oakland and it stayed there until the ninth.  With one out, Gary Gaetti doubled and scored on a Brunansky single to make it 4-3.  Roy Smalley doubled, Mark Salas was intentionally walked, and Gladden delivered a pinch-hit single down the left field line to bring home the tying and winning runs.

Of note:  Kirby Puckett was 0-for-4.  Greg Gagne was 2-for-3.  Mark Portugal pitched 5.2 innings, allowing four runs on seven hits and five walks with five strikeouts.

Record:  The Twins were 3-0 and took over sole possession of first place, a game ahead of California and the White Sox.

Notes:  Gladden remained out of the starting lineup, with Randy Bush playing right field and Brunansky moving to left...Eckersley was not yet the closer for the Athletics, but was setting up Jay Howell...Mike Davis' career numbers are not all that impressive, but he was pretty good at his peak.  From 1985-87 he batted .274 with 65 home runs and 70 stolen bases.  After the 1987 season he became a free agent, went to the Dodgers, and his career pretty much collapsed.  He did win a world championship there, though, and drew a walk right in front of Kirk Gibson's famous home run in Game 1 of the World Series.

Happy Birthday–October 6

Pop Snyder (1854)
Jerry Grote (1942)
Gene Clines (1946)
Gary Gentry (1946)
Victor Bernal (1953)
Alfredo Griffin (1957)
Oil Can Boyd (1959)
Rich Yett (1962)
Ruben Sierra (1965)
Archi Cianfrocco (1966)
Darren Oliver (1970)
Freddy Garcia (1976)
Andrew Albers (1985)

Right-hander Victor Bernal was drafted by the Twins in the 1975 January draft, but the pick was voided. He went on to be chosen by San Diego in the June draft of 1975 and played in fifteen games for the Padres in 1977.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–October 6