Happy Birthday–November 23

Due to personal time constraints, this is a reprint from last year which has not been updated.

This is a great day for names:

Chief Zimmer (1860)
Hi Church (1863)
Socks Seybold (1870)
George Stovall (1877)
Jimmy Sheckard (1878)
Runt Marr (1891)
Freddy Leach (1897)
Beans Reardon (1897)
Bubber Jonnard (1897)
Prince Hal Schumacher (1910)
Bill Gates (1918)
Charlie Osgood (1926)
John Anderson (1929)
Jack McKeon (1930)
Luis Tiant (1940)
Tom Hall (1947)
Ken Schrom (1954)
Brook Jacoby (1959)
Dale Sveum (1963)
David McCarty (1969)
Adam Eaton (1977)
Jonathan Papelbon (1980)

Runt Marr played in the minor leagues for nineteen years, managed in the minors for fifteen years, and was also a scout for many years.

Beans Reardon was a National League umpire from 1926-1949.

Bubber Jonnard was a long-time coach and scout.

Bill Gates was a minor league pitcher from 1938-1940 and 1946-1951.

Jack McKeon was a long-time manager and general manager, leading the Florida Marlins to a World Series victory in 2003.  In 2011, he became the second-oldest manager in major league history at age 80.  He also managed in the minor leagues for the Senators/Twins from 1957-64 and again in 1968, scouting for the Twins from 1965-67.

We would like to wish everyone a wonderful and blessed Thanksgiving.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 23

2002 Rewind: Game Forty-nine

ANAHEIM 4, MINNESOTA 3 IN ANAHEIM (13 INNINGS)

Date:  Saturday, May 25.

Batting stars:  Denny Hocking was 2-for-5 with two doubles.  Jacque Jones was 2-for-6.  Dustan Mohr was 1-for-4 with a walk.

Pitching stars:  Matt Kinney pitched 6.2 innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on seven hits and one walk while striking out five.  LaTroy Hawkins struck out four in two shutout innings.  J. C. Romero retired all four batters he faced.

Opposition stars:  Adam Kennedy was 2-for-5 with a double.  Darin Erstad was 2-for-4 with a walk and a stolen base, his sixth.  Jarrod Washburn pitched eight innings, giving up three runs on four hits and three walks while striking out seven.

The game:  The Angels took the lead with two in the second on a run-scoring double by Kennedy and an RBI bunt single by Jose Nieves.  Hocking's two-run double tied it in the fifth.  The Twins took the lead 3-2 in the top of the eighth when Hocking again doubled and scored on a Cristian Guzman single.  Eddie Guardado came in to pitch the ninth and Twins fans were confident, but Scott Spiezio drew a one-out walk and pinch-runner Julio Ramirez scored from first on a double by Bengie Molina.  The Twins put two on with two out in the top of the thirteenth, but David Ortiz flied out to end the threat.  In the bottom of the thirteenth, Tim Salmon made the first pitch Jack Cressend threw the last pitch he would throw, sending it over the fence for a walkoff home run.

WP:  Al Levine (2-1). LP:  Cressend (0-1).  S:  None.

Notes:  Tom Prince caught in place o A. J. Pierzynski.  He was 0-for-4, dropping his average to .306...Hocking was once again at second.  This game gave him a four-game hitting streak in which he was 7-for-15...Romero's ERA fell to 0.33...Mike Jackson pitched a scoreless inning to make his ERA 0.90...Hawkins' ERA dropped to 1.95...Cressend had four consecutive scoreless appearances, covering 7.2 innings, before this game.  His ERA had dropped from 8.82 to 6.00...Julio Ramirez, who scored the tying run, had a brief career, but it spanned five seasons.  A native of the Dominican Republic, he signed with the Marlins when he was sixteen in 1993.  An outfielder, he made his major league debut with Florida in 1999 as a September call-up, appearing in fifteen games but starting just four of them and getting only twenty-one at-bats.  He was primarily used as a defensive replacement and pinch-runner.  He was traded to the White Sox for 2001 and played in twenty-two games for them, starting twelve and getting thirty-seven at-bats.  He moved on to the Angels for 2002.  The game we're dealing with here came in the middle of a six-week stretch he spent in the majors, going down in mid-June and coming back in September.  He again didn't play much, appearing in 29 games but making just seven starts and getting just thirty-two at-bats.  He was with the Angels for six games in 2003 and with San Francisco for twelve games in 2005.  His career line is .167/.216/.229 in 96 at-bats.  Given that he was so often used as a defensive replacement or a pinch-runner, one assumes he was fast, but he attempted only five stolen bases and was successful only twice.  He stole much more often in the minors, getting 327 stolen bases (in 442 attempts).  He stole 135 stolen bases over two minor league seasons, getting 71 in the Florida State League in 1998 and 64 in the Eastern League in 1999.  He wasn't just a slap singles hitter, though, as he hit 101 minor league home runs, with a high of 23 for AAA Fresno in 2005.  On the one hand, it seems kind of unfair that teams kept calling him up and then not giving him a chance to play.  On the other hand, his AAA line is .253/.292/.399, which is not all that impressive, so maybe he should feel fortunate that he spent as much time in the majors as he did.

Record:  The Twins were 27-22, in second place, a game behind Chicago.

Happy Birthday–November 22

Harry Rice (1901)
Dick Bartell (1907)
Lew Burdette (1926)
Wade Blasingame (1943)
Rich Chiles (1946)
Greg Luzinski (1950)
Lyman Bostock (1950)
Wayne Tolleson (1955)
Lee Guetterman (1958)
Mike Benjamin (1965)
Jay Payton (1972)
Ricky Ledee (1973)
Joe Nathan (1974)
Jonny Gomes (1980)
Yusmeiro Petit (1984)

Mike Benjamin was drafted by Minnesota in the seventh round in January, 1985, but did not sign.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 22

2002 Rewind: Game Forty-eight

MINNESOTA 5, ANAHEIM 1 IN ANAHEIM

Date:  Friday, May 24.

Batting stars:  Jacque Jones was 2-for-3 with a home run (his ninth) and two hit-by-pitches.  A. J. Pierzynski was 2-for-4 with a home run.  Torii Hunter was 1-for-4 with a three-run homer, his thirteenth.

Pitching star:  Rick Reed pitched a complete game, giving up one run on three hits and no walks while striking out four.

Opposition stars:  Brad Fullmer hit a home run, his fourth.  Donne Wall retired all five batters he faced.

The game:  Jones led off the game with a home run and the Twins led all the way.  Jones and Cristian Guzman led off the third with singles.  The next two batters flied out, but Hunter's fly ball went over the fence to make the score 4-0.  Pierzynski hit a home run with one out in the fourth to put the Twins up 5-0.  Reed took it from there.  He gave up a one-out single to Darin Erstad in the first and did not give up another hit until Fullmer's home run leading off the fifth.  The only other Angels hit was a Bengie Molina single with two out in the eighth.

WP:  Reed (5-2).  LP:  Ramon Ortiz (4-5).  S:  None.

Notes:  Corey Koskie returned to the lineup, going 0-for-3.  Casey Blake, who had played some third in his absence, went back to the minors.  Jay Canizaro, who had also been playing some third in Koskie's absence, would stay until the end of May, then go back to the minors as well...Denny Hocking remained at second in place of Luis Rivas, going 1-for-4...This was one of two complete games for Reed in 2002 and was the batter of the two, at least by game scores...This was the best year, and really the only good year, that Ramon Ortiz would have.  He went 15-11, 3.77, 1.18 WHIP.  It was the only year he had an ERA under four and one of just four seasons (out of twelve) in which he had an ERA under five.  It was one of only two times in his career that he led the league in anything.  Unfortunately for him, it was home runs allowed, with forty.  He had a FIP of 4.87 as a result.  The other time he led the league in something was 2006, when he led the league in losses with 16.  He was, of course, a Twin for part of 2007.  He got off to a good start, but by the end of May he was pitching the way he had always pitched.  He ended his career 87-86, 4.95, 1.43 WHIP.

Record:  The Twins were 27-21, tied for first place with Chicago.