1969 Rewind: Game One Hundred Fifty-one

MINNESOTA 3, SEATTLE 2 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Saturday, September 20.

Batting stars:  Rod Carew was 3-for-4 with a walk and two runs.  Ted Uhlaender was 3-for-5 with a triple.  Cesar Tovar was 2-for-3 with a walk.  Tony Oliva was 2-for-5 with a double.

Pitching star:  Jim Perry pitched a complete game, giving up two runs on six hits and two walks and striking out eight.

Opposition stars:  John Kennedy was 2-for-3 with a two-run homer, his third.  Steve Whitaker was 2-for-4.  Gene Brabender pitched 6.1 innings, giving up two runs on nine hits and three walks and striking out four.

The game:  John Dondaldson and Whitaker started the game with singles, but Perry came back to strike out the next three batters.  The Pilots broke through in the second, though.  Jerry McNertney walked and Kennedy followed with a two-run homer, putting Seattle ahead 2-0.

Then came some frustration.  The Twins got two-out singles from Tovar and Johnny Roseboro in the second but did not score.  In the third the Twins got one-out singles from Uhlaender and Carew and again did not score.  In the fourth the Pilots got one-out singles from McNertney and Kennedy and did not score.  In the fifth, the Twins got a one-out single by Uhlaender followed by a walk to Carew and could not cash it in.  In the sixth, Killebrew walked and Tovar got a one-out single, but it again came to nothing.

Finally, in the seventh, the Twins got on the board.  Uhlaender tripled with one out and scored on a single by Carew.  Oliva followed with another single.  With two out, Rich Reese delivered an RBI single to tie the score 2-2.

It was still tied going to the bottom of the ninth.  With one out, Carew singled.  Oliva followed with a double, scoring Carew from first base with the deciding run.

WP:  Perry (20-6).  LP:  Diego Segui (11-6).  S:  None.

Notes:  Carew was restored to the second spot in the batting order and raised his average to .334.  Reese was 1-for-4 and was batting .321.  Oliva was batting .313.  Perry's ERA was 2.90.

This was the first time Perry won twenty games.  He would do it again in 1970, leading the league in wins with twenty-four.  He finished third in Cy Young voting in 1969 (behind Mike Cuellar and Denny McLain) and would win the award in 1970.

The Twins stranded eleven runners, going 2-for-10 with men in scoring position.

Record:  The Twins were 91-60, in first place in the American League West, eleven games ahead of Oakland.  The Athletics lost to California 7-3.  The Twins had clinched a tie for first place, which of course means their magic number was now one.

Happy Birthday–March 7

Ed Willett (1884)
Dave Danforth (1890)
Andy Phillip (1922)
Bobo Holloman (1923)
Red Wilson (1929)
Galen Cisco (1936)
Jimmie Hall (1938)
J. R. Richard (1950)
Jeff Burroughs (1951)
Albert Hall (1958)
Joe Carter (1960)
Jose Cano (1962)
German Gonzalez (1962)
Mauro Gozzo (1966)
Jeff Kent (1968)
Tyler Ladendorf (1988)

A member of the basketball Hall of Fame, Andy Phillip played minor league baseball in 1947, 1949, and 1952, batting .281 in 123 games.

Bobo Holloman is sometimes referred to as the worst pitcher ever to throw a major league no-hitter.

The father of Robinson Cano, Jose Cano appeared in six games for Houston in 1989.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to strategery's son.

Outfielder Jimmie Randolph Hall played for the Twins from 1963-1966.  He was born in Mount Holly, North Carolina and went to high school in Belmont, North Carolina.  He then was signed by Washington as a free agent in 1956.  He hit .385 his first year at Class D Superior, but then had some less impressive years.  He really struggled upon reaching AAA, batting only .227  there in 1960.  He then apparently suffered from injuries, as he totalled only 141 minor league at-bats in 1961-1962.  The Twins saw something in him, though, because in 1963 he became a regular outfielder for the Twins.  Hall started mostly in center field, although he would often be shifted to left late in games to replace Harmon Killebrew there, with Lenny Green taking over in center.  He hit .260 with an amazing 33 home runs (his highest home run total in the minors had been 17 in 1958), setting a rookie record for homers and finishing third in Rookie of the Year voting behind Gary Peters and Pete Ward.  He made the all-star team the next two years and finished 13th in MVP voting in 1965.  He hit in the .280s with a home run total in the twenties both years.  He played full-time in center field both of those years.  In 1966, the acquisition of Ted Uhlaender moved Hall to left.  The move did not go well, as Hall dropped to .239, although he again hit twenty home runs.  After the season, Hall was traded to California with Pete Cimino and Don Mincher for Dean Chance and a player to be named later (Jackie Hernandez).  He was the regular right fielder for the Angels in 1967, hitting .249 with sixteen homers, which in 1967 was not as bad as it might sound today.  It still wasn't good enough, however;  Hall became a part-time player, was traded to Cleveland in June of 1968, moved on to the Yankees in April of 1969, to the Cubs in September, to Atlanta in June of 1970, and was released after the 1970 season.  He hit for neither power nor average in any of those years.  Hall played at AAA for San Diego in 1971, then ended his playing career.  As a Twin, Jimmie Hall hit .269/.334/.481 with 98 home runs in four seasons.  Some sources attribute his drop-off to a time when he was hit in the head with a pitch, but this happened in 1964 and he had a fine season in 1965, so it seems unlikely.  After his playing career ended, Hall moved back to Mount Holly, North Carolina, where he was still living at last report.

Right-handed reliever German Jose (Caraballo) Gonzalez pitched for the Twins in parts of two seasons, 1988 and 1989.  His career contains more questions than answers.  Born in Rio Caribe, Venezuela, he signed with Minnesota as a free agent in 1986.  Gonzalez was obviously playing baseball somewhere before that, but no information is readily available about it.  He pitched very well in the Twins' minor league system, posting a 2.51 ERA and a 1.12 WHIP in Class A Kenosha in 1987 and a 1.02 ERA and a 0.97 WHIP in AA Orlando in 1988.  He came up to Minnesota in early August of 1988 and pitched well, with a 3.38 ERA and a 1.31 WHIP in 21.1 innings.  He bounced back and forth between AAA and the majors in 1989, coming to the Twins on three separate occasions.  He wasn't great, but he wasn't awful, either, going 3-2, 4.66 in 29 innings.  After that, however, the trail comes to an abrupt halt; he never appeared in organized baseball after 1989.  One assumes that he continued pitching somewhere for a while, as he had done well enough to warrant more chances, but this could not be confirmed, nor was any information readily available about what he has done since.

Right-hander Mauro Paul "Goose" Gozzo made two appearances for the Twins in 1992.  He was born in New Britain, Connecticut and went to high school in Berlin, Connecticut.  He was then drafted by the Mets in the 13th round in 1984.  The Mets kept him in Class A for three years, the last two of which were pretty good, although as a reliever he never pitched more than 78 innings in a season.  In March of 1987 Gozzo was traded to Kansas City in a trade that also involved Rick Anderson.  He had two pretty undistinguished years in AA Memphis and was left unprotected after the season.  He was chosen in the minor league draft by Toronto.  Something apparently clicked for him with the Blue Jays, as he had two fine years in their minor league system.  He was called up to the majors in early August of 1989 and was okay, going 4-1, 4.83 with a 1.39 WHIP.  He was back in the minors in 1990 and had another strong season, but Toronto traded him to Cleveland in September.  He finished the season in the majors, but again was back at AAA in 1991.  Gozzo was mostly a starter in AAA with the Indians and did not pitch very well.  He became a free agent after the season and signed with Minnesota for 1992.  He both started and relieved at AAA Portland, did pretty well, and got a September callup.  Mauro Gozzo pitched a total of 1.2 innings for the Twins, giving up five runs on seven hits.  He became a free agent after the season, signing with the Mets.  He was in the Mets' system for two years, splitting those years between AAA and the majors.  Gozzo pitched fairly well for the Mets when used out of the bullpen, though less well when tried as a starter.  He moved on to the Cubs' system in 1995, did not make the big leagues with them, and then ended his playing career.  Mauro Gozzo currently operates Goose's Major League Instruction, providing year-round baseball training and instruction, in Wallingford, Connecticut.  He is also the director of Goose’s Gamers, an AAU baseball league in Wallingford.  He has twin sons, Paul Gozzo and Sal Gozzo, who have played baseball for Tulane University.

Infielder/outfielder Tyler James Ladendorf did not play for the Twins but was in their farm system for two seasons.  He was born in Park Ridge, Illinois, went to high school in Des Plaines, Illinois, attended Howard College, and was drafted by Minnesota in the second round in 2008.  He hit very little in the GCL that year, hit a lot for Elizabethton in 61 at-bats in 2009, but did not do much for Beloit in 60 at-bats that same year.  He was sent to Oakland at the trade deadline in 2009 for Orlando Cabrera.  He did not reach AA until 2011 and did not get more than a few cups of coffee at AAA until 2014.  Surprisingly, he began 2015 in the majors but was injured after going 2-for-10 and was sent back to AAA when he came off the disabled list.  He got a September call-up and went 2-for-7, making him 4-for-17 on the season.  He spent much of 2016 with Oakland as a pinch-runner/defensive substitute and hit almost nothing, batting .083/.102/.083 in 48 at-bats (50 games).  He became a free agent after the 2016 season and signed with the White Sox.  He spent 2017 in AAA, and while he wasn't terrible he wasn't very good, either.  He became a free agent after the season and signed with Toronto for 2018, but was sold to Arizona in late May.  One assumes he was dealing with injuries, as he played in just forty-five minor league games.  He turns thirty-one today.  He has played every infield position except first base and has played every outfield position, so he offers position flexibility.  He offers little else, however.  In 1374 AA plate appearances he has batted .237/.321/.348.  In 888 AAA plate appearances he has batted .262/.331/.351.  He turns thirty-one today and is again a free agent..  He might get another chance, or he might sign with an independent league, but it also may be time for Tyler Ladendorf to figure out what he wants to do next in life.

1969 Rewind: Game One Hundred Fifty

MINNESOTA 2, SEATTLE 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Friday, September 19.

Batting stars:  Tony Oliva was 2-for-4 with a stolen base, his tenth.

Pitching star:  Dave Boswell struck out fourteen and pitched a complete game, giving up one run on five hits and a walk.

Opposition stars:  Steve Barber pitched five innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on seven hits and no walks and striking out two.  John Gelnar pitched two perfect innings, striking out one.

The game:  The Twins got one-out singles from Oliva and Killebrew in the first inning, but Bob Allison hit into a double play.  In the second, Rick Renick led off with a single, Leo Cardenas reached on an error, and Rod Carew singled, loading the bases with none out.  The Twins got only one run out of it, and that run scored on a double play off the bat of George Mitterwald.  Still, the Twins led 1-0.

The Pilots nearly tied it in the fourth, as John Donaldson led off with a triple.  But Boswell struck out Steve Hovley and future Twin Danny Walton and got ex-Twin Don Mincher to ground out to second, stranding Donaldson at third.  The Twins added a run in the fifth on singles by Allison and Cardenas and a force out hit by Carew, making the score 2-0.

Seattle got on the board in the seventh.  Walton hit a one-out double and with two out Jerry McNertney singled him home.  In the eighth the Pilots got the tying run to third.  With two out, Tommy Harper walked, stole second, and went to third on a wild pitch, but Donaldson grounded out to end the inning.

WP:  Boswell (18-11).  LP:  Barber (3-6).  S:  None.

Notes:  Carew was moved from his customary number two spot to seventh in the batting order.  Oliva moved up to second, Harmon Killebrew batted third, and Allison was fourth.  Allison was in left field.  Rick Renick batted fifth and played third base, with Killebrew on first.

Carew was 1-for-3 and was batting .330.  Oliva was batting .312.

By game scores, this was Boswell's best game of the season, with a score of 86.  His next highest score was 79, when he pitched twelve innings on July 14.  The fourteen strikeouts were a season high, topping the thirteen he had on May 13 in Baltimore.

In addition to Walton and Mincher, two other players connected to the Twins played in this game.  Ex-Twin Sandy Valdespino was used as a pinch-hitter and ex-Twin Ron Clark played shortstop as part of a double switch late in the game.  Ex-Twin Rich Rollins was also on the 1969 Seattle Pilots, but he played only half the season before missing the rest due to injury.

Record:  The Twins were 90-60, in first place in the American League West, ten games ahead of Oakland.  The Athletics lost to California 7-6, so the Twins' magic number was three.

Happy Birthday–March 6

Ring Lardner (1885)
Lefty Grove (1900)
Pete Gray (1915)
Bob Swift (1915)
Ted Abernathy (1933)
Cookie Rojas (1939)
Willie Stargell (1940)
Karl Best (1959)
Scott Stahoviak (1970)
Terry Adams (1973)
Marcus Thames (1977)
Clint Barmes (1979)
Jake Arrieta (1986)
Francisco Cervelli (1986)
Ross Detwiler (1986)

Author Ring Lardner wrote about a variety of subjects, but is probably most famous for writing about baseball.  If you haven't read any of his stuff, you really should.

As you probably know, Pete Gray played in 77 games for the St. Louis Browns in 1945 despite having only one arm.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–March 6

1969 Rewind: Game One Hundred Forty-nine

CALIFORNIA 5,  MINNESOTA 2 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Thursday, September 18.

Batting star:  Cesar Tovar was 2-for-4 with a home run, his eleventh.

Pitching stars:  Bob Miller pitched two shutout innings, giving up two hits and striking out one.  Al Worthington pitched two innings, giving up two hits and striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Andy Messersmith pitched 6.1 innings, giving up one run on five hits and two walks and striking out five.  Jim Fregosi was 3-for-5.  Billy Cowan was 2-for-2.  Jay Johnstone was 2-for-5.  Rick Reichardt was 1-for-3 with two walks and two runs.

The game:  Ted Uhlaender singled and stole second with none out in the first but stayed there.  Reichardt and Cowan opened the second with singles but did not score.  Reichardt opened the fourth with a walk and Cowan and Jarvis Tatum singled, loading the bases with none out.  This time, the Angels did score, as Joe Azcue had a run-scoring ground out and Aurelio Rodriguez hit a two-run single, making the score 3-0.

In the fifth Tovar singled, was balked to second, and went to third on an error, but could not advance the last ninety feet.  California got three walks in the sixth but could do nothing with them.  That was not true of the seventh, however.  With two out and none on, Fregosi singled and Reichardt and Roger Repoz walked, loading the bases.  Bill Voss then delivered a two-run single, making the score 5-0.

The Twins got on the board in the bottom of the seventh.  Harmon Killebrew singled and Rich Reese walked.  With one out, Johnny Roseboro hit an RBI single to make the score 5-1.  Leo Cardenas walked, loading the bases and bringing the tying run to the plate, but Graig Nettles hit into a line drive double play.  The Twins would not bring the tying run to the plate again.  They scored once more when Tovar homered with two out in the ninth, but that was it.

WP:  Messersmith (16-9).  LP:  Tom Hall (8-6).  S:  Vern Geishert (1).

Notes:  Rod Carew was 0-for-4 and was batting .330.  Rich Reese was 0-for-3 with a walk and was batting .322.  Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 and was batting .310.

Miller lowered his ERA to 2.99.  Ron Perranoski pitched a third of an inning and gave up no runs on one hit, making his ERA 2.27.

Hall started and pitched three innings, allowing three runs on five hits and two walks and striking out two.

This was the only save of Vern Geishert's career.  He pitched in just eleven major league games, two of them against the Twins.

Jarvis Tatum was a September call-up for the Angels in both 1968 and 1969.  He did much better in 1969, batting .318 in 22 plate appearances.  He had no walks and no extra-base hits, so his line was .318/.318/.318.  He was in the majors for almost all of 1970 as a reserve outfielder.  He did not do well, batting .238/.302/.276 in 201 plate appearances.  He was only twenty-three, though, so one would've thought the Angels would give him another chance.  They didn't.  Instead, they traded him to Boston as part of the Tony Conigliaro trade.  Boston released him in early April of 1971.  He played in Japan in 1971, in AAA for the Padres in 1972, and in Mexico in 1973 before ending his playing career.  Jarvis Tatum passed away on January 6, 2003 at the young age of fifty-six.  He is one of two major league players to have the first name "Jarvis", with ex-Twin Jarvis Brown being the other.

Record:  The Twins were 89-60, in first place in the American League West, nine games ahead of Oakland.  The Athletics lost to Kansas City 6-1, so the Twins' magic number was down to five.

Happy Birthday–March 5

Sam Thompson (1860)
Jeff Tesreau (1888)
Lu Blue (1897)
Elmer Valo (1921)
Del Crandall (1930)
Phil Roof (1941)
Katsuo Osugi (1945)
Kent Tekulve (1947)
Doug Bird (1950)
Mike Veeck (1951)
Mike Squires (1952)
Steve Ontiveros (1961)
Brian Hunter (1971)
Jeffrey Hammonds (1971)
Ryan Franklin (1973)
Paul Konerko (1976)
Mike MacDougal (1977)
Erik Bedard (1979)
Joe Benson (1988)

Katsuo Osugi was the first player to have a thousand hits in the Japanese Central League and the Japanese Pacific League.

The son of Bill Veeck, Mike Veeck is president of the Goldklang Baseball Group, which owns a variety of minor league teams, including the St. Paul Saints.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to brianS’ daughter.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to spookymilk’s father.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–March 5