Happy Birthday–November 28

Heinie Pietz (1870)
Frank O'Rourke (1894)
Jerry Gardner (1920)
Wes Westrum (1922)
Sixto Lezcano (1953)
Dave Righetti (1958)
Walt Weiss (1963)
John Burkett (1964)
Matt Williams (1965)
Pedro Astacio (1969)
Robb Nen (1969)
Jose Parra (1972)
Carlos Villaneuva (1983)
Miguel Diaz (1994)

Jerry Gardner spent most of his life in baseball as a minor-league player and manager and as a scout.

We would like to wish a very happy birthday to Mom Runner.

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

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 28

Minnesota Twins 2010s All-Decade Team

Inspired by The Athletic's all-decade teams for all of baseball, let's see what the Citizens here think of it. Here is Gleeman's article about his all-decade Twins team. I have reproduced it below in spoilered form for reference. Bonus discussion if you post the least-favorite or Bizzaro World team

Here's a template for you to use:
Catcher:
First base:
Second base:
Third base:
Shortstop:
Left field:
Center field:
Right field:
Designated Hitter:
Starter 1:
Starter 2:
Starter 3:
Starter 4:
Starter 5:
Closer:
Bullpen:
Bullpen:
Bullpen:
Bullpen:
Bullpen:

Spoiler: Gleeman's all-decade team SelectShow

1991 Rewind: Game Fifty

MINNESOTA 4, KANSAS CITY 1 IN KANSAS CITY

Date:  Sunday, June 2.

Batting stars:  Greg Gagne was 3-for-5 with a double.  Kirby Puckett was 2-for-4 with a home run (his sixth), a double, a walk, and two RBIs.  Lenny Webster was 1-for-2 with a double and two walks.

Pitching star:  Scott Erickson pitched 8.1 innings, giving up one run on five hits and a walk and striking out eight.  He threw 119 pitches.

Opposition stars:  Jim Eisenreich was 3-for-4 with a double.  Luis Aquino pitched four shutout innings, giving up three hits and a walk and striking out two.

The game:  The Twins scored exactly one run in each of the first four innings.  In the first, Chuck Knoblauch tripled followed by a Puckett double.  In the second, Mike Pagliarulo doubled, went to third on a wild pitch, and scored on Gagne's single.  In the third, Puckett homered.

The Royals got on the board in the bottom of the third, as Terry Shumpert walked, went to second on a ground out, and scored on Kirk Gibson's single.  Webster homered in the fourth to make the score 4-1.

And that was it.  Erickson was in control after that, retiring ten straight batters at one point and not allowing a man past second base.  Rick Aguilera came on with one out in the ninth to complete the game.

WP:  Erickson (8-2).  LP:  Tom Gordon (4-3).  S:  Aguilera (11).

Notes:  Pedro Munoz replaced Dan Gladden in left.  Gagne was the leadoff batter.  Gene Larkin was in right field.  Gladden was used as a pinch-runner for Larkin in the eighth and went to left field, with Munoz moving to right.  Al Newman pinch-ran for Pagliarulo, also in the eighth inning, and remained in the game at third base.  With the injury to Junior OrtizWebster was called up and made his 1991 debut.  He had been up briefly in 1989 and 1990, getting a total of twenty-six at-bats, but his home run in this game was the first of his major league career.  It's interesting that Tom Kelly continued to use someone other than Brian Harper to catch Erickson.

Webster, after his debut, was batting .500.  Puckett raised his average to .335.  Gagne raised his average to .319.  Erickson lowered his ERA to 1.58.  Aguilera dropped his ERA to 1.82.

Despite the fact that Erickson was only twenty-three and in his first full year in the majors, TK was not hesitant to leave him out there.  This was his eleventh start, and he had thrown over one hundred pitches in eight of them.  In six of them he was over one hundred ten and four he had one hundred twenty or more.  His high was 134 on April 16 and his low was 84 in his next start on April 21.  His average in those eleven starts was one hundred ten.

Eisenreich apparently enjoyed playing against his former team.  For his career, he batted .341/.364/.514 in 179 at-bats against the Twins.  The only team against whom he had a higher career OPS was the Dodgers, whom he destroyed to the tune of .405/.468/.620 in 205 at-bats.  He hit seven homers against the Dodgers and no more than four against any other club.  In 1991 Eisenreich batted .423/.444/.615 against Minnesota.  Obviously, he did not play against the Dodgers that year.

The Twins had finally pulled back up to .500.  Could they get above .500?  Could they stay there?  We shall see.

Record:  The Twins were 25-25, in fifth place in the American League West, 4.5 games behind Oakland.  They were one game ahead of sixth-place Chicago and 1.5 games behind fourth-place Seattle.

Happy Birthday–November 27

Bullet Joe Bush (1892)
Johnny Schmitz (1920)
Billy Moran (1933)
Jose Tartabull (1938)
Dave Giusti (1939)
Dan Spillner (1951)
Mike Scioscia (1958)
Randy Milligan (1961)
Tim Laker (1969)
Ivan Rodriguez (1971)
Willie Bloomquist (1977)
Jimmy Rollins (1978)

No players with connections to the Minnesota Twins appear to have been born on this day. The closest we come is Billy Moran, who was part of a three-team trade involving Minnesota, Cleveland, and the Los Angeles Angels. Minnesota acquired Frank Kostro and Jerry Kindall and sent Lenny Green and Vic Power to Los Angeles. Billy Moran was sent from the Angels to Cleveland in that trade.

1991 Rewind: Game Forty-nine

MINNESOTA 8, KANSAS CITY 4 IN KANSAS CITY

Date:  Saturday, June 1.

Batting stars:  Mike Pagliarulo was 2-for-3.  Chili Davis was 2-for-5 with two home runs (his tenth and eleventh) and four RBIs.  Kirby Puckett was 2-for-5.  Dan Gladden was 2-for-5.  Chuck Knoblauch was 1-for-2 with two walks.

Pitching star:  Terry Leach pitched two shutout innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Terry Shumpert was 2-for-3 with a home run, a stolen base (his eighth) and three runs.  Brian McRae was 2-for-5 with two RBIs.

The game:  Kent Hrbek walked leading off the second and Davis followed with a two-run homer, putting the Twins up 2-0.  The Royals tied it in the third.  A walk and an error put men on second and third, a ground out scored one, and a Kirk Gibson single brought home the tying run.

The Twins took the lead again in the top of the fifth on singles by Brian HarperPagliarulo, and Knoblauch.  Kansas City tied it in the bottom of the inning when Shumpert singled, stole second, and scored on a McRae single.

The Twins went into the lead to stay in the sixth.  Puckett led off the inning with a single and with one out, Davis hit another two-run homer, giving the Twins a 5-3 advantage.  They took control of the game in the seventh.  Pagliarulo led off with a single and Knoblauch walked, but pinch-runner Greg Gagne was picked off second.  Not to worry.  Gladden singled, a ground out moved the runners up, and Puckett delivered a two-run single to put the Twins in front 7-3.

Each team scored one more time.  Shumpert homered in the seventh to make the score 7-4.  In the eighth, Pedro Munoz singled, stole second, and scored on Gladden's single to make it 8-4.  The Royals got only one hit after Shumpert's homer.

WP:  Allan Anderson (2-4).  LP:  Kevin Appier (3-6).  S:  None.

Notes:  Al Newman started at shortstop, with Gagne on the bench.  Newman batted second, with Knoblauch ninth.  I assume there was a reason TK did that, but I have no idea what it is.  I can kind of get making Knoblauch the "second leadoff man", but not when it means putting Newman, his .197 average, and his .509 OPS in the number two spot.  But Tom Kelly did sometimes move in a mysterious way.

When Gagne pinch-ran for Pagliarulo, he remained in the game at short with Newman moving to third.  Munoz was the right fielder.

Harper was 1-for-5, dropping his average to .333.  Not that there's anything wrong with .333, but that's the lowest it had been since May 9.  Puckett went up to .332.  Gagne was 0-for-1 and was batting .308.  Davis went up to .301.

Carl Willis pitched two-thirds of an inning without giving up a run, dropping his ERA to 3.38.  Leach went down to 3.32.

This was Anderson's first win since April 10, the second game of the season.  He pitched 6.1 innings, giving up four runs (two earned) on eight hits and two walks.  He did not record a strikeout.  One of the things that has struck me in doing this series is how few strikeouts there were in the game back then, especially compared to today.  The Twins staff was tenth in team pitching strikeouts, and their batters struck out the least of any team in the league, so their games would obviously tend to have fewer strikeouts than average.

Appier pitched six innings, allowing five runs on six hits and a walk and striking out five.  Appier had been sent to the bullpen for a few weeks in May, although he really wasn't pitching all that badly.  He returned to the rotation in late May and stayed there the rest of the year, having a fine season.  Appier was a very good pitcher from 1990-1997, but then suffered a torn labrum.  While he resumed pitching in 1999, his numbers make it look like he didn't fully recover until 2001.  He had another good year in 2002, but then he struggled for two more seasons before calling it quits.  For his career, he was 169-137, 3.74, 1.29 WHIP over sixteen seasons.  That's a pretty good career.

The Royals starting shortstop in this game was David Howard, who was in his rookie year.  After this game, he was batting .056 (1-for-18).  He was obviously not their regular shortstop--that was Kurt Stillwell--but Howard was with the team for all but about three weeks of the season.  He was still in double digits (.087) on July 11, but pulled his average up to .216 by the end of the season.  He played for parts of nine seasons in the majors.  His highest average in a season in which he got 25 or more at-bats was .245 in 1998.  His highest OPS was .655 that same year.  He actually was the Royals regular shortstop in 1996 and batted .219 with an OPS of .595.  For his career he batted .225/.291/.303 in 1583 at-bats.  He played all over, but mostly middle infield.  I assume he's a heck of a nice guy, because he'd never have played that long if he wasn't.

Record:  The Twins were 24-25, fifth in the American League West, 5.5 games behind Oakland.  They were one game ahead of sixth-place Chicago and two games behind fourth-place Seattle.

Happy Birthday–November 26

Hugh Duffy (1866)
Fred Tenney (1871)
Bob Johnson (1905)
Lefty Gomez (1908)
Howard Easterling (1911)
Bob Elliott (1916)
Eddie Miller (1916)
Jeff Torborg (1941)
Larry Gura (1947)
Richie Hebner (1947)
Jorge Orta (1950)
Jay Howell (1955)
Bob Walk (1956)
Mike Moore (1959)
Harold Reynolds (1960)
Chuck Finley (1962)
Brian Schneider (1976)
Matt Garza (1983)

Infielder Howard Easterling was a star in the Negro Leagues in the 1930s and 1940s.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–November 26