Happy Birthday–March 17

Fred Pfeffer (1860)
Oscar Stanage (1883)
Joe Fitzgerald (1897)
Charlie Root (1899)
Sammy Baugh (1914)
Hank Sauer (1917)
Pete Reiser (1919)
Vic Voltaggio (1941)
Cito Gaston (1944)
Kurt Russell (1951)
Tim Lollar (1956)
Frank Wren (1958)
Danny Ainge (1959)
John Smiley (1965)
Dan Masteller (1968)
Bill Mueller (1971)
Raul Chavez (1973)
Scott Downs (1976)
Robb Quinlan (1977)
Chris Davis (1986)

Joe Fitzgerald had a long association with the Minnesota/Washington franchise, serving as bullpen catcher from 1945-1947, coach from 1948-1956, and scout from 1957 until he passed away in 1967.

Hall of Fame quarterback Sammy Baugh was an infielder in the minors for St. Louis in 1938, batting .200 in the American Association and the International League.

Vic Voltaggio was an American League umpire from 1997-1996.

Actor Kurt Russell spent three years in the low minors (1971-1973), batting .292 in 356 at-bats.

Frank Wren has been the general manager of the Baltimore Orioles and the Atlanta Braves.

NBA star Danny Ainge was a third baseman for Toronto from 1979-1981.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to AMR's sister.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–March 17

1991 Rewind: Game One Hundred Sixty-one

MINNESOTA 3, TORONTO 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Saturday, October 5.

Batting stars:  Shane Mack was 3-for-4 with two doubles.  Chili Davis was 2-for-4 with a home run, his twenty-ninth.  Kent Hrbek was 2-for-4.

Pitching stars:  Scott Erickson pitched six shutout innings, giving up four hits and four walks and striking out two.  He threw 92 pitches.  Rick Aguilera pitched a scoreless inning, giving up a walk and striking out one.

Opposition star:  Roberto Alomar was 2-for-2 with a home run (his ninth) and two walks.

The game:  The Twins took the lead in the first inning when Chuck Knoblauch walked and scored from first on a Kirby Puckett double.  Each team got a man to third base in the second inning, but neither scored.  Each team put men on first second with one out in the fifth, but each was taken out of the inning by a double play.

The Twins stretched their lead to 2-0 in the sixth when Davis homered.  They scored again in the seventh when Knoblauch was hit by a pitch, stole second, and scored on a Hrbek single.

The Blue Jays got on the board in the eighth when Alomar led off the inning with a home run, but did not get a hit after that.

WP:  Erickson (20-8).  LP:  Juan Guzman (10-3).  S:  Aguilera (42).

Notes:  The Twins used their regular starting lineup.  Junior Ortiz was behind the plate in place of Brian Harper, but that always happened when Erickson pitched.

Paul Sorrento pinch-hit for Ortiz in the sixth.  Lenny Webster replaced him in the seventh and went behind the plate.  Jarvis Brown pinch-ran for Puckett in the seventh and stayed in the game in center field.  Scott Leius pinch-hit for Mike Pagliarulo in the eighth.

Puckett was 1-for-3 and was batting .319.  Mack raised his average to .309.  Erickson lowered his ERA to 3.18.  Carl Willis pitched two-thirds of an inning without allowing a run and lowered his ERA to 2.63.  Aguilera lowered his ERA to 2.35.

The Blue Jays essentially treated this like a spring training game.  Alomar was the only Toronto player to play the entire game.  The regulars pretty much all came out after two turns through the batting order.  Starter Guzman pitched just three innings, giving up one run on three hits and a walk and striking out two.

Each team stranded eight runners.  They combined to go 1-for-15 with men in scoring position, with Hrbek's eighth-inning single as the one hit.

Record:  The Twins were 95-66, in first place in the American League West, nine games ahead of Chicago.

Toronto was 90-71, in first place in the American League East, six games ahead of Boston.

Happy Birthday–March 16

Bud Fowler (1847)
Blondie Purcell (1854)
Jerry Denny (1859)
Patsy Donovan (1865)
Jake Flowers (1902)
Buddy Myer (1904)
Lloyd Waner (1906)
Ken O'Dea (1913)
Tom Gorman (1919)
Clint Courtney (1927)
Hobie Landrith (1930)
Don Blasingame (1932)
Rick Reichardt (1943)
Rick Renick (1944)
Charles Hudson (1959)
Fieldin Culbreth (1963)
Abraham Nunez (1976)
Curtis Granderson (1981)
Stephen Drew (1983)
Brandon League (1983)
Mickey Storey (1986)

Bud Fowler was the first African-American to play professional baseball, playing in the minors in 1878 and from 1884-1894.

Tom Gorman was a National League umpire from 1951-1977.  His son Brian is currently a major league umpire.

Fieldin Culbreth has been a major league umpire since 1993.  His full name is Fieldin Henry Culbreth III.

Mickey Storey was drafted by Minnesota in the 22nd round in 2007, but did not sign.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–March 16

1991 Rewind: Game One Hundred Sixty

TORONTO 4, MINNESOTA 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Friday, October 4.

Batting star:  Jarvis Brown was 2-for-3.

Pitching stars:  Denny Neagle pitched five innings, giving up two runs on nine hits and no walks and striking out three.  Allan Anderson pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one walk.

Opposition stars:  Todd Stottlemyre struck out five in five innings, giving up one run on six hits and two walks.  Candy Maldonado was 2-for-2 with a double.  Turner Ward was 2-for-2 with a walk.  Derek Bell was 2-for-2 with two stolen bases, his second and third.

The game:  The Blue Jays scored in the first inning when Joe Carter reached on a fielder's choice, stole second, and scored on Maldonado's single.  They had men on first and second in the second and on second and third in the third, but did not score.  The Twins had the bases loaded with one out in the fourth, but Randy Bush lined into a double play.  So it stayed 1-0 Toronto until the fifth.

In the fifth, Eddie Zosky (who?) doubled and Ward singled to put the Blue Jays up 2-0.  The Twins put men on first and second in the fifth, but did not get on the board until the sixth.  Singles by Bush and Shane Mack and a walk to Scott Leius loaded the bases with one out.  Lenny Webster hit a sacrifice fly, cutting the margin to 2-1, but that was all the Twins got, and they would not come that close to taking the lead again.

Toronto got some insurance runs in the eighth.  Ward and Pat Border singled and Rance Mulliniks walked, loading the bases with one out.  Ed Sprague walked to force in a run and a sacrifice fly brought home another, making it 4-1.  The Twins did not get a baserunner after the sixth inning.

WP:  Stottlemyer (15-8).  LP:  Neagle (0-1).  S:  Duane Ward (22).

Notes:  Randy Bush was at DH in place of Chili Davis.  Paul Sorrento was at first base in place of Kent HrbekWebster was behind the plate in place of Brian Harper.  Al Newman was at shortstop in place of Greg Gagne.  Brown was in center field in place of Kirby Puckett.  Gene Larkin pinch-hit for Sorrento in the sixth and stayed in the game at first base.

Bush was 1-for-3 and was batting .309.  Mack was 1-for-4 and was batting .305.  Webster was 0-for-3 and was batting .303.

Newman was 0-for-2 with two walks and was batting .193 with an OPS of .472.

It had to be kind of strange to have a meaningless end-of-season three-game series against the team you would play in a few days for the League Championship.  Both teams treated it somewhat like a spring training game.  As you can see above, the Twins played a number of reserves.  The Blue Jays started most of their regulars, but substituted for them as the game progressed.  Both starters pitched just five innings even though the score was 2-1 after five.

This was the only decision Neagle would have as a Twin, as he was traded after the season.

Eddie Zosky played in forty-four major league games over five seasons and ten years.  He was a good field-no hit infielder who was drafted by Toronto in the first round out of Cal State-Fresno.  He spent two season in AA, where he had a decent but not great batting average, did not draw a whole lot of walks, and had little power.  He hit .264/.315/.350 in AAA in 1991 and got a September call-up, going 4-for-27 in 18 games.  He batted just .231 in AAA in 1992 but again got a September call-up, going 2-for-7 in 8 games.  He missed much of 1993, presumably to injury, was in AAA in 1994, then moved to the Marlins.  He was in AAA for them in 1995 but did get called up for about three weeks early in the season, going 1-for-5.  By this time he was in his late twenties and no longer a prospect, but he kept playing.  He was in the minors for Baltimore in 1996, San Francisco in 1997, and Milwaukee in 1998.  He was still with the Brewers in 1999 and got another September call-up, going 1-for-7.  He was with Pittsburgh and Houston in 2000 and got one more September call-up with the Astros, going 0-for-4.  Adding it all up, he was 8-for-50 in the majors, posting a line of .160/.173/.260.  He was well thought of early on:  Baseball America had him as the third-best prospect in the Southern League in 1990 and as the twenty-second-best prospect in all of baseball in 1991.  As a scout once said, you can talk all you want about the five tools, but none of the others mean much if you can't hit.

Record:  The Twins were 94-66, in first place in the American League West, eight games ahead of Chicago.

Happy Birthday–March 15

Arlie "The Freshest Man on Earth" Latham (1860)
Doc Casey (1870)
Ralph Miller (1873)
Fred Lieb (1888)
Rosy Ryan (1898)
Jimmie Crutchfield (1910)
Sid Hartman (1920)
Bob Locker (1938)
Wayne Granger (1944)
Bobby Bonds (1946)
Jim Kern (1949)
Steve Stroughter (1952)
Mickey Hatcher (1955)
Harold Baines (1959)
Mike Pagliarulo (1960)
Kim Batiste (1968)
Robert Fick (1974)
Vladimir Nunez (1975)
Dan Perkins (1975)
Kevin Youkilis (1979)
Jon Jay (1985)
Sean Poppen (1994)

Ralph Miller was the first major league player to live to be a hundred years old.

Fred Lieb was a sportswriter who covered baseball for seventy years.

Jimmie Crutchfield was a star outfielder in the Negro Leagues.

Sid Hartman is a sportswriter/broadcaster who has been covering sports in Minnesota since the earth cooled.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–March 15