Bucky Walters (1909)
Hector Maestri (1935)
Rick Miller (1948)
Ed Hodge (1958)
R. J. Reynolds (1959)
Frank Viola (1960)
Spike Owen (1961)
Scott Kamieniecki (1964)
Brent Mayne (1968)
Jose Cruz (1974)
Joe Beimel (1977)
Dennys Reyes (1977)
George Sherrill (1977)
Alberto Callaspo (1983)
Zach Duke (1983)
Joe Mauer (1983)
Right-hander Hector Maestri was with the Washington franchise in 1960, making one appearance in the majors. Before the 1961 season started, however, he was selected in the expansion draft by the new Washington franchise, for whom he made one more appearance in 1961.
Left-hander Ed Oliver Hodge made 25 appearances for the Twins in 1984. Born in Bellflower, California, Hodge was drafted by Minnesota in the fifth round of the January draft in 1979. There is nothing in his minor league record that suggests he would be a major league pitcher, but the 1984 Twins were desperate for a fifth starter, so after he had three good starts at AAA Toledo, going 2-0, 2.01 with a 0.90 WHIP, Ed Hodge found himself in the big league rotation. He did quite a bit better than could have been expected, going 3-2, 4.12 through mid-June, but then was injured, missing a month and a half. He came back on August 1, made five fair-to-middling starts, then spent the rest of the year in the bullpen. For the season, he was 4-3, 4.77. He pitched in 25 games, 15 of them starts, and pitched exactly 100 innings. Those would also be his career numbers; he was back in Toledo in 1985, had another not-to-good season, and was released after the season. He pitched for the Braves’ AAA team in 1986, and then his playing career came to an end. He worked for the police and fire departments in Johnson City, Tennessee from 1990-1997. More recently, he has done some coaching, serving as the pitching coach for the Sarasota Reds in 2006 and for Lakewood in the Phillies’ organization in 2007. He was a batting practice pitcher/coach for Houston from 2011-2012, and was hired to do a similar job for Detroit in 2013. He does not appear to still be in that position, however. At last report he was working with the NLB Baseball Coaching Academy, which will help you become a Next Level Ballplayer (NLB).
Left-hander Frank John Viola pitched for the Twins for most of the 1980s. He was born in Hempstead, New York and went to high school in East Meadow, New York. He then attended St. John’s (where he was involved in an epic pitcher’s duel with Yale’s Ron Darling that is still talked about occasionally), and was drafted by the Twins in the second round in 1981. He pitched reasonably well at AA Orlando in 1981, and after eight starts in AAA Toledo in 1982 he was in the Minnesota rotation at age 22. He was clearly not ready, posting ERAs over five and WHIPs over 1.5 in his first two seasons. When things clicked in, though, they did so in style. In 1984, Viola went 18-12, 3.21 with a WHIP of 1.16 and finished sixth in the Cy Young voting. He slipped a little in 1985 and 1986, although he was still a solid rotation starter, but in 1987 and 1988 he had his two best seasons. He went 41-17 in those two years, with an ERA of 2.77. He won the Cy Young award in 1988, when he won 24 of those games. Viola also finished tenth in MVP voting that year. He pitched over 245 innings each season for the Twins from 1984-1988. He was still pitching well at the end of July, 1989 when he was traded to the Mets for Rick Aguilera, Tim Drummond, Kevin Tapani, David West, and a player to be named later (Jack Savage). He continued to pitch Well for the Mets, winning 20 games in 1990 and finishing third in Cy Young voting that season. He also continued to pitch well over 200 innings each season. A free agent after the 1991 campaign, Viola signed with Boston and had two more very good years. After that, however, he struggled through injuries, had Tommy John surgery, and was never an effective pitcher again. He pitched briefly with Cincinnati in 1995 and Toronto in 1996 before bringing his playing career to an end. As a Twin, Frank Viola was 112-93, 3.86 in 260 appearances, 259 of them starts. Since his retirement, Viola has done some high-school and college coaching and has also done some broadcasting with the New England Sports Network. In 2011 he was the pitching coach for the Brooklyn Cyclones in the New York-Penn League and from 2012-2013 he was the pitching coach of the Savannah Sand Gnats in the South Atlantic League. He was going to be pitching coach of the AAA Las Vegas 51s in 2014, but open-heart surgery put that move on hold. The surgery was successful and he was able to assume pitching coach duties for the 51s in 2015 and remained in that position through 2017. He was the pitching coach for the AA Binghamton Rumble Ponies in 2018. He left the Mets organization after the season and became the pitching coach of the High Point Rockers in the Atlantic League in 2019.
Left-handed reliever Joseph Ronald Beimel made three appearances for the Twins in 2004. Born and raised in St. Mary’s, Pennsylvania, he attended Duquesne University and was drafted by Pittsburgh in the eighteenth round in 1998. He started for much of his minor league career. He had not pitched effectively above Class A when he suddenly made the Pirates out of spring training in 2001. He was with Pittsburgh for three full seasons despite not pitching very well: his ERA was exactly five and his WHIP was 1.58. He made some starts in his first two years, but was moved exclusively to the bullpen in 2003. The Pirates released Beimel at the end of March, 2004, and the Twins signed him a couple of weeks later. He had a poor year in Rochester, despite which he was given a September call-up. Beimel pitched 1.2 innings in three games, giving up eight runs on eight hits and two walks. He became a free agent for 2005 and signed with Tampa Bay. He didn’t pitch particularly well in AAA for them, either, but got to the big leagues for about a month and did well in seven appearances. He signed with the Dodgers for 2006, pitched well in ten appearances at AAA, and came up to the majors, where at age 29 he finally found big-league success. He was with Los Angeles for three years, appeared in 216 games, and had an ERA of 3.04. Beimel was a free agent after the 2008 season and took a long time to sign, finally signing with Washington in mid-March. He pitched well there, was traded to Colorado in mid-season, and continued to pitch fairly well through 2010. He was a free agent after that season and signed with Pittsburgh. He was injured much of the year but made 35 appearances for the Pirates, working 25.1 innings. Unfortunately, he did not pitch well and was released at the end of August. He signed with Texas for 2012 but was released in late March. He underwent Tommy John surgery on May 1 of 2012. He signed with Atlanta in mid-May of 2013 and pitched for AAA Gwinnett the rest of the season. A free agent after the season, he signed with Seattle and made it back to the majors for the first time since 2011. He actually had a fine year for the Mariners. He signed with Texas for 2015, was released in spring training, was re-signed by Seattle, and while he wasn't as good as 2014 he still pitched adequately. He made twelve appearances with AAA Omaha in 2016 and was not very good. He played with New Britain in the Atlantic League in 2017 but did not do very well, and that finally brought an end to his playing career. It was a heck of a career, though, stretching over twenty years. He now runs Beimel Elite Athletics, a baseball instructional facility with locations in Los Angeles and El Paso.
Left-handed reliever Dennys (Valarde) Reyes pitched for the Twins from 2006-2008. Born and raised in Higuera de Zaragosa, Mexico, Reyes was signed by the Dodgers as a free agent in 1993. He was a starter in his minor league career and was somewhat up-and-down, but pitched well in a month and a half stint with the Dodgers in 1997. At mid-season of 1998, the Dodgers traded Reyes to Cincinnati, where he stayed through 2001. He was not terrible in those years, although not particularly good, either. He split 2002 between Colorado and Texas, not doing much for either team. Reyes signed with Pittsburgh for 2003, was let go in May, and finished the season with Arizona, spending most of his time there in the minors. Reyes moved to Kansas City in 2004 and San Diego in 2005, doing nothing to attract anyone’s attention. The Padres released Reyes in July of 2005, and he was out of baseball until February of 2006, when Minnesota signed him. Reyes then went out and had one of the best seasons a LOOGY ever had. He appeared in 66 games, but pitched only 50.2 innings. In those innings, he went 5-0, 0.89 with a WHIP of 0.99. His ERA+ was 507. He did not repeat those numbers, but remained a valuable LOOGY for two more seasons. As a Twin, Dennys Reyes appeared in 191 games and pitched 126.1 innings. He was 10-1, 2.14 with a WHIP of 1.27. He became a free agent after the 2008 season and signed with St. Louis. He pitched well for the Cardinals in 2009-2010, then became a free agent again and signed with Boston. He made four appearances for the Red Sox and was made the fall guy for their poor start, getting sent outright to AAA. He then missed most of the season and was released in late September. He signed with Baltimore for 2012 but was released in early March. He did not play in 2012, but he pitched in Mexico from 2013-2015. He played in winter ball after the 2016 season, but that was it for him. No information about what Dennys Reyes has done since then was readily available.
Left-hander Zachary Thomas Duke came to the Twins in 2018. He was born in Clifton, Texas, went to high school in Waco and Hewitt, Texas, and was drafted by Pittsburgh in the twentieth round in 2001. He was a starting pitcher throughout his minor league career and did very well, reaching AAA in 2005 and making his major league debut in July of that season. He pitched extremely well the second half of that season, finishing fifth in Rookie of the Year voting. He was pretty average after that, although he made the all-star team in 2009 thanks to a hot first half. He was traded to Arizona after the 2010 season and but struggled with injuries. He signed with Washington as a free agent in 2011 and had a very good year for AAA Syracuse, earning a September call-up. He got off to a poor start in 2013, when he was transitioned to the bullpen, was released at mid-season, and signed with Cincinnati. He has bounced around since, playing for Milwaukee in 2014, the White Sox from 2015 through July of 2016, and for St. Louis from August of 2016 through 2017. He pitched fairly well in a setup role from the time he signed with Cincinnati through 2017. He signed with Minnesota for 2018 and went 3-4, 3.62, although with a WHIP of 1.58. The Twins traded him to Seattle at the end of July for Ryan Costello and Chase De Jong. He finished the season with the Mariners, became a free agent, and signed back with Cincinnati for 2019. He did not pitch well and was released in early July. He turns thirty-seven today. One would think he's out of chances, but Joe Beimel's career tells us that he also may not be.
There’s very little to be said about catcher/first baseman Joseph Patrick Mauer that anyone reading this does not already know. He was born and raised in St. Paul and was taken by Minnesota with the first pick of the 2001 draft. His lowest average in the minors was .302, with Class A Quad Cities in 2002. He showed very little power in the minors, never hitting more than five home runs in a season, although he hit 30 doubles in a 2003 split between Fort Myers and New Britain. He started 2004 with Minnesota but was injured most of the season, getting only 107 at-bats (in which he hit .308 with six home runs). His first full season came in 2005, when he hit .294 as a 22-year-old. In 2006, Mauer won his first batting title, the first American League catcher ever to win one. He has won two more since, including his highest average to date in 2009, .365. In 2009, when he won the MVP, Mauer also led the league in on-base percentage and slugging percentage. In 2010, in what some considered an “off year”, he hit .326/.402/.469, won the silver slugger and the gold glove, and finished eighth in MVP voting. He had an injury-plagued 2011 and took a lot of criticism, but still hit .287 in just under 300 at-bats. He spent substantial time at first base and DH in 2012, but stayed healthy and came back with a fine season, batting .319 and leading the league in on-base percentage. His 2013 season was similar, as he hit .324 and had a fine on-base percentage again. He again was hampered by injuries in 2014, when he moved to first base full-time. He played in 120 games but had the worst season of his career, although he still hit .277 with an OBP of .361. In 2015 he went down a little farther, as concussion issues clearly continued to bother him. He came back slightly in 2016, but not a lot. In 2017, however, he came back to have another good year, batting over .300 and posting an OPS of over .800 for the first time since 2013, raising hopes that his concussion issues may finally be behind him. He was down again in 2018, however, and decided to retire after the season. He made the all-star team six times, finished in the top eight in MVP voting four times, won three gold gloves, and won five silver slugger awards. His career numbers are .306/.388/.439. We can safely say he was very good at baseball. One assumes he is now doing pretty much whatever he wants to, at least to the extent his wife will allow him to.