Happy Birthday–May 29

Bob Hope (1903)
George McQuinn (1910)
Loel Passe (1917)
Fred White (1936)
Fay Vincent (1938)
John Kennedy (1941)
Blue Moon Odom (1945)
Jamie Allen (1958)
Mike Stenhouse (1958)
Eric Davis (1962)
Charlie Hayes (1965)
Trever Miller (1973)
Jerry Hairston (1976)
Matt Macri (1982)

Comedian and actor Bob Hope was a long-time part-owner of the Cleveland Indians and was on their Board of Directors.

Loel Passe broadcast Houston Astros games from the team’s inception through 1976.  Along the way, he worked with two Hall of Fame broadcasters, Gene Elston and Harry Kalas.

Fred White broadcast Kansas City Royals games from 1974-1998.

Fay Vincent was the commissioner of baseball from 1989-1992.

Third baseman Jamie Allen was drafted by Minnesota with the tenth pick of the 1976 draft, but did not sign.

We would also like to wish a very happy anniversary to Mr. and Mrs. brianS.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–May 29

Random Rewind: 1971, Game Sixty-five

MINNESOTA 4, CHICAGO 3 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Friday, June 18.

Batting stars:  Rod Carew was 3-for-4 with a double and a stolen base, his fourth.  Leo Cardenas was 2-for-4 with a home run (his eighth) and two runs.

Pitching stars:  Jim Perry pitched seven innings, giving up three runs (two earned) on seven hits and a walk and striking out four.  Ron Perranoski pitched two perfect innings.

Opposition stars:  Carlos May was 2-for-4 with a triple and a double.  Lee Richard was 2-for-4.  Lee Maye was 1-for-4 with a two-run homer.  Terry Forster struck out three in 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up two hits.  Bart Johnson pitched two shutout innings, giving up a hit and a walk.

The game:  Perry gave a foreshadowing of Brad Radke, giving up two runs in the first inning when Richard reached on an error and Maye homered.  The Twins put men on second and third with none out in the first inning but did not score.  Cardenas got them on the board in the second, leading off the inning with a home run to make the score 2-1 Chicago.

It stayed 2-1 until the fourth.  Cardenas reached on an error and Jim Holt singled, putting men on first and third with none down.  With one out, Perry laid down a squeeze bunt to tie the score.  Cesar Tovar then put the Twins ahead with an RBI double and Carew provided an insurance run with a run-scoring single, making the score 4-2 Minnesota.

The White Sox came back in the sixth.  With two out May tripled and scored on Jay Johnstone's double.  The tying run was in scoring position, and a Tom Egan walk put the go-ahead run on base, but Mike Andrews fouled to the catcher to end the threat.  Chicago got only one hit after that and did not advance a man past first base.

WP:  Perry (10-5).  LP:  Tom Bradley (6-6).  S:  Perranoski (4).

Notes:  Harmon Killebrew was at third base in this game, with Rich Reese at first.  That happened quite often, but Killebrew was more often at first base, with Steve Braun generally manning third.

Oliva was leading the team in batting at .381.  He would finish at .337.  This was the year Oliva suffered the knee injury that would curtail his career.  He was only thirty-two--one can only imagine what he might have done otherwise.

Tovar was also above .300, at .308.  He would finish at .311.

Carew was batting just .239 at this point in the season.  It would be interesting to know what was written about that at the time.  He would get straightened out, and would finish at .307.

Reese was batting just .173 at this point, which may be why Killebrew was spending more time at first base.  Reese would finish at just .219 with a .623 OPS.  He'd had an outstanding year in 1969, a decent year in 1970, but then was pretty much done.

Perry had a down year, although he was not awful by any means:  17-17, 4.23, 1.35 WHIP.  The Twins had two fine starters in Bert Blyleven (16-15, 2.81) and Jim Kaat (13-14, 3.32), but struggled to find a fourth.  Steve Luebber was awful and Ray Corbin was not very good.  Tom Hall was the best of the bunch, but the Twins thought he was more valuable in the bullpen.

They may have been right, because Perranoski, who had been excellent for the Twins from 1968-1970, struggled mightily in 1971.  He was 1-4, 6.75, 2.06 WHIP before being waived in July.  He never had a good season again.  He was thirty-five at this point, and apparently all those seasons of over 100 relief innings finally took their toll.

Tom Bradley started for the White Sox.  He pitched 3.2 innings, giving up four runs (one earned) on seven hits and a walk and striking out three.  He wasn't a great pitcher, but he had two excellent years (1971-1972) with the Sox and one good year (1973) for the Giants.  He threw 764.2 innings in those three years, which may be why he was done at age twenty-seven.

At least I kind of remembered that there had been a pitcher named Tom Bradley.  I have no memory whatsoever of Lee Richard.  It's understandable, because this is the only season he got a decent amount of playing time.  An infielder, he had 260 at-bats and batted .231 with an OPS of .590.  Presumably he was a good fielder.  And to be fair, he was only twenty-two, so Chicago probably assumed he would improve.  He didn't.  He played in parts of four more seasons, but was never more than a futility infielder.  For his career he batted .209/.259/.270 in 535 plate appearances.  I've quoted this line before, but as some old scout said about the five tools, none of the others mean much if you can't hit.

This was the fifth game of a six-game winning streak for the Twins.

Record:  The Twins were 33-32, in third place in the American League West, 10 games behind Oakland.  They would finish 74-86, in fifth place, 26.5 games behind Oakland.

The White Sox were 22-37, in sixth (last) place in the American League West, 18 games behind Oakland.  They would finish 79-83, in third place, 22.5 games behind Oakland.

Random Record:  The Twins are 30-27 in Random Rewind games.

Happy Birthday–May 28

Spider Baum (1882)
Jim Thorpe (1887)
Warren Giles (1896)
John Allyn (1917)
Bob Kuzava (1923)
Frank Saucier (1926)
Kirk Gibson (1957)
Bill Doran (1958)
Duane Ward (1964)
Mike Maksudian (1966)
Mike Difelice (1969)
Jhonny Peralta (1982)
Craig Kimbrel (1988)
Lester Oliveros (1988)
Huascar Ynoa (1998)

Spider Baum won 325 games in the minors between 1902-1920.  267 of those wins came in the Pacific Coast League.

Warren Giles was president of the National League from 1951-1969.

John Allyn was the owner of the Chicago White Sox from 1961-1975.

Frank Saucier is the player Eddie Gaedel pinch-hit for in 1951.

We would also like to wish a happy anniversary to Mr. and Mrs. Philosofer.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–May 28

Random Rewind: 1985, Game One Hundred Fifty-three

TEXAS 2, MINNESOTA 0 IN TEXAS

Date:  Thursday, September 26.

Batting star:  Kent Hrbek was 3-for-4.

Pitching star:  Mike Smithson pitched an eight-inning complete game, giving up two runs on six hits and four walks and striking out four.

Opposition stars:  Jose Guzman pitched 8.2 scoreless innings, giving up six hits and a walk and striking out five.  Gary Ward was 3-for-3 with a stolen base, his twenty-second.  Pete O'Brien was 1-for-1 with a home run (his twenty-first) and three walks.  I guess they should've walked him the other time, too.

The game:  The Twins put man on second and third with two out in the first inning but did not score.  That was as close as the Twins would come to scoring all night.

The Rangers didn't get anything accomplished in the first three innings, either, but in the fourth O'Brien hit a one-out homer to give Texas a 1-0 lead.  They added a run in the seventh on singles by Ward and Bob Jones, a walk to Duane Walker, and an infield out.

The Twins put one more threat together in the ninth, when Kent Hrbek and Tom Brunansky singled with two out.  Dwayne Henry came in and struck out Mark Salas to end the game.

WP:  Guzman (2-2).  LP:  Smithson (14-13).  S:  Henry (2).

Notes:  Jeff Reed, who was a September call-up, started behind the plate in place of Salas.  Salas mostly platooned with Tim Laudner in 1985.

Roy Smalley was at shortstop in place of Greg Gagne.  Smalley was used at DH more than any other position, but he still played a significant number of games at short in 1985.  Salas was the DH in this game.

Dave Engle pinch-hit for Reed in the eighth and stayed in the game behind the plate.  Gagne replaced Smalley at shortstop in the eighth.  Smalley would miss the next couple of games--perhaps he tweaked something.  If not, it seems odd to make a defensive substitution in a game you're losing by two runs.

Salas was batting .301.  He would be the team's lone .300 hitter, at least of players with a significant number of at-bats, as he finished at exactly .300.

The team leader in home runs was Brunansky at 27.  Hrbek had 21 and Gary Gaetti 20.  Also in double figures were Smalley (12), Randy Bush (10), and Tim Teufel (10).

Smithson had eight complete games in 1985.  From 1983-1986 he had 36 complete games and led the league in starts in two of those seasons.  That may be why he was pretty much done after 1986.

This was the year Bert Blyleven came back to the Twins in early August.  He was easily the team's best starter the rest of the season.  Other starters were SmithsonFrank ViolaJohn Butcher, and Ken Schrom.  Viola was the best of the rest, going 18-14, 4.09, 1.32 WHIP.

Even though he shut them down in this game, the Twins did pretty well most of the time against Guzman.  He was 5-6, 4.25, 1.45 WHIP against them.  This was only the fourth start of his major league career, as he came up as a September call-up.

Texas really didn't have a closer in 1985.  Seven different pitchers had saves, with Greg Harris leading with eleven.  Henry was in his rookie year, coming up in mid-August.

Record:  The Twins were 70-83, in sixth place in the American League West, 16.5 games behind California and Kansas City.  They would finish 77-85, tied for fourth with Oakland, 14 games behind Kansas City.

The Rangers were 58-94, in seventh (last) place in the American League West, 28 games behind California and Kansas City.  They would finish 62-99, in seventh place, 28.5 games behind Kansas City.

Random record:  The Twins are 29-27 in Random Rewind games.

Twins Top Moments: Final Four

Okay, no more need to show the videos.  I'm guessing you know who you're voting for.  We are down to four #1 seeds so I'm guessing I seeded this okay.

Which moment of the 1991 World Series was the best?

The Better Moment

  • Puckett Walk-Offs Game 6 (63%, 12 Votes)
  • Larkin Walks Off Game 7 (37%, 7 Votes)

Total Voters: 19

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And finally, how do you compare these two moments?

The Better Moment

  • Twins Win 87 Series (79%, 15 Votes)
  • Mauer's Final Game (21%, 4 Votes)

Total Voters: 19

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