This is a reprint from last year which has not been updated.
Jim Tobin (1912)
Phil Gagliano (1941)
Roy White (1943)
Craig Reynolds (1952)
Jim Leyritz (1963)
Dean Palmer (1968)
Jeff D’Amico (1975)
Jason Repko (1980)
David Aardsma (1981)
Michael Bourn (1982)
Chris Gimenez (1982)
Cole Hamels (1983)
Rick Porcello (1988)
Addison Reed (1988)
Tyler Duffey (1990)
Stuart Turner (1991)
Outfielder Jason Edward Repko was a reserve for the Twins in 2010. He was born in East Chicago, Indiana, went to high school in Richland, Washington, and was drafted in the first round by the Dodgers in 1999. He was up and down in the minors, but got it going in 2004 when he hit .303 with 13 homers in a year split between AA and AAA, actually hitting a little better in AAA that year. As a result, he spent almost all of 2005 and most of 2006 in the majors with the Dodgers. The latter was his best year in the majors so far, as he hit .254 with an OPS of .722 in 130 at-bats. He missed all of 2007 with an ankle injury and was back in the minors for most of 2008 and 2009. He hit well there, combining for an average of .281 and an OPS of .812, but got only cups of coffee in the majors, getting a total of 23 big league at bats. The Dodgers released him at the end of March of 2010, and he signed with the Twins a week later. He did fairly well in Rochester and came up to the Twins in late June. He got off to a hot start but then struggled, hitting just .171 after August 8. He was with Minnesota almost all of 2011 as a reserve outfielder but did nothing offensively. He became a free agent after the season and signed with Boston for 2012, but spent almost the entire season in AAA, getting only five games in the majors. A free agent again, he played with York in the Atlantic League in 2013 and didn't do a whole lot. He retired in 2013, but came back to play for York again in 2014 He was batting .196 when he was hurt in July. He came back in 2015 with Sioux Falls in the American Assocation and had a fine season, batting .291 with an OPS of .858. He was with York in the Atlantic League in 2016 and had another solid season, but did not play after that. As a Twin, Jason Repko hit .227/.297/.315 in 260 at-bats. Those numbers are pretty much in line with his career major league numbers. At last report, he had returned to the Richland, Washington area.
Catcher/first baseman/outfielder/pitcher Christopher Paul Gimenez played for the Twins from 2017-2018. Born and raised in Gilroy, California, he attended the University of Nevada-Reno and was drafted by Cleveland in the nineteenth round in 2004. He batted .300 for short-season Mahoning Valley that year, but his batting statistics are then unimpressive until 2008, when he batted .304 with an OPS of .873 in a season split between AA and AAA. It should be noted that his AA numbers that year were substantially better than his AAA numbers. He reached the majors in June of 2009, and became pretty much the definition of a replacement level backup catcher. He spent time in both the majors and the minors in every season from 2009-2016, never getting as many as 200 at-bats in the majors and only coming close to that once, in 2010. With those small sample sizes, he had the occasional season in which he looked like a competent batter, most notably 2015 when he batted .255 with an OPS of .820. He was with the Indians through 2010, with Seattle in 2011, Tampa Bay in 2012-2013, Texas and Cleveland again in 2014, Texas again in 2015, and Cleveland again in 2016. In addition to catching, he made occasional appearances at first or the outfield in those years, and was used as a mop-up pitcher three times. The Twins signed him as a free agent and he got his first full season in the majors in 2017 at age thirty-four. In 186 at-bats, he batted .220/.350/.382, numbers that are actually a little better than his career numbers. A free agent after the season, he spent most of the 2018 season in the minors, getting twenty-eight at-bats with the Cubs. At the end of August he was traded back to Minnesota for Bobby Wilson in an exchange of replacement-level backup catchers. He went 8-for-29 the rest of the season, making his numbers as a Twin .228/.350/.400. He also pitched in seven games as a Twin, with a record of 0-0, 13.50, 2.17 WHIP in six innings. He called it quits after the season and was hired by the Dodgers as a "game planning coach" in 2019, a position he continues to hold. We're not sure what a "game planning coach" is, but it sounds impressive, anyway.
Right-hander Addison Devon Reed pitched for the Twins in 2018. He was born in Montclair, California, went to high school in Rancho Cucamonga, California, attended San Diego State, and was drafted in the third round by the White Sox in 2010. A reliever throughout his professional career, he shot through the White Sox system, got a September call-up in 2011, and was in the majors to stay. He had a fine season in 2013 and then was traded to Arizona. He did not do as well for the Diamondbacks, went to the minors for a few weeks, and then was traded to the Mets at the August deadline. Something clicked for him with the Mets--through 2017 he had an ERA of 2.09 and a WHIP of 1.01. He was traded to Boston at the July deadline in 2017 and continued to pitch well. The Twins signed him for 2018 and some thought that he might end up being their closer. He started the season well, but then ran into injury problems and was largely ineffective after the first two months of the season. He tried to come back in 2019 but continued to have injuries and was ineffective in five games in Rochester. The Twins released him in May and he has not pitched since. He turns thirty-two today. If he could get healthy again, there's no real reason to think he couldn't be an effective pitcher again. Getting healthy again, however, looks like it will be the hard part. Information about whether he's trying to do that, or if he's simply moved on to the next phase of his life, was not readily available.
Right-hander Tyler Blinn Duffey has pitched for the Twins off and on since 2015. Born and raised in Houston, he attended Rice University (also in Houston) and was drafted by the Twins in the fifth round in 2012. He was used in relief in Elizabethton that year and was dominant in twelve appearances, but became a starter in 2013. He pitched very well in Cedar Rapids that year, but not as well when moved up to Fort Myers. He began 2014 in Fort Myers but was quickly moved up to AA and also made three starts in Rochester. He started 2015 back in AA but was promoted to Rochester after eight starts. He pitched very well in both places and made it to the Twins in early August. In ten starts he went 5-1, 3.10, 1.31 WHIP with 53 strikeouts in 58 innings. If you throw out a really bad first start his numbers were even better: 5-0, 2.25, 1.23 WHIP. He obviously wasn't going to do that long-term, but it gave Twins fans reason to hope he'd be a reliable starter. It didn't happen: in 2016, he was 9-12, 6.43, 1.59 WHIP. He moved to the bullpen in 2017 and was better, but still not really good--2-3, 4.94, 1.37 WHIP. He split 2018 between AAA and the majors, pitching very well in Rochester but not well at all in Minnesota. Two years ago, we said, "We wish him well, but if he doesn't get going pretty soon he's going to run out of chances." Well, he got going. He had an excellent year in 2019 and did even better in 2020. He turns thirty today. Tyler Duffey is clearly being counted on to have an important role in the Twins' bullpen in 2021.
Catcher Randy Stuart Turner did not play for the Twins, but was in their farm system from 2013-2016. Born and raised in Eunice, Louisiana, he attended the University of Mississippi and was drafted by Minnesota in the third round in 2013. He simply could not hit. His best offensive season was 2013, when he batted .264/.340/.380 in 121 at-bats as a twenty-one-year-old in Rookie ball. He never had an OPS over .700 after that. The Twins apparently believed in him--they promoted him to Class A in 2014, to AA in 2015, sent him to the Arizona Fall League (despite the fact that he had batted just .223 in AA), and put him in AA in 2016. They understandably left him off the forty-man roster after the season, and Cincinnati chose him in the Rule 5 draft. The Reds dutifully kept him around as a backup catcher, and he batted about like you'd expect him to--.134/.182/.244 in 82 at-bats. He appears to have been injured much of 2018. He played twenty-eight games in AAA in 2019 and batted .156 in 102 plate appearances. He became a free agent after the season and did not sign with anyone, so we assume his playing career is over. No information about what Stuart Turner has been doing since 2019 was readily available.