CALIFORNIA ANGELS 2, MINNESOTA TWINS 1 IN CALIFORNIA
Date: Sunday, July 23, 1967
Batting stars: None. The Twins had three hits, all singles.
Pitching stars: Dean Chance pitched six innings, giving up two unearned runs on four hits and a walk and striking out three. Ron Kline pitched two shutout innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Roger Repoz was 2-for-4. Jack Hamilton pitched six innings, giving up one run on two hits and five walks and striking out four. Minnie Rojas pitched three shutout innings, giving up one hit and two walks and striking out two.
The game: California scored both of their runs in the third inning. Bobby Knoop reached on an error, was bunted to second, and scored on a single by Jose Cardenal. Cardenal then stole second, was wild pitched to third, and stole home, giving the Angels a 2-0 lead.
The Twins, meanwhile, did not have a hit through three innings. They did not get a hit in the fourth, either, but still scored. Cesar Tovar led off with a walk. With one out, Harmon Killebrew and Rich Reese walked, loading the bases. Zoilo Versalles hit a sacrifice fly, and the lead was cut to 2-1.
The Twins were held hitless until the seventh, when Zoilo Versalles and Russ Nixon led off with singles. A bunt moved runners to second and third. A strikeout made two out, Rod Carew was intentionally walked, and a ground out ended the inning. The Twins got one more hit in the ninth, a single by Bob Allison, but he never moved past first base, and the game ended 2-1.
WP: Jack Hamilton (7-1).
LP: Dean Chance (11-8).
S: Minnie Rojas (19).
Notes: Russ Nixon was behind the plate in place of Jerry Zimmerman. Earl Battey, who would’ve been the regular catcher, was injured much of the season. Cesar Tovar was at third base. He played 72 games there–Rich Rollins had the most, with 97. Rich Reese, normally a first baseman, was in left field, one of just ten games he played there, in place of Bob Allison.
Rod Carew was batting .301. He would finish at .292.
Dean Chance had an ERA of 2.61. He would finish at 2.73.
Don Mincher was at first base for California, going 1-for-4. He was an original Twin and played for them through 1966. He was part of the trade through which the Twins acquired Dean Chance. Jimmie Hall was in right field for California, going 0-for-2 with a walk. He played for the Twins from 1963-1966 and was part of that same trade.
The Twins drew seven walks but had only three hits, all singles. They stranded eight and were 0-for-6 with men in scoring position.
This was the only season Ron Kline would pitch for the Twins. It was a good one–he went 7-1, 3.7, 1.20 WHIP in 71.2 innings (54 games). He came up to the big leagues in 1952 at age 20, missed two seasons for military service, then played through 1970. He was primarily a starter through 1961, and made occasional starts through 1963, going to the bullpen full-time after that. He became mayor of his hometown of Callery, Pennsylvania after his playing career ended.
Minnie Rojas had an undistinguished minor league career with the Giants in the early sixties. He then went to the Mexican League for two years, and when he came back he was a completely different pitcher. He had excellent seasons for the Angels in 1966 and 1967. He had a down year in 1968, although he wasn’t terrible. By then, though, he was thirty-four, and the Angels let him go. He played one more year in Mexico, and surely could have played more, but in March of 1970 he was severely injured in an auto accident. It killed two of his children and left him with a severed spinal cord. Through physical therapy he was able to regain some use of his upper body, but could not walk again. He passed away in Los Angeles in March of 2002.
Record: California was 53-44, in third place in the AL, two games behind Chicago. They would finish 84-77, in fifth place, 7.5 games behind Boston.
The Twins were 49-43, in fifth place in the AL, 3.5 games behind Chicago. They would finish 91-71, tied for second place with Detroit, one game behind Boston.
Random Record: The Random Twins are 26-30 (.464).
Can't buy a win.