October 15 – This Day in Twins History

(click on images once or twice to make them larger)

 

2019 – The human behind — and inside — Minnesota Twins mascot T.C. Bear is out of the costume for good. Greg Wilfahrt is no longer portraying the wide-eyed and permanently smiling mascot that he has embodied since the caricature’s birth in 2000, a role he played without missing a regular season or playoff home game for 20 seasons, a team official said Wednesday. “The Twins have made a change,” according to team spokesman Dustin Morse, who said the move took effect Tuesday. The change means that Wilfahrt is no longer employed by the team, whose directory had listed him as “mascot supervisor,” Morse said. Morse declined to say whether the 46-year-old Wilfahrt initiated the move or was fired. “Greg departed the organization, and we thank him for his many years of service,” was all the spokesman would say. The hunt is on for a new TC bear.

Greg Wilfahrt is out as the one and only TC Bear.

UPDATE February 4, 2020 – Twins hire not one but two people to be mascot T.C. Bear – Read all about

1995 – Thelma Griffith Haynes, the former co-owner and executive of the Minnesota Twins baseball club died at the age of 82. Haynes of Lexington Parkway, Orlando, who co-owned the team with her brother, Calvin Griffith of Melbourne, sold it to Carl Pohlad in 1984. Her father, Clark Griffith Sr., founded the Washington Senators in the early 1920s. The family moved the ball club to Minnesota in 1961. Orlando was the team’s spring training site from the 1930s until 1990.Born in Montreal, Canada, she moved to Central Florida in 1982.

Baseball: Closeup portrait of Minnesota Twins vice president and assistant treasurer Thelma Griffith Haynes during spring training. Haynes is the sister of owner Calvin Griffith.
Orlando, FL 3/11/1983
CREDIT: Lane Stewart (Photo by Lane Stewart /Sports Illustrated/Getty Images)

1968 – The Twins lose outfielders Bob Oliver and Pat Kelly, shortstop Jack Hernandez, and pitcher Jerry Cram to the Kansas City Royals, and pitcher Buzz Stephen and third baseman Rich Rollins to the Seattle Pilots in the 1968 expansion draft.

Denver’s Bob Oliver
Credit: (Denver Post via Getty Images)
Pat Kelly (Credit to Getty Images)
Jackie Hernandez

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jerry Cram & Paul Splittorff
Buzz Stephen
Rich Rollins

 

 

 

 

 

 

1964 – The Twins trade catcher Joe McCabe to Washington for catcher Ken Retzer.

Joe McCabe
Ken Retzer

 

 

 

 

 

 

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2 comments

    1. Retzer played for the Twins AAA Denver Bears in 1965 primarily because the Twins had Earl Battey, Jerry Zimmerman and John Sevcik catching for them that season.

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