The Garrett Jones story

 

Garrett Jones
Garrett Jones

September 4, 2009 – Garrett Jones was signed by the Twins on May 24, 2002 after being released by the Atlanta Braves who had drafted Jones in the 14th round of the 1999 amateur draft. Garrett toiled in the Twins minor league system from 2002 to 2007 before he finally got that call to join the Twins. Jones made several trips between Rochester and Minnesota in 2007 but appeared in only 31 games hitting .208 in 77 at bats. During his time in Minnesota Jones hit 2 home runs and had 5 RBI’s. Jones spent all of the 2008 season in Rochester and became a free agent after the season ended. The Pittsburgh Pirates took a chance on Garrett Jones, signing him in December of 2008 and the rest as they say “is history”. Now there is talk of Garrett Jones becoming the National League Rookie of the Year, I think it is unlikely, but it would make for a great story wouldn’t it? Chuck Finder, of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote a nice piece on Garrett Jones recently and you can find it here.

Cuddyer first Twin to homer twice in an inning

Michael Cuddyer

August 24, 2009 – Michael Cuddyer hit a pair of home runs during an eight-run seventh inning for the Twins in their 10-3 win at Kansas City last night. Cuddyer is the only player to homer twice in an inning for Minnesota since the franchise left Washington, D.C. after the 1960 season. The only player to do that for the old Senators was Jim Lemon against the Red Sox at Griffith Stadium on Sept. 5, 1959. Source: Elias

Former Twins Manager Cal Ermer dead at 85

Twins skipper in 1967-1968
Twins skipper in 1967-1968

August 8, 2009 – Former Twins manager Cal Ermer died Saturday in his sleep at his home in Chattanooga, Tenn. after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. Ermer was the Twins third manager replacing Sam Mele after he was let go by owner Calvin Griffith.

I was lucky enough to have spent a little over an hour on the phone with Cal this past February as I was preparing to do a story about him for this site. I found him to be a great story teller even at a time where his memory was starting to fail him. You just knew that Cal Ermer loved baseball because he loved to talk about it. Prior to my call to Cal he did not know me from the man in the moon but he took my call and was very interested in what I was doing with the twinstrivia.com web site.

Catfish’s catcher recalls perfect game against the Twins on May 8, 1968

"Catfish" HunterAugust 3, 2009 – With the recent perfect game by Mark Buerhle of the White Sox against the Tampa Rays still fresh in everyone’s mind, maybe it is time to think back to May 8, 1968 when Jim “Catfish” Hunter pitched the 9th perfect game in baseball history and this time the Minnesota Twins were the victims as they lost 4-0 at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum.

Jim Pagliaroni was behind the plate that day and in this article that was written by Rich Zuckerman in May of 2008 he recounts what happened that day and tells you a little more about Hall of Famer Jim “Catfish” Hunter. It is a nice little article and well worth your time, click here to get to the story. For an actual newspaper account of the game, check out the Milwaukee Journal.

Twins relievers as they leave the Metrodome

August 2, 2009 – Twinstrivia.com photographers were lucky enough to catch some Twins relief pitchers as they left the Metrodome as a group on Sunday afternoon after three straight losses to the Angels by scores of 11-5, 11-6, and 13-4. When asked by reporters why the bullpen pitched so poorly against the Angels they replied that they too, just like their GM, have been working very hard lately. Autograph seekers were disappointed when they looked at the autographs they had just collected to find that they all had been signed the same way, “Best Wishes, Ron Davis”. When the autograph seekers asked for their Sharpie’s back, the players threw them back to the fans but each and every pen landed way over the head of the fan and out in the street where they were quickly run over by TC as he was buzzing home on his 4-wheeler.

No Feud Like An Old Feud

July 27, 2009 – A short but interesting piece by Walter Bingham in the May 1, 1961 Sports Illustrated about the Twins and the traditional animosity between St. Paul and Minneapolis as they open their first season in Minnesota in 1961 . Click on the magazine cover to read the story.

10 run leads are just not enough

July 21, 2009 – A lot of Twins fans were already in bed confident of another Twins win when home plate umpire Mike Muchlinski called Mike Cuddyer out on a close call at the plate at about 12:38 AM local time on Tuesday morning. Cuddyer was trying to tie the score at 14-14 all the way from second base on a wild pitch by A’s reliever Michael Wuertz. Replays showed fairly clearly that Cuddyer was safe, having slid under the tag from Wuertz but the dirty deed had already been done, the A’s were already shaking hands for a great come from behind victory while Gardy “discussed” the play with Muchlinski.

It was an abrupt end to a game that dragged on for 3 hours and 32 in front of only 10,283 fans in Oakland in a game where each team hit 4 home runs with a grand slam for each side. Neither starter, or reliever for that matter, had anything, Oakland starter Gio Gonzalez lasted just 2 2/3 innings giving up 11 earned runs and Nick Blackburn pitched 5 innings for Minnesota and gave up 7 earned runs on 13 hits. Twins pitchers threw 155 pitches, allowed 22 hits and 3 walks and strangely enough, did not strike out a single A’s batter.

With the 14-13 loss the Twins tied their record for largest blown lead in Twins history. The Twins and Frank Viola had a 10-0 lead in the 3rd inning at Cleveland Stadium on September 28, 1984 and lost the game 11-10 but that was in the Ron Davis era and many would say that was not all that shocking. Sports Illustrated did a recap of the game in their October 4, 1984 issue and you can check it out here. If you want to see the actual box score of the 1984 game just click here.

According to Elias, Minnesota’s Justin Morneau had two home runs and seven RBIs and Oakland’s Matt Holliday had two homers and six RBIs in the A’s win over the Twins. It was only the fourth game in major-league history in which a player on each team hit at least two home runs and had at least six RBIs. The other pairs of opponents to do that were Rogers Hornsby (Cardinals) and Butch Henline (Phillies) in 1922, Lou Gehrig (Yankees) and Jimmie Foxx (A’s) in 1930, and Albert Belle (White Sox) and Rusty Greer (Rangers) in 1997.

A’s starter Gio Gonzalez gave up 11 runs in two and two-thirds innings Monday night but he did not get a loss as Oakland rallied from a ten-run deficit to beat the Twins, 14-13. Gonzalez is only the second starting pitcher in baseball’s modern era (i.e., since 1900) to avoid a loss in a game in which he pitched fewer than three innings and gave up at least 11 runs. You don’t have to search back very far to find the other instance: the Rangers’ Scott Feldman was charged with 12 runs in two and two-thirds innings in Boston on August 12, 2008 he too was not involved in the decision as Texas lost to the Red Sox, 19-17.

The Joe you don’t know

July 16, 2009 – For those of you that don’t get to read the Star Tribune, you missed a great story this past Sunday by Jim Souhan. The story is kind of a behind the scenes look at Joe Mauer. Take a few minutes and check it out here.

They Said It

July 4, 2009 – Here are some fun and interesting quotes pertaining to the Minnesota Twins/Washington Senators that I found in The Sports Illustrated archives.

Frank Kostro, Minnesota Twins utility man: “So far I’ve played right, left and first base and I’m Polish. Does that make me a utility pole?” – 4/29/1968

Mickey Mantle, injured Yankee, after batting practice at the Minnesota Twins’ Metropolitan Stadium: “This is the greatest home-run stadium I’ve ever seen. If this were my home park I’d hit 90 homers some year.” – 7/29/1963

Dick Erickson, head groundkeeper at Met Stadium in Bloomington, MN. asked what his job would be if the Twins and Vikings move into a domed stadium in 1981: “I guess I’ll just scrape the bubble gum off the field.” – 12/18/1978

Dave St. Peter, Twins president, on having real grass in the ballpark that Minnesota plans to open in 2010: “It will be a great joy to see somebody riding a mower instead of a vacuum cleaner.” – 9/24/2007

Sam Mele, to his family after he was fired by the Minnesota Twins: “What are you crying for? All these years you’ve been saying you’d like to have me home for the summer. Well, that’s where I’ll be now.” – 6/19/1967

Ellis Clary, Minnesota Twins scout, whose team is in the thick of its divisional race despite one of baseball’s lowest payrolls: “We’ve got the only players who’ll make more in their World Series shares than in salary.” – 8/6/1984

Calvin Griffith, 285-pound former owner of the Minnesota Twins upon running into equally hefty Craig Kusick, a onetime Twins first baseman who now teaches high school phys ed: “You and I should attend some of your classes.”

Ron Davis, former Minnesota Twin reliever who had a knack for giving up late-game homers, on the boos he still hears at appearances in the Twin Cities: “When it’s 10 years later and they still hate you, that’s what you call charisma.” – 2/20/1995

Mrs. Laura Quilici, hearing that her son Frank had been named manager of the Minnesota Twins: “Oh, the poor kid. He’s going to get an ulcer now.” – 7/17/1972

Jim DeShaies, Minnesota Twin pitcher on ignoring baseball tradition and changing his seat in the dugout during teammate Scott Erickson’s recent no-hitter: “I think everybody gets caught up in superstitions. But I don’t put much stock in them—knock on wood.” – 5/16/1994

Tony Perez, Cincinnati Reds coach, on wire-service reports that pitcher John Smiley was unhappy about his trade from the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Minnesota Twins: ” John Smiley is going to change his name to John Frowny.” 4/6/1992

Don Baylor, Minnesota Twins DH, on why he would say no if George Steinbrenner offered him the Yankees’ managing job: “I came into this game sane, and I want to leave it sane.” – 10/19/1987

Cookie Lavagetto, manager of the likely last place Washington Senators, after reprimand by Commissioner Ford Frick for saying the Yankees would win pennant by 15 games: “I wanted to get them overconfident so we could beat them.” – 4/14/1958

Billy Gardner, Minnesota Twins manager, on outfielder Darrell (Downtown) Brown, who has hit one home run in 591 career at bats: “That must be an awful small town.”

Tom Kelly, Minnesota Twins manager, explaining why he made pitcher Pat Mahomes walk off the field with him after pulling him during a 17-1 loss to the Detroit Tigers: “Then we would have to take only half the boos each.” – 5/10/1993

Junior Oriz, Minnesota Twins catcher, after teammate Scott Erickson threw a two-hitter for his 12th straight win: “He’s unbelievable. He’s like that guy in Texas who’s 41, or 42, or 43.”

Sam Mele, ousted Minnesota Twins manager, asked what he had noticed most about the club this summer: “They got going right after I left.” – 9/25/1967

Gene Mauch, Minnesota Twins manager, on having a blood relative, Roy Smalley on his team: “Sometimes I look on Roy as my nephew, but sometimes only as my sister’s son.” – 5/26/1980

Hal Naragon, Minnesota Twins catcher, on whether Boston’s Carl Yastrzemski will turn out to be the Red Sox new Ted Williams: “He’s like Ted from the shoelaces down.” – 9/18/1961

Gene Mauch, of the Minnesota Twins, who is in his first year as an American League manager: “I’ve seen more inferior umpiring so far this season than I saw in 16 years as a manager in the National League.” – 7/19/1976

Calvin Griffith, president of the Washington Senators, who once promised to keep the club in Washington “as long as I live,” in an amendment: “As long as we make a living.” – 7/14/1958

Not Such a Tough Cookie

June 30, 2009 – A very enjoyable story about the Minnesota Twins first manager Attilo Harry “Cookie” Lavagetto, written by Walter Bingham for Sports Illustrated on May 15, 1961. Maybe there really is something to the Sports Illustrated cover jinx; Lavagetto was fired by owner Calvin Griffith on June 23 after piloting the first year Minnesota Twins to a 25-41 start to the 1961 season. Click on the magazine cover to read the story.