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Harmon Killebrew On David Letterman!?

With the appearance of Joe Mauer last week on Jimmy Fallon, I was reminded of another episode of a famous Twin who appeared on late ni...

Showing posts with label Eric Milton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Milton. Show all posts

Saturday, April 15, 2017

Ervin Santana's 4/15/17 Gem Ranks High On AT Twins List

Who says there's no pitching in today's MLB?

Today's lovely 6-0, 1 hit, 1 walk, 8 strikeout, nine inning shutout  win against the Chicago White Sox by Ervin Santana vaults him to a nice spot near the top of the Twins All-Time Top 116 single game pitching performances, as measured by his 92 Game Score. It tied him with several other greats in Twins history, namely Johan Santana, Jim Kaat, Dave GoltzGerry Arrigo and Milton, again. Game Score is a 1980s Bill James creation, as explained in my "Brief & Damn Near Worthless Sabrmetrics Guide. In brief, it awards points for strikeouts, innings pitched, and outs recorded, while subtracting points for hits, walks, and earned runs allowed.

It really helps distinguish the wonderfully dominating starts that characterize elite pitchers from those outings of pitchers that needed a fair amount of fielding luck and walks and hits to get through nine innings.

Eric Milton is #1 on our list, whose 1999 no-hitter versus the Angels  (You Tube) was above all other starts in team history in terms of quality and economy. It was fast. It was dominating. And It was clean, like Santana's was today. He faced 28 batters. Santana, 29. Milton punched out 13 in his gem, which clocked in at 2:28. Santana, again, k'd 8 in a zippy 2:26, by comparison. Pretty comparable, right? The main seperator between them was the five extra strikeouts, and one hit allowed by Santana.



It's probably worth noting that Bert Blyleven has pitched 5 of the TOP 25 Game Score games in team history, more than any other hurler. You should also note that Santana's game today rates higher than no-hit games pitched by Jack Kralick in 1962 (#34 on our list), Scott Erickson in 1994 (#48), and Francisco Liriano in 2011.

Photo: Jim Mones, AP
Part of the fun of lists like these is that they give Twins fans, old and young, an opportunity to recall the great games they remember seeng in person, or on radio or TV. Anyone born as early as the 1980s remembers watching Scott Baker's no-hit bid against KC in 2007 (#7), or Andrew Albers's 2013 2-hitter versus the Tribe (#116), for example. I obviously fit into the "prehistoric duffer" category, as I can readily recall the 1973 Joe Decker 15 strikeout game (#14), or the Dave Goltz 11 inning 2-1, complete game win in 1977 (#20). Feel free to post your favorite game reminiscences from those you see in the list!  

NO HIT PITCHERS IN RED CAPS, others referenced appear in BLUE.
-I'm adding box score links to the dates, check back sometime to check 'em out-

Rk             Player          Date Opp   Rslt   IP H R BB SO GSc
1         ERIC MILTON    1999-09-11 ANA  W 7-0  9.0 0 0  2 13  98
2       Bert Blyleven    1975-08-27 MIL  W 1-0 11.0 6 0  1 13  97
3        Dave Boswell    1966-07-30 BAL  W 7-0  9.0 1 0  1 11  95
4         Jim Merritt 1967-05-30(2) NYY  W 3-0  9.0 2 0  0 11  94
5       Bert Blyleven    1986-08-01 OAK W 10-1  9.0 2 1  1 15  93
6        Kevin Tapani    1992-06-24 CAL W 11-0  9.0 2 0  0 10  93
7         Scott Baker 2007-08-31(2) KCR  W 5-0  9.0 1 0  1  9  93
NEW!      Ervin Santana  2017-04-15 CHI  W 6-0  9.0 1 0  1  8  92
8 Johan Santana 2004-07-06 KCR W 4-0 9.0 3 0 2 13 92 9 Jim Kaat 1967-09-18 KCA W 2-0 10.0 6 0 0 12 92 10 Eric Milton 2002-08-01 CHW W 6-0 9.0 3 0 0 11 92 11 Dave Goltz 1976-08-31(1) MIL W 4-0 9.0 2 0 2 11 92 12 Dave Goltz 1977-08-23 BOS W 7-0 9.0 1 0 3 10 92 13 Gerry Arrigo 1964-06-26(1) CHW W 2-0 9.0 1 0 1 8 92 14 Joe Decker 1973-06-26 CHW W 4-0 9.0 4 0 3 15 91 15 Camilo Pascual 1961-07-19(1) LAA W 6-0 9.0 5 0 1 15 91 16 Jim Merritt 1966-07-21 WSA W 1-0 9.0 3 0 2 12 91 17 Dean Chance 1968-06-19 WSA W 4-0 9.0 3 0 0 10 91 18 Frank Viola 1986-10-05 CHW W 3-0 9.0 2 0 1 9 91 19 Ervin Santana 2016-07-06 OAK W 4-0 9.0 2 0 0 8 91 20 Dave Goltz 1977-07-25 OAK W 2-1 11.0 8 1 1 14 90 21 Bert Blyleven 1973-09-14 CHW W 6-0 9.0 4 0 1 12 90 22 Camilo Pascual 1963-09-18 DET W 10-0 9.0 2 0 3 10 90 23 Bert Blyleven 1973-09-26 OAK W 4-1 9.0 1 1 1 8 90 24 Bert Blyleven 1973-05-24 KCR W 2-0 9.0 1 0 2 7 90 25 Jim Perry 1970-09-25 KCR W 1-0 9.0 2 0 0 7 90 26 Mudcat Grant 1965-09-25(1) WSA W 5-0 9.0 1 0 2 7 90 27 Dave Boswell 1968-05-29 CLE W 1-0 9.0 3 0 2 10 89 28 Jim Kaat 1962-04-22 LAA W 5-0 9.0 4 0 0 10 89 29 Johan Santana 2005-08-12 OAK W 1-0 9.0 3 0 1 9 89 30 Kevin Slowey 2008-06-29 MIL W 5-0 9.0 3 0 0 8 89 31 Brad Radke 2005-05-05 CLE W 9-0 9.0 3 0 0 8 89 32 Scott Erickson 1991-05-01 BOS W 1-0 9.0 2 0 1 7 89 33 Jim Merritt 1967-09-21 KCA W 4-0 9.0 2 0 0 6 89 34 JACK KRALICK 1962-08-26 KCA W 1-0 9.0 0 0 1 3 89 35 Bert Blyleven 1974-05-24 TEX W 9-0 9.0 5 0 0 11 88 36 Dick Woodson 1972-08-01 TEX W 3-0 9.0 3 0 3 10 88 37 Bert Blyleven 1972-05-03 MIL W 7-0 9.0 4 0 1 10 88 38 Johan Santana 2005-06-08 ARI W 10-0 9.0 4 0 0 9 88 39 Bert Blyleven 1986-07-13 NYY W 5-0 9.0 3 0 1 8 88 40 Dave Goltz 1976-09-09 TEX W 6-0 9.0 3 0 1 8 88 41 Jim Kaat 1973-07-01 CAL W 2-1 9.0 1 1 0 7 88 42 Dean Chance 1968-09-23 CAL W 3-0 9.0 3 0 0 7 88 43 Jim Kaat 1962-06-23 LAA W 5-0 9.0 3 0 0 7 88 44 Bill Krueger 1992-06-30 CAL W 2-0 9.0 2 0 1 6 88 45 Scott Erickson 1991-06-24 NYY W 5-0 9.0 2 0 1 6 88 46 Geoff Zahn 1980-06-06 TOR W 5-0 9.0 1 0 3 6 88 47 Scott Baker 2009-08-14 CLE W 11-0 9.0 2 0 0 5 88 48 SCOTT ERICKSON 1994-04-27 MIL W 6-0 9.0 0 0 4 5 88 49 Gary Serum 1978-08-19 TOR W 5-0 9.0 2 0 0 5 88 50 Bert Blyleven 1974-08-30 BOS W 3-2 9.0 4 2 2 14 87 51 Camilo Pascual 1963-07-23 CLE L 2-3 12.2 7 3 2 11 87 52 Brad Radke 1997-07-20 OAK W 1-0 9.0 5 0 0 10 87 53 Joe Decker 1973-08-24 MIL W 3-0 9.0 4 0 2 10 87 54 Jim Kaat 1966-09-25 DET W 1-0 9.0 4 0 1 9 87 55 Dick Stigman 1963-05-29 WSA W 10-1 9.0 2 1 3 9 87 56 Dave Goltz 1976-09-25 CAL W 6-0 9.0 2 0 4 8 87 57 Dean Chance 1968-04-10 WSA W 2-0 9.0 4 0 0 8 87 58 Dean Chance 1967-05-11 KCA W 8-0 9.0 1 0 6 8 87 59 Camilo Pascual 1963-05-25 CHW W 6-0 9.0 2 0 4 8 87 60 Eric Milton 1999-07-31 ANA W 8-0 9.0 3 0 1 7 87 61 Darrell Jackson 1978-07-07(2) OAK W 1-0 9.0 3 0 1 7 87 62 Jim Perry 1970-08-07 OAK W 2-1 11.0 5 1 3 7 87 63 Camilo Pascual 1962-09-30 BAL W 1-0 9.0 3 0 1 7 87 64 Camilo Pascual 1961-09-23(2) WSA W 10-0 9.0 2 0 3 7 87 65 Scott Diamond 2012-07-27 CLE W 11-0 9.0 3 0 0 6 87 66 Joe Mays 2002-08-16 BOS W 5-0 9.0 2 0 2 6 87 67 Dave Goltz 1974-10-01 TEX W 6-0 9.0 2 0 1 5 87 68 Dick Stigman 1964-07-03 NYY W 1-0 10.0 4 0 2 5 87 69 Dave Boswell 1969-09-19 SEP W 2-1 9.0 5 1 1 14 86 70 Jim Kaat 1968-09-02 BOS W 5-1 9.0 3 1 2 11 86 71 Camilo Pascual 1962-07-13 WSA W 4-0 9.0 4 0 3 10 86 72 Kevin Tapani 1990-05-06 MIL W 4-0 9.0 5 0 0 9 86 73 Jim Perry 1970-09-01(1) MIL W 4-0 9.0 5 0 0 9 86 74 Camilo Pascual 1961-08-29 NYY W 3-0 9.0 4 0 2 9 86 75 Camilo Pascual 1961-05-20 KCA W 2-0 9.0 5 0 0 9 86 76 Brad Radke 1998-06-09 CHC W 8-0 9.0 4 0 1 8 86 77 Bert Blyleven 1970-08-26 BOS W 7-0 9.0 4 0 1 8 86 78 Bert Blyleven 1970-06-27 CHW W 9-1 9.0 2 1 1 8 86 79 DEAN CHANCE 1967-08-25(2) CLE W 2-1 9.0 0 1 5 8 86 80 Brad Radke 2001-06-12 HOU W 7-0 9.0 4 0 0 7 86 81 Jerry Koosman 1979-09-04 KCR W 5-1 9.0 2 1 0 7 86 82 Bert Blyleven 1973-06-16 DET W 5-0 9.0 4 0 0 7 86 83 Jim Kaat 1966-08-27 CHW W 1-0 9.0 3 0 2 7 86 84 Camilo Pascual 1961-05-15 CHW W 5-0 9.0 4 0 0 7 86 85 Frank Viola 1984-05-19 BOS W 7-0 9.0 3 0 1 6 86 86 Geoff Zahn 1977-07-10 SEA W 15-0 9.0 3 0 1 6 86 87 Luis Tiant 1970-04-26 DET W 6-0 9.0 3 0 1 6 86 88 Camilo Pascual 1961-08-23 CHW W 4-0 9.0 2 0 3 6 86 89 Dick Woodson 1972-09-06 TEX W 2-0 9.0 2 0 2 5 86 90 Jim Perry 1966-07-19(2) WSA W 4-0 9.0 2 0 2 5 86 91 Scott Erickson 1992-07-24(1) BOS W 5-0 9.0 1 0 2 3 86 92 Dean Chance 1967-07-02(1) WSA W 4-1 9.0 5 1 0 12 85 93 Jim Kaat 1963-07-24(2) CLE W 5-0 9.0 6 0 1 11 85 94 Dean Chance 1967-06-01 BOS W 4-0 9.0 5 0 2 10 85 95 Jim Perry 1966-08-16 CAL W 8-1 9.0 3 1 4 10 85 96 Jim Kaat 1961-09-14(2) LAA W 3-1 9.0 3 1 2 10 85 97 Brad Radke 1997-09-21 MIL W 2-1 10.0 6 1 0 9 85 98 Jim Perry 1966-06-26(2) DET W 7-1 9.0 3 1 3 9 85 99 Kyle Lohse 2002-08-20 CHW W 5-0 9.0 4 0 2 8 85 100 Bert Blyleven 1985-08-17 SEA W 2-0 9.0 3 0 4 8 85 101 Bert Blyleven 1972-09-22 CAL W 1-0 9.0 5 0 0 8 85 102 Tom Hall 1969-08-24 NYY W 1-0 9.0 4 0 2 8 85 103 Dean Chance 1968-08-03 DET W 4-0 9.0 4 0 2 8 85 104 Joe Mays 1999-07-17 CHC W 8-0 9.0 3 0 3 7 85 105 Dick Woodson 1973-05-13 KCR W 5-0 9.0 3 0 3 7 85 106 Jim Merritt 1968-06-04 NYY W 3-0 9.0 4 0 1 7 85 107 Jim Perry 1968-04-13 NYY W 6-0 9.0 4 0 1 7 85 108 Bert Blyleven 1986-08-11 CAL W 2-0 9.0 3 0 2 6 85 109 Tom Hall 1969-04-18 CAL W 6-0 9.0 2 0 4 6 85 110 Camilo Pascual 1963-05-10 KCA W 2-0 9.0 3 0 2 6 85 111 Bert Blyleven 1973-06-08 BAL W 2-0 9.0 2 0 3 5 85 112 Jack Kralick 1963-04-25 WSA W 3-0 9.0 3 0 1 5 85 113 Dick Stigman 1963-04-18 LAA W 3-0 9.0 3 0 1 5 85 114 Jim Kaat 1962-07-19 CLE W 8-0 9.0 3 0 1 5 85 115 Pedro Ramos 1961-04-11 NYY W 6-0 9.0 3 0 1 5 85 116 Andrew Albers 2013-08-12 CLE W 3-0 9.0 2 0 0 2 85
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/15/2017.

To generate this list at Baseball Reference, I began at 85 as my absolute bottom benchmark score. Any game lower than this failed to make the list, like Francisco Liriano's 83 in his 2011 no-hitter. I vividly recall saying in my "25 Best Pitched Twins Games" * post that that game wasn't even close to  being the best pitched game of his career, and being chastised as being ridiculous by one friend ("A no-hitter HAS to be the best game he's ever thrown!"). Because throwing a no-hitter is the be-all/end-all criterion, and nothing else matters, I guess. Walk 11 or 12 guys, strike out 3, and have your fielders catch 4 "At-em" balls? No matter!

* A post that now looks hopelessly arbitrary, unscientific, and very subjective today, as there's no rank order, and I was going completely off of memory. Of course, I didn't have the benefit of the "BBRef Play Index" to guide me 6 years ago!

But owing to Liriano's 6 walks and a mere 2 strikeouts in that effort, I stand by my earlier idea. I think most people would agree a game that is as clean as Santana's was today, nice to watch and tinged with an artistic flair, is qualitatively better. I don't care if I see a 10 walk, 4 strikeout, 12-inning complete game no-hitter tomorrow, I'll still maintain a "clean," economical pitching effort with 2 hits allowed gets the nod.

"So long, everybody!" - Herb Carneal

Monday, January 30, 2012

Chuck Knoblauch & The Dollar Dog Rebellion: May 2, 2001

The Odd Couple: Kelly and Knoblauch  face down rowdies


[UPDATED, August 31, 2013]




I was there at the H.H.H. Metrodome to see the whole, mustard-slathered spectacle. 


Wednesday night, May 2, 2001, was the defining evening for prodigal son Chuck Knoblauch, when he found out he was no longer the fair-haired boy of Twins glories past. In contrast, the original Biblical son received nothing like the rude, verbal ass-kicking and shennanigans that Knobby received  in that series-ending game at the Metrodome. It was the venue's most surreal, darkest ballgame ever. It's the only time my team won when I wanted to wear a bag over my head in embarassment.
Above, right: behold the culprit of the evening!
It had all started so wonderfully for Chuck in Minnesota.
Bowman 1991 Rookie

After he was drafted #25 in the first round of the 1989 draft, he apprenticed for just parts of two years (A: 139 games, AA ball: 118 games) in the minors. Then there was the 1991 Twins World Championship and Rookie Of The Year award; there were the four All-Star selections, three top-20 MVP finishes, two Silver Slugger and Gold Glove awards. He did all this with a single-minded pursuit that bordered on mania. I remember a televised, steamy game from Cleveland in '95 or so - he did everything, hitting for extra bases, stealing, fielding - he was a rocket-propelled runt. Sadly, when you coupled the off-season workouts with the mail order food supplements (some apparently of the legal variety) that transformed him from a slightly pudgy little fellow into an intense greyhound, you had a guy that became viewed as a diva. His relations with Twins Manager Tom Kelly became strained. 

 
All the Twins could get
for Scott Erickson was...
Scott Klingenbeck.
 The lean years for the Twins extended from 1993 through the end of the Millennium. Knoblauch learned, as current Twins catcher Joe Mauer discovered in the summer of 2011, that (A) the fruits of losing made for an unpleasant aftertaste and (B) stars get the lion's share of criticism for the losing. The Twins traded away the Greg Gagnes, the Kevin Tapanis, the Scott Ericksons in a series of money-saving maneuvers until all at once, it seemed as if Knobby, Kirby and (later) Paul Molitor were the only sure things for the Twins. 



Once Puckett irretrievably lost his eyesight, Kelly was left with mediocrities like Rich Becker, Scott Stahoviak, Pat Meares, and Frankie Rodriguez to pencil into the lineup after Knoblauch at leadoff. His wife at the time found him uncommunicative after frustrating ballgames, despite his personal successes. He signed a contract in late-season 1996, but the losses still mounted - and by the end ‘97, he’d had enough, and made known he wanted out. He got his wish, forcing the Twins hand.  Enter Cristian Guzman, Eric Milton, Brian Buchanan, and Danny Mota in February, whom the Twins wrangled away from the Yankees for his services.



Commence the white-hot hatred of Twins fans spurned. As history would demonstrate later, vengeful Minnesota fans make Glenn Close (“Fatal Instinct”) look like the school librarian by comparison.


Fan to Knoblauch:
"You will NOT ignore me !"
When A.J. Pierzynski returned to the American League in 2005, he elicited similar antipathy. Like Knobby, he brought a bundle in trade booty: Joe Nathan, Francisco Liriano and Boof Bonser. What is it about the state's sporting public that they can't look good fortune in the face and see it for what it is? It's a paradox that's hard to fathom...


The Game - Wednesday, May 2, 2001
Ordinarily, a game that’s scoreless into the middle innings would be noteworthy on its own merit, with stellar pitching by starters Joe Mays and Orlando Hernandez. That helped create a taught, tense affair. It should have been a fascinating game. But there was something else at hand. As I watched that game in left field, I felt an increasing discomfort with what was going on around me; a crazed anarchy was in the air, very unsettling. Boorish kids of college age were giving it to the Yankees and Knoblauch; it wasn't just the loudness - it was the meanness, bitterness, bile, and beach balls pinging back and forth that made this freak show. One frustrated gentleman, obviously a middle-aged, Twins fanatic, was seen catching one of those bouncers, puncturing it, and telling the miscreants to "WATCH THE GAME;" his reward was debris and bear bottles thrown his way as well (oh, did that HURT my feelings!). This took place while the Twins were mounting a rally in the 6th inning. 


A number of factors contributed to this evening's weirdness:

No, drunk guys. It does NOT say
"start the throwin'"
  • It was dollar dog night with little to no limit on how many hot dogs you could buy (or throw as handy projectiles on this night)

  • The Twins were just returning to respectability in ‘01, and thus general admission left field seats went for a paltry $10. That screamed one thing: “Come one, come all ye drunken frat boys!”
     (It’s a fact: cheap prices appeal to the rude, boorish set, as well as thrifty families)
  • Knoblauch’s 2nd base days were over. He’d been replaced there by  a young Alphonso Soriano. That meant he had the privilege of playing with his back to those same lower left field seats. Bullseye! 
  • A popular FM morning radio station show in the Twin Cities was stirring the pot against Knoblauch constantly, especially fixating on the incident when he pushed a kid in Seattle



    At 9:11 p.m., Doug Mientkiewicz singled in Matt Lawton and David Ortiz to put the Twins up by 3 runs off Mike Stanton and the Yanks in that 6th. This created an excuse for an erruption of bottles and dogs and objects to be tossed to the turf, at Knoblauch - and it became so intense that 3B Umpire Angel Hernandez felt he had no other choice except to signal Manager Joe Torre to order his Yankees from the field. Tom Kelly, in an ironic twist, emerged from the Twins dugout to be Knoblauch's savior, in an attempt to calm the knuckleheads.

The letters on the backs of the imbeciles' shirts spell out
"Watch Your Back Chuck" when properly arranged. Nice!

At the same time, PA announcer Bob Casey was intoning with a perturbed urgency:

 "Ladies and gentlemen, this is an important, championship ballgame. If the trouble in leftfield does not end, the game will be forfeited and the Yankees will win. NOW QUIT THIS!"

Everybody's welcome..unless your name is "Chuck"

After 12 minutes, following the ejection of a posse of unrulies from General Admission, play finally resumed.  The Twins A.J. Pierzynski took a strike three called, and the Twins bullpen came on to stuff New York the rest of the way. That would have been the end of it, except that yet another flurry of Chuck-shucking happened in the 8th inning...resulting in another 5 minute delay. That stoppage promoted the umpiring crew to more seriously consider a forfeit ruling. But the threat passed when fans witnessed more ejections, and they yielded to sanity, finally. Shockingly, the game took only 3:01 to play. As a footnote, the Twins won, 4-2.

For his part Kelly was livid not only with the fans, but he also felt the stadium's sound system was playing so loudly that he couldn't convey his message to the offending patrons. ''It was a terrific game, and in my mind it was ruined,'' Kelly said. ''Hopefully, they can clean it up around here.''
"What in the name of the Wide
World of Sports is going on here?"

 
To his credit, Knoblauch understood that just a small minority was responsible, and resisted downgrading Minnesota fans and Minneapolis: ''They need to turn the page. It's been four years. I don't know what's going on here... Even after all this, I won't say anything bad about the city,'' Knoblauch said. ''It's probably a bunch of 16-year-olds who don't have a clue who Chuck Knoblauch is."

Chuck would later confide to the Star Tribune's Amelia Rayno in 2013 how the episode affected him: "It hurt...I mean, I'm human. I can't even give you any details. It was like an out-of-body experience ... that's the part of my life that's like, 'Really?' It really meant that much? You're trying to hurt me, knowingly throwing a quarter or a marble or something at me? It's twisted. It made me bitter about Minnesota, definitely."

As a longtime Twins fan, it should be obvious to the reader that I'm embarrased this ever happened. Yet, I think it fair to add this bit of clarification: had Chuck had a sense of humor about himself during his career, and not taken himself so seriously, he might have endeared himself as one of the more beloved Twins before he left. It may have mitigated the ugliness of May 2, 2001. So, in that sense he had it wrong: Twins fans felt they DID know him, and some felt he deserved this treatment. If you can imagine.

I don't foresee similar flareups with the returns of Joe Nathan, or Michael Cuddyer or Jason Kubel in the future. 


Chuck in The Big Apple: A classic case of
"Be careful what you wish for."

In the final analysis, there should be some credit given to Twins management; they had doubled the security contingent in left after situations on a relatively minor scale disrupted the Monday game. But with the opportunity for the Twins to win the 3-game series at hand, a 16,000 fan walkup besieged the Ticket offices Wednesday.  It caught the Twins off guard with their surprising success of that early 2001 season, according to Dave St. Peter. It was their biggest, mid-week attendance in 13 years in April or May.


 In retrospect, I don't think it can be disputed that Chuck Knoblauch was by far the best second baseman in MLB over 1995-1996. Furthermore, if you focus on peak performance, he had the best all-round years for any Twins second baseman in their history. That would include Rod Carew (with the exception of his ridiculous 1977 MVP season - but of course, he was a first baseman by then!). 

High Heats Stats also takes this to a greater, detailed level in it's analysis of Knoblauch's superior seasons, "Five Fascinating Facts About Chuck Knoblauch." Truly illuminating, that he was besting a Hall of Famer in Roberto Alomar.


It can be stated that trading Chuck for players like Guzman and Eric Milton undoubtedly bettered the product on the field, helped keep the Twins in Minnesota, and staved off contraction in 2001. Just another reason that residual bitterness towards Chuck Knoblauch is misguided and stupid.

 
As our announcing friend Herb Carneal put it:
So long, everybody!" - TT

Information from a May 4, 2001 Online Athens article was also extremely helpful in this recap.

Here's a You Tube video from '97 that foreshadows Knoblauch's eventual departure from Minnesota.
Then there's this story on what Chuck Knoblauch is up to these days, from a summer, 2011 StarTribune feature

Bleeding Yankee Blue posted this interview with Chuck in Aug., 2011.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

The Phenoms of Minnesota Twins Springs Past: Part I

Luke Hughes.  Kyle Gibson.  Scott Diamond. Just a few new names we Twins fans have heard bandied about this spring of 2011. This post and the ones to follow highlight some past Twins who either performed admirably in spring training, or caught on with the club early in the season.

Some "kicked up the dust," and flourished...while some wilted like daisies in the hot summer sun, from the pressures of big league ball.

Jimmie Hall, 1963: Southern Fried Slugger 
He was the fleet center fielder with a sweet, whiplash swing from the left side. He was the first, real "tools" player (speed, power) to come up in the Twins' system in the early 1960's. He was sort of a Mickey Mantle character, Minnesota version, with his skill set and southern drawl.

1964 Topps Card
Jimmie Hall was 25 when he impressed the Twins in the '63 camp (see "3 New Faces For The Twins" - Albert Lea Trib. April 1, 1963).  He'd been in the minors for parts of 7 seasons, and had finished his stint in the reserves in '62. Lenny Green had been the veteran in center field for the club, and knew by the middle of June that the fleet Hall would be taking his spot. Check out The Sporting News feature pg. 1 and page 2 on him from July 27, 1963. He was just a country kid, really, from Mount Holly, SC. You can imagine it was a kind of a place with Sheriffs like Andy Taylor and greasy spoon restaurants, a place where you couldn't swing a Louisville Slugger without hitting an Aunt Bee or drunk Otis Campbell character. He disliked big cities, a la, Hibbing, Minnesota native Roger Maris. That he played at Metropolitan Stadium must have been O.K. with him, as it was basically located in what had been a cornfield.

When Green went down with an injury in June, Hall was inserted into the starting lineup, and began knocking the cover off the ball. He hit .322 that month with 5 jacks, then only .233 but 7 HR's in July, caught fire with 13 bombs, 27 RBI and .333 in August, and finished off the year in September with another 6 homers. Not bad stuff -31 homers, .273 batting average, with 77 ribbies, .354 OBP & slugged .556.

Here's a wonderful clip of Jimmie batting against Don Drysdale in the 1965 World Series:


While he had three more fine seasons with Minnesota, it was always claimed that his May, 1964 beaning (link: Mar. 23, 1967 Milwaukee Sentinel) made him tentative against lefty throwers.   Actually, his line against them wasn't impressive previously, having only hit 1 homer pre-injury, and four lifetime (see Jason Kubel (10, through 2010) and Jacque Jones (21) lifetime for comparison). Just as crucial, perhaps, was his collision with Bob Allison that made him less aggressive going back to the wall for deep drives. He called it a career in 1970 with the Braves.

Sergio Ferrer, 1974: not ready for primetime...
Custom Made 1974 Ferrer Topps
Twins Cards Autographs section
Sergio Ferrer was basically the clubhouse janitor who masqueraded his way onto the major league stage. That is to say, he was a sham of a major league player for most of his time in the show. He was Chico Esquala, the fictional, comedic, Latin middle infielder popularized by Garret Morris on Saturday Night Live, before anybody had ever heard the name. He impressed the Twins brass during spring training competition, where his AA background looked to be more than adequate against the usual collection of green prospects and rusty veterans.

The Twins had selected him as a Rule 5 draftee on Dec. 3, 1973, from the Dodgers farm system.  Essentially, Calvin Griffith and company had grown dissatisfied with incumbent shortstop Danny Thompson. Thompson had produced a .225/.259/.282 line (batting, on base, slugging) line in '73, and it had to give the Twins pause, especially with his leukemia woes factored in. The Twins, with Ferrar's minor league stat sheet in front of them, saw this: a .297 BA, and a .397 OBP, with 44 steals in two seasons. I remember hearing the spring training games carried by WCCO radio out of Minneapolis, feeling thrilled whenever the little Puerto Rican reached base, anticipating he'd use his speed to swipe another bag.  And when he started the season as Manager Frank Quilici's lead off man, he batted .281 in 20 games, showing that speed alright...

Problem was, the Twins had neglected to scan the defensive side of his rap sheet: 70 errors in two seasons previous in A and AA ball.  Sure enough, when he had to field the ball, Ferrer didn't disappoint: at the start of '74, he committed 9 errors in 62 chances, a span of 125 innings. That's an .855 fielding percentage in 20 games (14 where he was the starter), while the league shortstops average was .969. Things had not "been berry, berry good..."


That's just plain loco, amigo!

By May 12, the "Sergio Ferrer Era" was mercifully over, as it marked the last time that year he would start at shortstop for the Twins. By the end of May, he was at AAA Tacoma, probably sent over in a spare bat bag to save cheap Calvin Griffith some air fare. There, he continued his pattern of savage butchery (a mere 29 errors in 79 games, .924 Fld%). The Twins tried their luck afterward with a revolving door of infield candidates, including Thompson, Luis Gomez, Jerry Terrell and Eric Soderholm. Dick Nixon could only wish he was given as quiet a burial in that stormy summer of '74. Sergio resurfaced with the hapless, late '70's New York Mets, where he found a home as Ed Kranepool's designated pinch runner.

Eric Milton, 1998: Centerpiece of Yankee trade for Chuck whats-his-name?
In the six seasons since the 1991 Championship, 2B Chuck Knoblauch had gone from an image of being the finest all-American overachiever who ever had his cheeks pinched by adoring grandmothers, to being a trade-demanding megalomaniac.  The Twins found suckers takers for his services in the New York Yankees [cue evil dictator laugh here].

The ransom they had to pay for his services turned into the most celebrated trade and transaction for the Twins in the decade of the 1990's: Brian Buchanan, Cristian Guzman, Eric Milton, Danny Mota and $3M came Minnesota's way on Feb. 6, 1998.

1999 Topps Rookie card
It was with no small joy for Twins fans that Milton was given a spot on the roster after his first spring fling with the Twins - he had discernible talent, which gave the fan base instant hope- a commodity that had become non-existent in a relatively short span of time. Pitchers like Rich Robertson, Scott Klingenbeck, and players like Scott Stahoviak and David McCarty had come to symbolize the decay and general malaise of a franchise (or like that same, inebriated Otis stumbling upon and flipping off the happy birthday kids party with his coarseness and rude flatulence). They were part of the slow building steam of resurgence for the Twins of the early 2000's that would blow the lid off the sham and lie that was contraction between the seasons of 2001 and 2002.

With that in mind, it's probably not too much of an exaggeration to claim Milton and his cohorts, specifically Guzman, were part of the most important trade in franchise history. The franchise's fate may have tipped another way if not for that. Of course, we'll never know.  Milton's 15-25 won-loss record over his first two seasons then became secondary, what with the legitimacy and talent (like the young Frank Viola) he brought to the pitching staff. A point of contention: Milton's Sept.11, 1999 no-hitter against the Anaheim Angels is downgraded for the low grade lineup he faced while Johnny Vander Meer's 1938 no-hitter (the second of two consecutive gems) against a very undistinguished Brooklyn Dodger lineup is given no such scrutiny or back-handed praise. With his career seemingly over at this point we owe him - and the Knobber - a salute in gratitude (uh, not that salute - the classy, respectful one).

We'll return later with more Twins phenoms.
Until then, as Herb used to say: "...and the count rides along."
TT