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1955
The Cubs' Sam Jones threw the first no-hitter by a black pitcher in MLB history on May 7, 1955. The Minnesota angle here is that the former Negro Leaguer played for the town ball Rochester Royals in 1949, pitching no-hitters against Owatonna on August 4 and Austin on September 7.
It is worth noting, here, that 1949 was the same summer that former Negro Leaguer Hilton Smith was playing town ball in Fulda, Minnesota, managed by Patrick Reusse's dad Dick. (Smith was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2001, along with Kirby Puckett and Dave Winfield.)
1961
Twins and Angels pitchers traded home runs off each other on May 12, 1961.
Tied 2-2 in the top of the fifth, Angels pitcher Eli Grba hit a solo home run to give his team a 3-2 lead. Then in the bottom of the inning, Twins pitcher Pedro Ramos homered to tie it back up. Ramos added a two-run single in the sixth, and the Twins held on to win 5-4, with the pitcher driving in the Twins’ final three runs.
1972
The Twins suffered their longest loss on this date in 1972.
The Twins and Brewers were tied 3-3 after 21 innings at Metrpolitan Stadium when the game was postponed due to the American League’s curfew. The game resumed the next morning, with the Brewers scoring in the top of the 22nd off Bert Blyleven. The Twins loaded the bases against Brewers pitcher Jim Lonborg in the bottom of the inning, but the Brewers held on to win 4-3.
Rod Carew went 5-for-7 with two doubles and three walks in the game.
Blyleven and Lonborg started the regularly scheduled game later that day, with Blyleven going nine innings. This game, too, required extra innings. The Brewers took a 4-3 lead on a solo home run in the top of the 15th, but with Jim Nettles aboard in the bottom of the inning, Eric Soderholm hit a two-out, walk-off home run for a 5-4 Twins win.
Soderholm’s home run was, apparently, the most clutch swing in Twins history in terms of Win Probability Added, (which I don’t claim to understand). According to Baseball Reference, the Twins’ probability of winning went from 8% to 100% on Soderholm’s swing, for a probability added of 92%.
Carew went 3-for-6 with a walk in the second game, for a total of 12 times on base between the two games.
The Twins and Brewers played a combined 37 innings over the two games.
1982
Just one day after trading two bona fide big-leaguers for a minor-league pitcher and the unproven Tom Brunansky, the Twins continued their liquidation by trading pitcher Roger Erickson and standout catcher Butch Wynegar to the Yankees for... not a whole heckuva lot.
Wynegar was an All-Star in his first two seasons and finished second to Detroit’s Mark Fidrych in 1976 AL Rookie of the Year balloting.
Despite the Brunansky deal working out very well in retrospect, both trades were seen at the time as cheap, cost-cutting measures by Twins ownership.
1991
Rookie second baseman Chuck Knoblauch went 4-for-5 on this date in 1991, raising his average to .336 over his first 30 career games. He hit .400 over a 20-game hitting streak in September and was named American League Rookie of the Year.
2002
1995 Hill-Murray graduate, three-time Golden Gophers MVP, and 1999 tenth-round Angels draft pick Robb Quinlan went 5-for-5 with two home runs and eight RBI for triple-A Salt Lake versus Edmonton on this date in 2002.
Quinlan went on to hit .333 with 31 doubles, 13 triples, 20 home runs, and a league-leading 112 RBIs en route to being named the Angels’ Minor League Player of the Year. The major-league team, meanwhile, won the 2002 World Series. Quinlan made his major league debut on July 25, 2003.
2019
Sauk Rapids-Rice graduate Anthony Bemboom made his major league debut catching for the Rays on this date in 2019. He must call a nice game, because pitcher Blake Snell had 10 strikeouts through the first four innings.
Are you interested in Twins history? Then check out the Minnesota Twins Players Project, a community-driven project to discover and collect great information on every player to wear a Twins uniform!
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