Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'hosken powell'.
-
Powell was born in Selma, Alabama, on May 14, 1955, during the height of racial segregation in the South. Powell did not receive much attention from Major League scouts until he attended Chipola College in Marianna, Florida, a junior college that would later produce future MLB all-stars Jose Bautista, Patrick Corbin, Russell Martin, and future Minnesota Twins outfielder Rene Tosoni. While at Chipola College, Powell was first drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the first round of the 1975 MLB January Draft-Regular Phase but declined to sign with the Pirates. Powell played one more season with Chipola, then was selected by the Twins in June 1975 draft, signing with the team as a 20-year-old athlete. Powell broke into MLB with the Twins in 1978 as a 23-year-old rookie and made his debut on Opening Day against the Seattle Mariners as the Twins leadoff hitter. The Twins suffered a 3-2 loss that day, but Powell at least recorded his first hit in the majors. The 1978 season was a decent start to Powell's MLB career. He hit .247 with 20 doubles in 121 games. He stole 11 bases. Powell's promise as a hitter was never that of the modern, power hitter. Like many Twins in the mid-to-late 70s, Powell was brought on for his contact-hitting abilities as he had batting averages of .329, .345, and .326 in his first three professional seasons. In 1979, Powell's hitting showed some improvement. Although Powell played fewer games (104) than the previous year, his numbers showed tremendous success during his sophomore season. He had a .293 batting average, a .360 on-base percentage, and a career-high .739 OPS. He had 17 doubles and drove in 36 runs. As the decade turned to the '80s, Powell remained the Twins' everyday right fielder for the next two seasons. Powell's production in the 1980 season would be one of his better seasons. He played in a career-high 137 games and had a career-high 127 hits, 14 stolen bases, and 58 runs scored. Powell hit .262. Powell's final season with the Twins was in 1981 during the strike-shortened season when the Twins and other teams only played around 110 games. Powell played in 80 games that season for the Twins, splitting playing time with Twins rookie Dave Engle. 1981 was the worst of Powell's four seasons, with the Twins posting a .239 batting average, with 25 runs batted in, and a .612 OPS. Following the conclusion of the season, Powell was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays for a player to be named later that would be Greg Wells, a first baseman who only played 15 games for the Twins in 1982. Powell regained his success with Toronto in 1982 and found a successful role as a backup outfielder with the team. 1983 was his final season in the big leagues. Powell only played in 40 games with the Blue Jays and was released by them in July. Powell tried to make his way back into the big leagues in the Brewers minor league system in 1984 but never received the call. He also played in the Mexican League in 1985, his final season in professional baseball. Powell's time with the Twins and in MLB was short-lived, and he never panned out to the top of the lineup as the contact hitter the team had drafted him as. Still, Powell was a reliable player in the Twins lineup who finished out the everyday right fielder role in the 70s.
-
Hosken Powell had the shortest MLB career between three Tony Oliva successors, but he still often found himself in the lineup throughout his four seasons with the Twins. Powell was born in Selma, Alabama, on May 14, 1955, during the height of racial segregation in the South. Powell did not receive much attention from Major League scouts until he attended Chipola College in Marianna, Florida, a junior college that would later produce future MLB all-stars Jose Bautista, Patrick Corbin, Russell Martin, and future Minnesota Twins outfielder Rene Tosoni. While at Chipola College, Powell was first drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the first round of the 1975 MLB January Draft-Regular Phase but declined to sign with the Pirates. Powell played one more season with Chipola, then was selected by the Twins in June 1975 draft, signing with the team as a 20-year-old athlete. Powell broke into MLB with the Twins in 1978 as a 23-year-old rookie and made his debut on Opening Day against the Seattle Mariners as the Twins leadoff hitter. The Twins suffered a 3-2 loss that day, but Powell at least recorded his first hit in the majors. The 1978 season was a decent start to Powell's MLB career. He hit .247 with 20 doubles in 121 games. He stole 11 bases. Powell's promise as a hitter was never that of the modern, power hitter. Like many Twins in the mid-to-late 70s, Powell was brought on for his contact-hitting abilities as he had batting averages of .329, .345, and .326 in his first three professional seasons. In 1979, Powell's hitting showed some improvement. Although Powell played fewer games (104) than the previous year, his numbers showed tremendous success during his sophomore season. He had a .293 batting average, a .360 on-base percentage, and a career-high .739 OPS. He had 17 doubles and drove in 36 runs. As the decade turned to the '80s, Powell remained the Twins' everyday right fielder for the next two seasons. Powell's production in the 1980 season would be one of his better seasons. He played in a career-high 137 games and had a career-high 127 hits, 14 stolen bases, and 58 runs scored. Powell hit .262. Powell's final season with the Twins was in 1981 during the strike-shortened season when the Twins and other teams only played around 110 games. Powell played in 80 games that season for the Twins, splitting playing time with Twins rookie Dave Engle. 1981 was the worst of Powell's four seasons, with the Twins posting a .239 batting average, with 25 runs batted in, and a .612 OPS. Following the conclusion of the season, Powell was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays for a player to be named later that would be Greg Wells, a first baseman who only played 15 games for the Twins in 1982. Powell regained his success with Toronto in 1982 and found a successful role as a backup outfielder with the team. 1983 was his final season in the big leagues. Powell only played in 40 games with the Blue Jays and was released by them in July. Powell tried to make his way back into the big leagues in the Brewers minor league system in 1984 but never received the call. He also played in the Mexican League in 1985, his final season in professional baseball. Powell's time with the Twins and in MLB was short-lived, and he never panned out to the top of the lineup as the contact hitter the team had drafted him as. Still, Powell was a reliable player in the Twins lineup who finished out the everyday right fielder role in the 70s. View full article
-
May 13, 1989 Kirby Puckett Hits Four Doubles Kirby Puckett hit a team record four doubles as the Twins beat the Blue Jays 10-8 at the Metrodome. Kirby, who was 4-for-5 with three RBI and a run scored, hit two doubles each off of 7x All-Star Dave Stieb and '87 AL saves leader Tom Henke. May 13, 2009 Crede Hits Walk-Off Grand Slam Down 7-9 to Detroit in the eighth with Mike Redmond on first, Jason Kubel, pinch-hitting for Carlos Gomez, hit a game-tying home run. The teams were still tied in the thirteenth when Curtis Granderson hit a one-out triple off of Jesse Crain. Then, with two out, Crain was called for a balk, bringing Granderson home with the go-ahead run. Kubel led-off the bottom of the thirteenth with a single, and was pinch-run for by Nick Punto, who was sacrificed to second by Denard Span, and driven in by Matt Tolbert to tie the game. Joe Mauer then grounded out for the second out of the inning, with Tolbert advancing to second on the play. 2006 AL MVP Justin Morneau was intentionally walked to fill first. Tigers reliever Brandon Lyon, however, then gave up a walk to Michael Cuddyer, forcing the winning run up to third base. With two out and a 1-2 count, third baseman Joe Crede hit a walk-off grand slam. May 14 Happy 62nd Birthday, Hosken Powell It's the birthday of former Twins right fielder Hosken Powell, born in Selma, Alabama in 1955. The Twins' '75 draft choice played in Minnesota from 1978-'81 before playing his final two big league seasons in Toronto. Powell hit his first major league home run off of Hall of Famer Jim Palmer in May of his rookie season. His third home run was off of Hall of Famer Fegie Jenkins. And his final home run came off of Hall of Famer Don Sutton. May 14, 1968 3-HR First Inning vs. Catfish Hunter After Twins starter Jim Merritt set Oakland's Bert Campaneris, Reggie Jackson, and Sal Bando down in order to start the game, Rod Carew led off the bottom of the first with a home run off of future-Hall of Famer Jim "Catfish" Hunter. Catfish then walked Cesar Tovar, and gave up another home run to Tony Oliva. After walking Harmon Killebrew, Catfish finally got Bob Allison to pop up for the first out. Rich Rollins then drove in Harmon with the Twins' third home run of the inning, giving them a 5-0 lead in the first inning. The Athletics battled back, however, scoring in each on the next three innings, including a big six-run fourth inning, ultimately winning 13-8, with Catfish Hunter improving to 4-2 on the season. May 14, 1998 Marlins Trade Eisenreich In what would have been one of the biggest blockbuster trades of all time had it happened in 1993, the Marlins sent Gary Sheffield, Bobby Bonilla, Charles Johnson, 1977 St. Cloud Tech graduate Jim Eisenreich, and Manuel Barrios to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Mike Piazza, and Todd Zeile. Keep in touch with the @TwinsAlmanac on Twitter.
-
- kirby puckett
- joe crede
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Recent Articles
-
Recent Posts
-
3
Hey, look here
Whoooooooo Ranked ProspectsTurangChourioQueroFrelickBillWilburSpankyEdgarJohn NOOOOOOOOOO...
By Brock Beauchamp
Last post date -
0
Can Jorge López Rediscover His First-Half Success?
The Twins made a much-needed trade for an all-star reliever at last year’s deadline, but what they got fell short of e...
By Lou Hennessy
Last post date
-
Blog Entries
-
Who's Online (See full list)
- There are no registered users currently online