Worth Noting
Jim Hoey,
the right-handed reliever recalled by the Twins from Triple-A Rochester on
Sunday, might have the best fastball on the staff. Manager Ron
Gardenhire said on his KSTP radio show Sunday that Hoey can throw
the ball “96-97” miles per hour.
Although he’s 28, Hoey has only pitched 35.2 innings in the major
leagues including his no hit, no runs 1.1 innings debut for the Twins on
Monday night. In 2006 and 2007 he pitched for Baltimore, the club
that traded him last December to the Twins. He has a 7.82 career ERA
in the majors.
Hoey, who entered pro baseball in 2003, has been a reliever since 2005.
He missed all of 2008 with an inflamed right shoulder.
The Twins are five games under .500 with their 6-11 record. The worst
April in franchise history is 8-16 in 1978.
Orlando Hudson,
the Twins 2010 second baseman, is hitting .294 in his last 10 games
and .278 for the season in San Diego. Another former Twin, relief pitcher Pat Neshek,
is 1-0 with a 3.38 ERA in six games for the Padres. The Twins chose to
part with both players since the end of last season.
Local baseball fan Dave Wright emailed that former Twins’ third
baseman Reno Bertoia passed away last Friday in Windsor, Ontario
at age 75. Bertoia, one of the few natives of Italy to play in the
majors, homered
in the franchise’s first regular season game, the 1961 6-0 win in Yankee
Stadium over New York. He was Wright’s high school history teacher and
baseball coach at Assumption High School in Windsor. “A great
man,” Wright said in his email.
St. Thomas second baseman
Charles Bruchu, who hit .563 with a .668 slugging percentage in five
games, is the MIAC Baseball Player of the Week for his play last week.
Pitcher-of-the-Week is Hamline's Brett Bugielski for his
impressive bullpen work (1-0, three saves) in four Piper wins.
Radio talk show host and public relations executive
Dave Mona,
who also has been working as a special assistant to Gophers' athletics
director Joel Maturi, told Sports Headliners his agreement
with the University will end in June.
Former Gophers’ football player Tommy Watson emailed that he has
a new website promoting his motivational speaking, life coaching and
business consulting.
http://tawatson.com/
Former
University of Connecticut standout and current ESPN analyst
Rebecca Lobo on Lynx No. 1 draft choice Maya Moore: “If Maya stays
healthy, she will be the WNBA Rookie of the Year. She is WNBA-ready now
and proved that when she played with the National Team at the World
Championships last summer. She was the only college player on the team
and held her own. She has a WNBA body and a WNBA game. I expect her to
be an all-star and an All-WNBA performer her rookie year. … Again, she
needs to stay healthy, but Maya could be the (league) MVP her rookie
year.”
The Lynx are using a diverse marketing
plan to sell tickets for the coming season including print, radio, cable
TV, emails and automated phone calls, according to Conrad Smith,
the club’s chief operating officer. Coinciding with last week’s
selection
of Moore and in preparation for the regular season home opener on June 5
at Target Center, the marketing campaign may take the franchise well
beyond last year’s season ticket total of 2,400. Single game tickets
start at $10 with other prices at $30, $45, $60, $110 and $175.