If Your Birthday is April 21st...

 ...you share it with the pitcher who holds the record for most games appeared. Jesse Orosco worked in 1252 games over 24 seasons in four decades. Best known as a Met, where he claimed his place in history by nailing down the last out in game seven of the 1986 World Series, Jesse is also in that select circle who've played for both New York teams -- though his 15-game Yankee stint in 2003 produced forgettable results (with an ERA over 10).    

Zack Godley won 15 games for the 2018 Diamondbacks -- while leading the NL in hit batters and wild pitches. After struggling for Arizona, Toronto and Boston the last couple of seasons, he went unsigned over the winter, before signing a minor league deal with the Brewers during March. 

Edwin Rios is the latest impressive prospect to graduate from the Dodgers farm system. Ironically, his roster spot used to belong to someone he shares April 21st with.


Joc Pederson smacked 130 home runs in seven L.A. seasons, before moving to the Cubs over the winter as a free agent.

Jeff Keppinger broke in with the 2004 Mets beginning a nine-year career that featured six more stops, highlighted by a .325 season with the 2012 Rays.

Kevin Brown -- the other one -- was a catcher who appeared in just 85 games in parts of seven season during the '90s and 2000s. If you're curious, he was never a teammate of the namesake pitcher. 

Al Bumbry spent 13 of his 14 seasons with the Orioles. A lifetime .281 hitter, he 1973 American League Rookie of the Year; 10 years later, he was the everyday left fielder on Baltimore's last World Series champs.

Gary Peters won 19 and 20 in his first two full seasons with the White Sox. One of the American League's best lefty starters of the '60s, he was also one of the game's best hitting pitchers -- with 19 homers and 102 RBI.

Dick Green, the dependable but low key 2nd baseman spent a dozen years spanning the A's tenure in Kansas City and Oakland -- and played alongside Reggie Jackson and Joe Rudi on three consecutive World Series champions.

And we remember:

Ken Caminiti
, a talented 3rd baseman with the Astros and Padres -- where he won the 1996 NL MVP -- but whose career was derailed by self-admitted alcohol and cocaine abuse and clouded by his use of steroids. He died of an overdose in 2004.



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