In this morning's New York Times, Mincher -- who would only play 61 games for the Rangers during the team's first season in Arlington, 1972 -- reflects upon his brief tenure with Teddy Ball Game in Texas. He says of Williams:
"He was the most personable guy I ever met. He wasn't that great a manager, because he didn't really care about defense. And he just couldn't figure out why everybody couldn't hit .340. It was beyond his imagination that not anybody could pick up a bat and hit .340. He just couldn't stand it."As for the reason Mincher is profiled in this morning's Times -- he played for the original Minnesota Twins and the original Texas Rangers, two franchises sifted from the ashes of the never-say-die Washington Senators (and both in the postseason together for the first time). Says Mincher, a 200-home-run-hitter now 72 and living in his native Huntsville, Alabama, "I'm the answer to a trivia question."