Twink Twining

Howard Earle "Twink" Twining (May 30, 1894 – June 14, 1973) was an American baseball pitcher who played one game in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Cincinnati Reds. He played baseball and basketball at Swarthmore College and later became a prominent dermatologist.

Early life
Twining was born on May 30, 1894, in Horsham, Pennsylvania. He attended Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, and became a "well-known" athlete in the area while playing baseball and basketball. He initially played second base at Swarthmore but then switched to pitcher and became a "star". He led the baseball team to wins over Penn and Michigan in three days in 1914; the win over Penn was the first time they ever accomplished it in school history. In basketball, he served as team captain, and Twining was also the manager of the football team.

Twining led the baseball team to several more victories against Penn in the 1915 season and also led the basketball team to wins over schools such as Army and Rutgers. The Evening Public Ledger described him as one of the three best pitchers in college baseball. Nicknamed "Twink" and "Twig", he threw right and batted right-handed. He graduated from Swarthmore with a Doctor of Medicine degree.

Professional baseball career
Twining began his professional baseball career after having graduated from Swarthmore in 1915 with a team in Chester. He also played for a team in Media that year and for the Salisbury team of the independent Peninsula League. With Salisbury, he was the starting pitcher in an exhibition win over the Connie Mack-led Philadelphia Athletics.

In June 1916, Twining was signed by Buck Herzog, manager of the Cincinnati Reds of Major League Baseball, after having been told about Twining by a scout. He did not make his debut until over a month after signing with the team, being the closing pitcher in a 10–3 loss to the Brooklyn Robins. The Cincinnati Post noted that the game "was a nightmare for Red fans" and reported that Twining "had nothing with which to deceive the [Robins] ... He displayed a nice pitching motion but the Dodgers had no trouble hitting his offerings." He pitched two innings of the game and had an earned run average of 13.50, facing 11 batters while allowing three runs. He was released by the Reds several days later, with The Pittsburgh Press reported that he had "been with the Reds for over a month without having the slightest chance to make good or to start a game."

After being released by Cincinnati, Twining later spent time in 1916 with a team called "Carney's Point" in Delaware. He played for the Upland team of Upland, Pennsylvania, in 1917. The following year, he was a member of the Sun team in the Delaware River Shipbuilding League and also saw action with the "Chester Ship club". He played for the Wilkinsburg Murdocks in 1920, and for Glenside of the Philadelphia Suburban League from 1921 to 1922, helping them win two league championships.

Later life and death
Twining attended Hahnemann Medical School and graduated in 1919. He received dermatology training in Vienna and became a prominent dermatologist in Pennsylvania. He wrote articles published in medical journals, headed the Hahnemann Medical School department of dermatology and was president of the Philadelphia Dermatological Society. He was a member of the Pennsylvania Academy of Dermatology and served at various hospitals, including in Abington, Hahnemann and Wilmington, and at the Skin and Cancer, Philadelphia General and Naval Hospitals. He was a 32nd degree mason. He died on June 14, 1973, at the age of 78, from a long illness.