see Joe's story in the Star
By JOE CHRISTENSEN , STAR TRIBUNE
Todd Oakes, who spent 18 years as Gophers pitching coach, mentoring the likes of Twins closer Glen Perkins, died Thursday after a four-year battle with acute myeloid leukemia, his family confirmed. He was 55.
Oakes was beloved in the Gophers baseball community, and the first-place team had recently recorded a video tribute to their coach. His No. 25 jersey often was hung up around practice and team gatherings in recent days as Oakes' health declined.
The family wrote on Oakes' CaringBridge site, "With a heavy heart, we are saddened to say that Todd passed away peacefully this morning. He was surrounded by his family with a cross in his hand and his favorite music playing.
He is survived by his wife, Terri, and their three sons Tyler, TJ and Tanner.
Longtime coach John Anderson had turned into a team counselor of sorts, helping players and coaches balance their grief for "T.O." while preparing for the biggest Gophers baseball games in years. The team plays at 1 p.m. Thursday in an elimination game at the Big Ten tournament in Omaha, Neb.
"We're at an institution of higher learning; this is another life lesson for [the players]," Anderson said earlier this month when Oakes was placed in home hospice.
The five-year survival rate for acute myeloid leukemia is about 26 percent. Oakes was diagnosed in 2012 and spent 50 days in a hospital undergoing chemotherapy. When he needed a bone-marrow transplant, his brother, Gerald, stepped up as a match, and donated 5.1 million healthy stem cells.
"Some people don't get through the initial process," Oakes told the Star Tribune in 2013. "They never get to hear that word 'remission' from the doctor."
Oakes did twice. He fought off the disease in 2012 and again in 2014 before the leukemia returned for a third time last September.
About four weeks ago, the father of three took a turn for the worse.
Oakes grew up in Spring Grove, Minn., and attended Waldorf College in Iowa before transferring to Nebraska. He went 16-4 as a pitcher over two seasons with the Cornhuskers, earning All-Big Eight honors in 1983. He earned his bachelor's degree in education and was a third-team Academic All-American.
Drafted by the San Francisco Giants, Oakes spent four years pitching in the minors before becoming a coach for 12 years in the Giants' system.
Oakes took over as Gophers pitching coach in 1998, in part, so he could spent more time at home with his wife and three sons.
In Oakes' first two seasons, the Gophers' team ERA improved from 5.73 to 4.20. It dipped to 2.89 three years ago, when Minnesota had two first-team All-Big Ten pitchers, in Tom Windle and DJ Snelten.
Windle got drafted in the second round by the Dodgers that year, and Snelten went in the ninth round to the Giants. One year earlier, Oakes' son TJ was the Gophers' staff ace and got drafted in the 11th round by the Rockies.
All told, Oakes coached 26 Gophers pitchers who went on to become drafted, including Perkins, who's a two-time All-Star with the Twins, and Seth Rosin, who made his major league debut with the Rangers in 2014.