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2004 Minnesota Twins season

The 2004 Minnesota Twins season was the 104th season in the franchise's history and its 44th season in the Twin Cities. The Twins were managed by Ron Gardenhire and played in the Metrodome.

2004 Minnesota Twins
American league Central Champions
LeagueAmerican League
DivisionCentral
BallparkHubert H. Humphrey Metrodome
CityMinneapolis
Record92–70 (.568)
Divisional place1st
OwnersCarl Pohlad
General managersTerry Ryan
ManagersRon Gardenhire
TelevisionKSTC-TV/KSTP-TV
FSN North
(Bert Blyleven, Dick Bremer)
Radio830 WCCO AM
(Herb Carneal, John Gordon, Dan Gladden, Jack Morris)
← 2003 Seasons 2005 →

The Twins finished with a 92–70 record and won the American League Central. They advanced to the ALDS, but they lost the series to the New York Yankees in four games. It was the second year in a row in which the Yankees eliminated the Twins in the ALDS.[1]

Twins pitcher Johan Santana won the 2004 Cy Young Award on a unanimous vote.[2]

Offseason edit

Spring training edit

The Twins posted a 20–10 record in spring training, the best of any major league team in 2004.[4] This includes split-squad games but not ties or exhibition games.

Regular season edit

Offense edit

For a playoff team, the offense was not strong. This was partly due to injuries and starters absent from the lineup. Lew Ford surprised many by batting .299 in his first full year in the major leagues. Free agent acquisition José Offerman saw a majority of time in the designated hitter spot, but hit only .256 with two home runs. Shannon Stewart did hit .304, but injuries limited him to 378 at bats. In 107 at bats, Mauer was able to hit .307. In his absence, catcher Henry Blanco hit only .206. First baseman Doug Mientkiewicz's hitting continued to decline, as he hit .246 with five home runs before being dealt to the Boston Red Sox.

Nine players hit ten or more home runs. When the Twins hit their record 225 homers in 1963, only eight players reached double figures.

Team Leaders
Statistic Player Quantity
HR Corey Koskie 25
RBI Torii Hunter 81
BA Lew Ford .299
Runs Lew Ford 89

Pitching edit

Brad Radke was the opening day starter, but he was soon overshadowed by Johan Santana's Cy Young year. Radke, Santana, and Carlos Silva anchored the starting rotation. Unfortunately, Kyle Lohse had a bad year that saw his ERA balloon to 5.34, while the fifth spot in the rotation was nebulous. (41-year-old Terry Mulholland made 15 starts, while Seth Greisinger made nine.)

The Twins set their club record of 32 consecutive scoreless innings in June, which included back-to-back-to-back shutouts by Radke, Santana and Lohse.

In the bullpen, Joe Nathan blew everyone away during his first year as a closer at any level, earning 44 saves with a 1.62 ERA. Juan Rincón and J. C. Romero continued playing as excellent set-up men, while the rest of the bullpen was weaker. Romero set a Twins record by going 36 innings over 32 appearances without allowing a run to score.

Santana finished the year with 13 straight wins without a loss, then went 1-0 with a no-decision in the American League Division Series. He set the Twins record with 265 strikeouts this season.

Defense edit

Blanco and Mauer (when he played) were solid catchers, both with .991 fielding percentages. Mientkiewicz was a one-time Gold Glove winner, but his successor Justin Morneau surprised people with his .995 fielding percentage. Luis Rivas was dependable at second base, while Cristian Guzmán could turn exceptional plays at shortstop. (It was the routine ones that fooled him.) Corey Koskie was defensively average, while the outfield quartet of Hunter, Jacque Jones, Shannon Stewart and Ford were solid – especially Hunter, who won a Gold Glove.

Season standings edit

AL Central W L Pct. GB Home Road
Minnesota Twins 92 70 0.568 49–32 43–38
Chicago White Sox 83 79 0.512 9 46–35 37–44
Cleveland Indians 80 82 0.494 12 44–37 36–45
Detroit Tigers 72 90 0.444 20 38–43 34–47
Kansas City Royals 58 104 0.358 34 33–47 25–57


Record vs. opponents edit


Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
Team ANA BAL BOS CWS CLE DET KC MIN NYY OAK SEA TB TEX TOR NL 
Anaheim 6–3 4–5 5–4 4–5 7–2 7–0 5–4 5–4 10–9 13–7 6–1 9–10 4–5 7–11
Baltimore 3–6 10–9 2–4 3–3 6–0 6–3 4–5 5–14 0–7 7–2 11–8 5–2 11–8 5–13
Boston 5–4 9–10 4–2 3–4 6–1 4–2 2–4 11–8 8–1 5–4 14–5 4–5 14–5 9–9
Chicago 4–5 4–2 2–4 10–9 8–11 13–6 9–10 3–4 2–7 7–2 4–2 6–3 3–4 8–10
Cleveland 5–4 3–3 4–3 9–10 9–10 11–8 7–12 2–4 6–3 5–4 3–3 1–8 5–2 10–8
Detroit 2–7 0–6 1–6 11–8 10–9 8–11 7–12 4–3 4–5 5–4 3–3 4–5 4–2 9–9
Kansas City 0–7 3–6 2–4 6–13 8–11 11–8 7–12 1–5 2–7 2–5 3–6 4–5 3–3 6–12
Minnesota 4–5 5–4 4–2 10–9 12–7 12–7 12–7 2–4 2–5 5–4 4–5 5–2 4–2 11–7
New York 4–5 14–5 8–11 4–3 4–2 3–4 5–1 4–2 7–2 6–3 15–4 5–4 12–7 10–8
Oakland 9–10 7–0 1–8 7–2 3–6 5–4 7–2 5–2 2–7 11–8 7–2 11–9 6–3 10–8
Seattle 7–13 2–7 4–5 2–7 4–5 4–5 5–2 4–5 3–6 8–11 2–5 7–12 2–7 9–9
Tampa Bay 1–6 8–11 5–14 2–4 3–3 3–3 6–3 5–4 4–15 2–7 5–2 2–7 9–9 15–3
Texas 10–9 2–5 5–4 3–6 8–1 5–4 5–4 2–5 4–5 9–11 12–7 7–2 7–2 10–8
Toronto 5–4 8–11 5–14 4–3 2–5 2–4 3–3 2–4 7–12 3–6 7–2 9–9 2–7 8–10


Notable Transactions edit

Roster edit

2004 Minnesota Twins
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Postseason edit

The Twins entered and exited the postseason nearly the same as the previous season, losing to the Yankees, 3 games to 1 in the Division Series. The Twins won the first game by a score of 2–0, with starting pitcher Johan Santana getting the win. However, the Twins lost the next three games, with the Yankees taking the series 3 games to 1. Game 1 of this series represented the last postseason victory for the Twins until 2023. Game 2 began a 18 game postseason losing streak for the team, tied with the 1975–79 Chicago Blackhawks for the longest such losing streak in North American sports history.[6] The Yankees would go on to be upset by the Boston Red Sox on their way to breaking the curse.

See 2004 American League Division Series.

Player stats edit

Batting edit

Starters by position edit

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
C Henry Blanco 114 315 65 .206 10 37
1B Doug Mientkiewicz 78 284 70 .246 5 25
2B Luis Rivas 109 336 86 .256 10 34
SS Cristian Guzmán 145 576 158 .274 8 46
3B Corey Koskie 118 422 106 .251 25 71
LF Lew Ford 154 569 170 .299 15 72
CF Torii Hunter 138 520 141 .271 23 81
RF Jacque Jones 151 555 141 .254 24 80
DH José Offerman 77 172 44 .256 2 22

Other batters edit

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Shannon Stewart 92 378 115 .304 11 47
Michael Cuddyer 115 339 89 .263 12 45
Justin Morneau 74 280 76 .271 19 58
Matt LeCroy 88 264 71 .269 9 39
Joe Mauer 35 107 33 .308 6 17
Nick Punto 38 91 23 .253 2 12
Michael Ryan 36 71 17 .239 0 7
Jason Kubel 23 60 18 .300 2 7
Augie Ojeda 30 59 20 .339 2 7
Michael Restovich 29 47 12 .255 2 6
Terry Tiffee 17 44 12 .273 2 8
Pat Borders 19 42 12 .286 0 5
Alex Prieto 16 32 8 .250 1 4
Rob Bowen 17 27 3 .111 1 2
Jason Bartlett 8 12 1 .083 0 1

Pitching edit

Starting pitchers edit

Note: G = Games; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Johan Santana 34 228.0 20 6 2.61 265
Brad Radke 34 219.2 11 8 3.48 143
Carlos Silva 33 203.0 14 8 4.21 76
Kyle Lohse 35 194.0 9 13 5.34 111

Other pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Terry Mulholland 39 123.1 5 9 5.18 60
Seth Greisinger 12 51.0 2 5 6.18 36
Matt Guerrier 9 19.0 0 1 5.68 11
J.D. Durbin 4 7.1 0 1 7.36 6

Relief pitchers edit

Note: G = Games; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Joe Nathan 73 1 2 44 1.62 89
Juan Rincón 77 11 6 2 2.63 106
J.C. Romero 74 7 4 1 3.51 69
Aaron Fultz 55 3 3 1 5.04 37
Joe Roa 48 2 3 0 4.50 47
Grant Balfour 36 4 1 0 4.35 42
Jesse Crain 22 3 0 0 2.00 14
Carlos Pulido 6 0 0 0 8.74 9
Brad Thomas 3 0 0 0 16.88 0
Joe Beimel 3 0 0 0 43.20 2

Miscellaneous edit

 
2004 AL Cy Young Award winner Johan Santana.

Other post-season awards edit

Farm system edit

[7][8]

References edit

  1. ^ "2004 Minnesota Twins Statistics". Baseball Reference. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  2. ^ "Twins' Johan Santana wins AL Cy Young Award". Minnesota Public Radio. November 11, 2004. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  3. ^ A. J. Pierzynski Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  4. ^ "MLB Spring Training Standings – 2004". ESPN. Retrieved July 23, 2017.
  5. ^ "Doug Mientkiewicz Stats".
  6. ^ "Twins tie record for longest playoff losing streak in North American sports after ALDS sweep by Yankees". CBSSports.com. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  7. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007
  8. ^ Baseball America 2005 Annual Directory

External links edit

  • Player stats from www.baseball-reference.com
  • Team info from www.baseball-almanac.com
  • Twins history since 2000, from www.mlb.com October 18, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  • 2004 Standings

2004, minnesota, twins, season, 104th, season, franchise, history, 44th, season, twin, cities, twins, were, managed, gardenhire, played, metrodome, 2004, minnesota, twinsamerican, league, central, championsleagueamerican, leaguedivisioncentralballparkhubert, h. The 2004 Minnesota Twins season was the 104th season in the franchise s history and its 44th season in the Twin Cities The Twins were managed by Ron Gardenhire and played in the Metrodome 2004 Minnesota TwinsAmerican league Central ChampionsLeagueAmerican LeagueDivisionCentralBallparkHubert H Humphrey MetrodomeCityMinneapolisRecord92 70 568 Divisional place1stOwnersCarl PohladGeneral managersTerry RyanManagersRon GardenhireTelevisionKSTC TV KSTP TVFSN North Bert Blyleven Dick Bremer Radio830 WCCO AM Herb Carneal John Gordon Dan Gladden Jack Morris 2003 Seasons 2005 The Twins finished with a 92 70 record and won the American League Central They advanced to the ALDS but they lost the series to the New York Yankees in four games It was the second year in a row in which the Yankees eliminated the Twins in the ALDS 1 Twins pitcher Johan Santana won the 2004 Cy Young Award on a unanimous vote 2 Contents 1 Offseason 2 Spring training 3 Regular season 3 1 Offense 3 2 Pitching 3 3 Defense 3 4 Season standings 3 5 Record vs opponents 3 6 Notable Transactions 3 7 Roster 4 Postseason 5 Player stats 5 1 Batting 5 1 1 Starters by position 5 1 2 Other batters 5 2 Pitching 5 2 1 Starting pitchers 5 2 2 Other pitchers 5 2 3 Relief pitchers 6 Miscellaneous 7 Other post season awards 8 Farm system 9 References 10 External linksOffseason editNovember 14 2003 Traded catcher A J Pierzynski and cash to the San Francisco Giants Received pitchers Joe Nathan Francisco Liriano and Boof Bonser 3 November 20 2003 Selected pitcher Matt Guerrier off waivers from the Pittsburgh Pirates December 3 2003 Traded pitcher Eric Milton to the Philadelphia Phillies Received pitcher Carlos Silva IF Nick Punto and a player to be named later The Philadelphia Phillies sent Bobby Korecky minors December 17 to the Minnesota Twins to complete the trade December 18 2003 Signed Henry Blanco as a free agent January 8 2004 Signed Aaron Fultz as a free agent February 6 2004 Signed Jose Offerman as a free agent Spring training editThe Twins posted a 20 10 record in spring training the best of any major league team in 2004 4 This includes split squad games but not ties or exhibition games Regular season editOffense edit For a playoff team the offense was not strong This was partly due to injuries and starters absent from the lineup Lew Ford surprised many by batting 299 in his first full year in the major leagues Free agent acquisition Jose Offerman saw a majority of time in the designated hitter spot but hit only 256 with two home runs Shannon Stewart did hit 304 but injuries limited him to 378 at bats In 107 at bats Mauer was able to hit 307 In his absence catcher Henry Blanco hit only 206 First baseman Doug Mientkiewicz s hitting continued to decline as he hit 246 with five home runs before being dealt to the Boston Red Sox Nine players hit ten or more home runs When the Twins hit their record 225 homers in 1963 only eight players reached double figures Team Leaders Statistic Player QuantityHR Corey Koskie 25RBI Torii Hunter 81BA Lew Ford 299Runs Lew Ford 89Pitching edit Brad Radke was the opening day starter but he was soon overshadowed by Johan Santana s Cy Young year Radke Santana and Carlos Silva anchored the starting rotation Unfortunately Kyle Lohse had a bad year that saw his ERA balloon to 5 34 while the fifth spot in the rotation was nebulous 41 year old Terry Mulholland made 15 starts while Seth Greisinger made nine The Twins set their club record of 32 consecutive scoreless innings in June which included back to back to back shutouts by Radke Santana and Lohse In the bullpen Joe Nathan blew everyone away during his first year as a closer at any level earning 44 saves with a 1 62 ERA Juan Rincon and J C Romero continued playing as excellent set up men while the rest of the bullpen was weaker Romero set a Twins record by going 36 innings over 32 appearances without allowing a run to score Santana finished the year with 13 straight wins without a loss then went 1 0 with a no decision in the American League Division Series He set the Twins record with 265 strikeouts this season Team Leaders Statistic Player QuantityERA Johan Santana 2 61Wins Johan Santana 20Saves Joe Nathan 44Strikeouts Johan Santana 265Defense edit Blanco and Mauer when he played were solid catchers both with 991 fielding percentages Mientkiewicz was a one time Gold Glove winner but his successor Justin Morneau surprised people with his 995 fielding percentage Luis Rivas was dependable at second base while Cristian Guzman could turn exceptional plays at shortstop It was the routine ones that fooled him Corey Koskie was defensively average while the outfield quartet of Hunter Jacque Jones Shannon Stewart and Ford were solid especially Hunter who won a Gold Glove Season standings edit vteAL Central W L Pct GB Home RoadMinnesota Twins 92 70 0 568 49 32 43 38Chicago White Sox 83 79 0 512 9 46 35 37 44Cleveland Indians 80 82 0 494 12 44 37 36 45Detroit Tigers 72 90 0 444 20 38 43 34 47Kansas City Royals 58 104 0 358 34 33 47 25 57 Record vs opponents edit 2004 American League recordvteSources 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Team ANA BAL BOS CWS CLE DET KC MIN NYY OAK SEA TB TEX TOR NL Anaheim 6 3 4 5 5 4 4 5 7 2 7 0 5 4 5 4 10 9 13 7 6 1 9 10 4 5 7 11Baltimore 3 6 10 9 2 4 3 3 6 0 6 3 4 5 5 14 0 7 7 2 11 8 5 2 11 8 5 13Boston 5 4 9 10 4 2 3 4 6 1 4 2 2 4 11 8 8 1 5 4 14 5 4 5 14 5 9 9Chicago 4 5 4 2 2 4 10 9 8 11 13 6 9 10 3 4 2 7 7 2 4 2 6 3 3 4 8 10Cleveland 5 4 3 3 4 3 9 10 9 10 11 8 7 12 2 4 6 3 5 4 3 3 1 8 5 2 10 8Detroit 2 7 0 6 1 6 11 8 10 9 8 11 7 12 4 3 4 5 5 4 3 3 4 5 4 2 9 9Kansas City 0 7 3 6 2 4 6 13 8 11 11 8 7 12 1 5 2 7 2 5 3 6 4 5 3 3 6 12Minnesota 4 5 5 4 4 2 10 9 12 7 12 7 12 7 2 4 2 5 5 4 4 5 5 2 4 2 11 7New York 4 5 14 5 8 11 4 3 4 2 3 4 5 1 4 2 7 2 6 3 15 4 5 4 12 7 10 8Oakland 9 10 7 0 1 8 7 2 3 6 5 4 7 2 5 2 2 7 11 8 7 2 11 9 6 3 10 8Seattle 7 13 2 7 4 5 2 7 4 5 4 5 5 2 4 5 3 6 8 11 2 5 7 12 2 7 9 9Tampa Bay 1 6 8 11 5 14 2 4 3 3 3 3 6 3 5 4 4 15 2 7 5 2 2 7 9 9 15 3Texas 10 9 2 5 5 4 3 6 8 1 5 4 5 4 2 5 4 5 9 11 12 7 7 2 7 2 10 8Toronto 5 4 8 11 5 14 4 3 2 5 2 4 3 3 2 4 7 12 3 6 7 2 9 9 2 7 8 10 Notable Transactions edit April 9 The Toronto Blue Jays selected Mike Nakamura off waivers April 11 Signed Joe Beimel as a free agent April 13 Signed Terry Mulholland as a free agent July 31 2004 As part of a 4 team trade traded Doug Mientkiewicz 5 to the Boston Red Sox Received Justin Jones minors from the Chicago Cubs In addition the Boston Red Sox sent Nomar Garciaparra and Matt Murton to the Chicago Cubs the Montreal Expos sent Orlando Cabrera to the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago Cubs sent Brendan Harris Alex Gonzalez and Francis Beltran to the Montreal Expos November 23 2004 Signed Juan Castro as a free agent November 24 2004 Signed Mike Redmond as a free agent Roster edit 2004 Minnesota TwinsRosterPitchers 19 Grant Balfour 50 Joe Beimel 28 Jesse Crain 31 J D Durbin 38 Aaron Fultz 58 Seth Greisinger 54 Matt Guerrier 49 Kyle Lohse 46 45 Terry Mulholland 36 Joe Nathan 51 Carlos Pulido 22 Brad Radke 39 Juan Rincon 71 Joe Roa 33 J C Romero 57 Johan Santana 52 Carlos Silva 56 Brad Thomas Catchers 21 Henry Blanco 26 Pat Borders 44 Rob Bowen 24 Matthew LeCroy 7 Joe MauerInfielders 18 Jason Bartlett 5 Michael Cuddyer 15 Cristian Guzman 47 Corey Koskie 16 Doug Mientkiewicz 27 Justin Morneau 30 Jose Offerman 4 Augie Ojeda 17 Alex Prieto 8 Nick Punto 2 Luis Rivas 32 Terry Tiffee Outfielders 20 Lew Ford 48 Torii Hunter 11 Jacque Jones 1 Jason Kubel 41 Michael Restovich 12 Michael Ryan 23 Shannon Stewart Manager 35 Ron GardenhireCoaches 40 Rick Anderson pitching 62 Al Newman third base 9 Steve Liddle bench 43 Rick Stelmaszek bullpen 45 46 Scott Ullger hitting 13 Jerry White first base Postseason editThe Twins entered and exited the postseason nearly the same as the previous season losing to the Yankees 3 games to 1 in the Division Series The Twins won the first game by a score of 2 0 with starting pitcher Johan Santana getting the win However the Twins lost the next three games with the Yankees taking the series 3 games to 1 Game 1 of this series represented the last postseason victory for the Twins until 2023 Game 2 began a 18 game postseason losing streak for the team tied with the 1975 79 Chicago Blackhawks for the longest such losing streak in North American sports history 6 The Yankees would go on to be upset by the Boston Red Sox on their way to breaking the curse See 2004 American League Division Series Player stats editBatting edit Starters by position edit Note Pos Position G Games played AB At bats H Hits Avg Batting average HR Home runs RBI Runs batted in Pos Player G AB H Avg HR RBIC Henry Blanco 114 315 65 206 10 371B Doug Mientkiewicz 78 284 70 246 5 252B Luis Rivas 109 336 86 256 10 34SS Cristian Guzman 145 576 158 274 8 463B Corey Koskie 118 422 106 251 25 71LF Lew Ford 154 569 170 299 15 72CF Torii Hunter 138 520 141 271 23 81RF Jacque Jones 151 555 141 254 24 80DH Jose Offerman 77 172 44 256 2 22Other batters edit Note G Games played AB At bats H Hits Avg Batting average HR Home runs RBI Runs batted in Player G AB H Avg HR RBIShannon Stewart 92 378 115 304 11 47Michael Cuddyer 115 339 89 263 12 45Justin Morneau 74 280 76 271 19 58Matt LeCroy 88 264 71 269 9 39Joe Mauer 35 107 33 308 6 17Nick Punto 38 91 23 253 2 12Michael Ryan 36 71 17 239 0 7Jason Kubel 23 60 18 300 2 7Augie Ojeda 30 59 20 339 2 7Michael Restovich 29 47 12 255 2 6Terry Tiffee 17 44 12 273 2 8Pat Borders 19 42 12 286 0 5Alex Prieto 16 32 8 250 1 4Rob Bowen 17 27 3 111 1 2Jason Bartlett 8 12 1 083 0 1Pitching edit Starting pitchers edit Note G Games IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses ERA Earned run average SO Strikeouts Player G IP W L ERA SOJohan Santana 34 228 0 20 6 2 61 265Brad Radke 34 219 2 11 8 3 48 143Carlos Silva 33 203 0 14 8 4 21 76Kyle Lohse 35 194 0 9 13 5 34 111Other pitchers edit Note G Games pitched IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses ERA Earned run average SO Strikeouts Player G IP W L ERA SOTerry Mulholland 39 123 1 5 9 5 18 60Seth Greisinger 12 51 0 2 5 6 18 36Matt Guerrier 9 19 0 0 1 5 68 11J D Durbin 4 7 1 0 1 7 36 6Relief pitchers edit Note G Games W Wins L Losses SV Saves ERA Earned run average SO Strikeouts Player G W L SV ERA SOJoe Nathan 73 1 2 44 1 62 89Juan Rincon 77 11 6 2 2 63 106J C Romero 74 7 4 1 3 51 69Aaron Fultz 55 3 3 1 5 04 37Joe Roa 48 2 3 0 4 50 47Grant Balfour 36 4 1 0 4 35 42Jesse Crain 22 3 0 0 2 00 14Carlos Pulido 6 0 0 0 8 74 9Brad Thomas 3 0 0 0 16 88 0Joe Beimel 3 0 0 0 43 20 2Miscellaneous edit nbsp 2004 AL Cy Young Award winner Johan Santana Johan Santana won the Cy Young Award becoming the third player in Minnesota Twins history to do so The first two were Jim Perry in 1970 and Frank Viola in 1988 The lone representative of the Twins in the All Star Game was closer Joe Nathan On July 25 Paul Molitor was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame He is the second St Paul native to enter following Dave Winfield and from 1996 on has played with coached for and managed the Twins The highest paid Twin in 2004 was Brad Radke at 10 750 000 followed by Torii Hunter at 6 500 000 Earl Battey was inducted into the Twins Hall of Fame Other post season awards editCalvin R Griffith Award Most Valuable Twin Johan Santana Joseph W Haynes Award Twins Pitcher of the Year Johan Santana Bill Boni Award Twins Outstanding Rookie Joe Mauer Charles O Johnson Award Most Improved Twin Juan Rincon Dick Siebert Award Upper Midwest Player of the Year Keith Foulke The above awards are voted on by the Twin Cities chapter of the BBWAA Carl R Pohlad Award Outstanding Community Service Torii Hunter Sherry Robertson Award Twins Outstanding Farm System Position Player Jason Kubel Jim Rantz Award Twins Outstanding Farm System Pitcher Scott BakerFarm system editSee also Minor League Baseball Level Team League ManagerAAA Rochester Red Wings International League Phil RoofAA New Britain Rock Cats Eastern League Stan CliburnA Fort Myers Miracle Florida State League Jose MarzanA Quad Cities River Bandits Midwest League Kevin BolesRookie Elizabethton Twins Appalachian League Ray SmithRookie GCL Twins Gulf Coast League Riccardo Ingram 7 8 References edit 2004 Minnesota Twins Statistics Baseball Reference Retrieved March 20 2021 Twins Johan Santana wins AL Cy Young Award Minnesota Public Radio November 11 2004 Retrieved March 20 2021 A J Pierzynski Statistics Baseball Reference com MLB Spring Training Standings 2004 ESPN Retrieved July 23 2017 Doug Mientkiewicz Stats Twins tie record for longest playoff losing streak in North American sports after ALDS sweep by Yankees CBSSports com Retrieved October 8 2019 Johnson Lloyd and Wolff Miles ed The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball 3rd edition Durham North Carolina Baseball America 2007 Baseball America 2005 Annual DirectoryExternal links editPlayer stats from www baseball reference com Team info from www baseball almanac com Twins history since 2000 from www mlb com Archived October 18 2006 at the Wayback Machine 2004 Standings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2004 Minnesota Twins season amp oldid 1194463642, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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