From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1993 Minnesota Twins underperformed
in their last year in the old American
League West Division, finishing with a 71-91 record, leaving
the team tied for fifth place with the California Angels. There
were bright spots for Manager Tom Kelly. This included Kirby Puckett
winning the All-Star MVP award on July 13, after
hitting a home run and an RBI double. Another bright spot was St.
Paul native Dave
Winfield getting his 3,000th hit in his first year back with
his hometown team. The hit came off of Dennis Eckersley on September 16.
Offseason
Regular
season
- The highest paid Twin in 1993 was Puckett at $5,300,000,
followed by Hrbek at $3,100,000.
Offense
Not only did Winfield get his 3,000th hit, but he also got his
500th double and 450th homer. He had a serviceable year as the
team's primary designated hitter, hitting .271 with
21 home runs and 76 RBI. Other offensive highlights included Kent Hrbek becoming the
second Twin (along with Harmon Killebrew) to reach 1,000 RBI
and Brian Harper becoming only the fourth catcher in the prior 40
years to hit .300 in three consecutive seasons. Chuck Knoblauch
continued his solid leadoff hitting, batting .277 and stealing a
team-leading 29 bases. The weaker spots in the regular lineup
included Pedro Muñoz (.233 average).
Pitching
The starting rotation was reasonably competent, with Kevin Tapani, Willie Banks, and Jim Deshaies having
ERAs in the low fours. Unfortunately, Scott Erickson was not able to follow up
his very successful first three years in the majors, posting an ERA
of 5.19 and leading the majors in losses (19). The fifth spot in
the rotation was uncertain, with Eddie Guardado making 16 starts and Mike Trombley
10.
There were strong pitchers in the bullpen, starting with closer
Rick Aguilera.
He had 34 saves, and was American League Pitcher of the Month for
June. Also having strong years were Larry Casian with an ERA of 3.02, Mike Hartley (4.00),
and Carl Willis
(3.10). This was not so much the case for pitchers such as George Tsamis
(6.19) and Brett Merriman (9.67).
Defense
The team was strong defensively. Harper was a strong catcher,
with a .988 fielding percentage. Hrbek was always strong at first
base as well, making only five errors in 1993. Knoblauch was a good
second baseman at this point in his career. Mike Pagliarulo
played in about half the team's games at third, with reasonable
competence. (Jeff
Reboulet and Terry Jorgenson also saw time at the position.)
The team intended Scott
Leius to be the starting shortstop, but an early injury
prevented this from occurring. It paved the way for Pat Meares to man the
position for several years. He surprised the team by playing
reasonably well during his rookie year. Puckett always excelled in
center field, while Shane
Mack and Munoz did okay on either side of him.
Season
standings
Notable
transactions
Roster
1993 Minnesota Twins |
Roster |
Pitchers
|
|
Catchers
Infielders
|
|
Outfielders
|
|
Manager
Coaches
|
Player
stats
Batting
Starters by
position
Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H =
Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted
In
Other
batters
Pitching
Starting
pitchers
Other
pitchers
Relief
pitchers
Farm
system
[11]
References
External
links
Minnesota Twins |
|
Formerly the
Washington Nationals and the Washington
Senators ·
Based in Minneapolis, Minnesota
(Twin
Cities) |
|
The Franchise |
|
|
Ballparks |
|
|
Culture |
|
|
Important Figures |
|
|
Retired Numbers |
|
|
Championships |
|
|
Pennants |
|
|
Other titles |
|
|
Seasons (110) |
|
1900s |
|
|
1910s |
|
|
1920s |
|
|
1930s |
|
|
1940s |
|
|
1950s |
|
|
1960s |
|
|
1970s |
|
|
1980s |
|
|
1990s |
|
|
2000s |
|
|
2010s |
|
|
|