Pitcher, Minnesota Twins
Age: 25
5th season
with Twins
Bats – Left,
Throws – Left
Height: 6’0” Weight: 210
Prior to 2004:
A native of
Venezuela, where his engineer father was also a semipro baseball player,
Santana sought to emulate his father by playing shortstop in his youth,
learning to throw right-handed so he could properly field the position. Playing
for his local team, the Chiquilines, as a teenager, he was utilized in center
field, where he lacked speed and was not a proficient hitter. Signed by the
Houston Astros as a 17-year-old in 1995, he was converted into a pitcher and
performed well in the Dominican Summer League in 1996. Promoted to the Rookie-level
Gulf Coast League in 1997, he struggled while appearing in nine games and
posted an 0-4 record with a 7.93 ERA. He finished the year with Auburn of the
Class A New York-Pennsylvania League where he stayed in 1998 and in 15 starts
went 7-5 with a 4.36 ERA and 88 strikeouts in 86.2 innings pitched. Santana,
whose fastball, curve, and changeup were improving along with his arm strength,
finished up the year by appearing in two games with Quad Cities in the Class A
Midwest League in ’98. In 1999 he remained in the Midwest League and pitched
for the Michigan Battle Cats where he went 8-8 with a 4.66 ERA and 150
strikeouts in 160 innings. Exposed by the Astros in the 1999 Rule 5 draft, Santana
was obtained by the Twins, who were compelled to keep him on the major league
roster. Used out of the bullpen with Minnesota in 2000, he appeared in 30 games
(five of them starts) and produced a 2-3 mark with a 6.49 ERA. He reduced his
ERA to 4.74 in 2001 and spent two months in 2002 with Edmonton of the Class AAA
Pacific Coast League where he worked on his changeup before returning to the
Twins and going 8-6 in 27 appearances (14 starts) with a 2.99 ERA and 137
strikeouts in 108.1 innings while also leading the league with 15 wild pitches.
Valued for his ability out of the bullpen, Santana was moved into the starting
rotation in July of 2003 and went on to finish with a 12-3 record and 3.07 ERA
with 169 strikeouts while compiling 158.1 innings. The Twins topped the AL Central
Division but lost to the Yankees in the ALDS while a sore hamstring hindered
Santana’s performance. Heading into 2004, he was the team’s breakout pitching
star.
2004 Season Summary
Appeared in 34
games
[Bracketed
numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]
Pitching
Games – 34
Games Started –
34 [3, tied with four others]
Complete Games
– 1 [20, tied with 27 others]
Wins – 20 [2]
Losses – 6
PCT - .769 [2]
Saves – 0
Shutouts – 1 [4,
tied with 26 others]
Innings Pitched
– 228 [2]
Hits – 156
Runs – 70
Earned Runs – 66
Home Runs – 24
Bases on Balls
– 54
Strikeouts – 265
[1]
ERA – 2.61 [1]
Hit Batters – 9
[17, tied with Barry Zito, Kenny Rogers & Josh Towers]
Balks – 0
Wild Pitches – 7
[17, tied with seven others]
League-leading
strikeouts were +38 ahead of runner-up Pedro Martinez
League-leading
ERA was -0.65 lower than runner-up Curt Schilling
Midseason
Snapshot: 7-6, ERA - 3.78, SO – 136 in 123.2 IP
Most
strikeouts, game – 14 (in 8 IP) vs. Baltimore 9/19
10+ strikeout
games – 12
Fewest hits
allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 1 (in 8 IP) at KC Royals 7/17, (in 7 IP) vs. KC
Royals 9/3
Batting
PA – 8, AB – 8,
R – 0, H – 3, 2B – 0, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 2, BB – 0, SO – 1, SB – 0, CS – 0,
AVG - .375, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0
Fielding
Chances – 37
Put Outs – 9
Assists – 24
Errors – 4
DP – 2
Pct. - .892
Postseason Pitching: G – 2 (ALDS vs. NY Yankees)
GS – 2, CG – 0,
Record – 1-0, PCT – 1.000, SV – 0, ShO – 0, IP – 12, H – 14, R – 1, ER – 1, HR
– 0, BB – 4, SO – 12, ERA – 0.75, HB – 1, BLK – 0, WP – 0
Awards & Honors:
AL Cy Young
Award: BBWAA
AL Pitcher of
the Year: Sporting News
6th in
AL MVP voting (117 points, 30% share)
AL Cy Young
voting:
Johan Santana,
Min.: 140 pts. – 28 of 28 first place votes, 100% share
Curt Schilling,
Bos.: 82 pts. – 59% share
Mariano Rivera,
NYY: 27 pts. – 19% share
Pedro Martinez,
Bos.: 1 pt. – 1% share
Joe Nathan, Min.:
1 pt. – 1% share
Francisco
Rodriguez, Ana.: 1 pt. – 1% share
Twins went
92-70 to finish first in the AL Central Division by 9 games over the Chicago
White Sox. The pitching staff led the league in ERA (4.03). At or near first
place through the All-Star break, the Twins swept a late-July series against
the White Sox to secure their hold on the top spot for the rest of the season
despite a mediocre offense but benefiting from the pitching staff led by
Santana to win their third straight AL Central title. Lost ALDS to the New York
Yankees, 3 games to 1, with the only win coming in Santana’s Game 1 start.
Aftermath of ‘04:
Santana
followed up with another strong season in 2005, going 16-7 with a 2.87 ERA and
again leading the circuit with 238 strikeouts while the Twins dropped to third
place in the division. The star lefthander placed third in American League Cy
Young voting. He won the award again in 2006 as he led the league in wins with
his 19-6 record, ERA (2.77), and strikeouts (245). In 2007, Santana produced a
15-13 mark with a 3.33 ERA and 235 strikeouts that included a team-record 17 in
a game against Texas. Facing difficult decisions on payroll, the Twins traded
Santana to the New York Mets for four young players in 2008. The Mets signed
him to a seven-year, $137.5 million contract extension. He performed well in
’08 with a 16-7 tally (including 8-0 in the season’s second half) and NL-best
2.53 ERA and 234.1 innings pitched while also striking out 206 batters. Limited
to 25 starts due to injury in 2009, Santana was still an All-Star on his way to
producing a 13-9 record with a 3.13 ERA and 146 strikeouts while pitching 166.2
innings. A shoulder injury that required surgery knocked him out of action in
September of 2010 and he finished at 11-9 with a still-respectable 2.98 ERA,
although his strikeouts dropped to 144 in 199 innings pitched. Santana missed
all of 2011 due to recovery from his surgery, much to the consternation of Mets
fans. Returning to action in 2012, he produced a 6-9 record that included the
first no-hitter in franchise history. In an uneven year that included two stints
on the disabled list due to an ankle and back injuries, his ERA was 4.85 and he
recorded 111 strikeouts while pitching 117 innings. Further shoulder surgery
cost Santana the entire 2013 season and the Mets bought out the remainder of
his contract, rendering him a free agent. He had abortive minor league trials
with the Orioles and Blue Jays but never made it back to the major leagues. For
his major league career, Santana compiled a 139-78 record with a 3.20 ERA, 15
complete games, 10 shutouts, and 1988 strikeouts in 2025.2 innings. With the
Twins he was 93-44 with a 3.22 ERA, 6 complete games, 4 shutouts, and 1381
strikeouts in 1308.2 innings. Pitching in 11 postseason games, he had a 1-3
record with a 3.97 ERA and 32 strikeouts in 34 innings. In addition to
receiving two Cy Young Awards, Santana was a four-time All-Star and received a
Gold Glove in 2007. He was inducted into the Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame in
2018.
---
Cy Young Profiles feature pitchers who were recipients of
the Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1956 to
present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its
inception through 1966 and from 1967 on to one recipient from each major league.
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