B/T: L-L
BORN: November 7, 1938, Zeeland, MI
CAREER: Kaat went 283-237 (.544) with a 3.45 ERA (4530.1 IP, 1738 ER), 180 complete games, 31 shutouts, 17 saves, 1083 walks, 2461 strikeouts, a 1.26 WHIP and a .264 opponent batting average in 898 career games (625 starts) for Washington/Minnesota (1959-73), Chicago-AL (1973-75), Philadelphia (1976-79), New York-AL (1979-80) and St. Louis (1980-83). Kaat made his major league debut for the Washington Senators in 1959 and was a crucial part of the franchise¡¯s starting rotation when it relocated to the Twin Cities in 1961. He won 10 or more games for the Twins in every season except for 1961, when he won nine, and is the club¡¯s all-time leader in wins (189), games started (422) and innings pitched (2959.1), while ranking second in complete games (133), shutouts (23) and strikeouts (1824).
He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2022 after being voted in via the Golden Days Era Committee alongside former teammate Tony Oliva. Kaat pitched in four decades and is one of five pitchers in AL/NL history to pitch for 25 seasons, including 15 with the Senators/Twins. He won the first 12 of his 16 consecutive Gold Glove Awards with the Twins and started three games in the 1965 World Series. He was selected as the left-handed pitcher on the Twins 25th Anniversary Team in 1986 and 40th Anniversary All-Time Team in 2000, was inducted into the Twins Hall of Fame in 2001 and named one of the 50 Greatest Twins in 2010. Kaat¡¯s number was formally retired on July 16, 2022.
HOW OBTAINED: Signed as a minor league free agent by the Senators on June 17, 1957.