Carl Pavano Autograph
Carl Pavano Bio
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Carl Anthony Pavano was born on January 8, 1976 in New Britain, Connecticut.
The Boston Red Sox selected him in round 13 of the 1994 MLB Draft. He was traded to the Montreal Expos in the 1997 blockbuster deal that sent Pedro Martinez to the Red Sox. Pavano made his Major League debut for the Expos in 1998. He went 24-35 with a 4.83 ERA over parts of five seasons in Montreal. They traded him to the Florida Marlins at the 2002 deadline.
Pavano was 33-23 with a 3.64 ERA during parts of three seasons in Florida, and helped them win the World Series in 2003. Pavano was 2-0 with a 1.40 ERA in the 2003 postseason. He started the infamous "Steve Bartman game" during the 2003 NLCS, and tossed eight innings of one run ball in game four of the World Series that fall. The New York Yankees signed him to a four year, $40 million deal following the 2004 season.
His tenure with the Yankees was infamously disappointing. Pavano made just 26 starts over the length of his contract, suffering a string of bizarre and mysterious injuries. This included broken ribs from a car accident in August 2006 while on a minor league rehab assignment. Pavano didn't tell the Yankees about the car accident for another two weeks. Yankees ace Mike Mussina openly questioned if Pavano even wanted to play for the Yankees at one point.
The Cleveland Indians signed him to an incentive laden one year deal in 2009. They traded him to the Minnesota Twins in a post-deadline waiver deal on August 7, 2009.
Pavano went 5-4 with a 4.64 ERA in 12 starts down the stretch for Minnesota that year. He started the Twins regular season finale against the Kansas City Royals on three days rest, earning the win and helping force a "Game 163" tiebreaker against the Detroit Tigers. Pavano pitched six shutout innings against the Yankees in game three of the 2009 ALDS, but allowed two solo home runs after manager Ron Gardenhire sent him out there for the seventh. Minnesota lost the game 3-1.
He returned to the Twins on a one year, $7 million deal. Pavano went 17-11 with a 3.75 ERA. His seven complete games and two shutouts led the American League. He got to start the first regular season game in Target Field history on April 7, 2010 against the Boston Red Sox. Pavano was the winning pitcher, allowing one run over six innings.
Several teams were interested in signing Pavano during the off-season, but he came back to Minnesota on a two year, $17 million deal. Pavano went 9-13 with a 4.30 ERA in 2011. His complete game shutout against Kansas City in the regular season finale helped the Twins avoid a 100 loss season. An injury plagued 2011 campaign limited him to just 11 starts.
He was a pre and post game analyst for Miami Marlins broadcasts from 2014 through 2017. As of 2023, he was living in Fairfield, Connecticut with his family.
Notable Events & Trivia
- 2003 World Series champion
- 2004 All-Star
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2010 Joseph W. Haynes Award
- Twins most outstanding pitcher
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2011 Carl R. Pohlad Award
- Outstanding community service by a Twins player or coach
- 2010 AL complete games leader
- 2010 AL shutouts leader
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First pitch thrown, hit allowed, strikeout and win in Target Field history
- April 7, 2010 against Boston Red Sox
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The Twins Almanac (4/12): WCCO helicopter rescues Twins starters stranded in Burnsville
Read today's Twins Almanac, featuring the starting pitcher taking a helicopter ride to the home opener, the 2,000th hit for a Twins legend, the first home opener in Target Field history, and the birthdate of a St. Paul major leaguer.
Two Reasons Why Sonny Gray Could Accept the Qualifying Offer
The Twins would love it if their reigning MVP would return to run it back on a one-year deal. Most assume he won't. But, are we totally positive?
0-18. Who Got Us Here? Part 2: 2009-2017
Things are really starting to change around here, but one thing stays consistent: playoff futility.
Lockout Lookup: Carl Pavano
This week, Twins Daily checks in on a veteran starting pitcher with an injury history who actually worked out for the Minnesota Twins.
Meltdown Sold Out!
The Twins Daily Winter Meltdown has officially sold out. I hope you got yours. If you have not, and still want to get in the door, we are looking for a few volunteers to help check people in and such. You can find details on how to sign up for that here.
Former Minnesota Twins catcher and current Fox Sports North Analyst Tim Laudner has been added to the lineup for the Twins Daily Winter Meltdown this Saturday from 5-8 at The Pourhouse, just two blocks from Target Field and Twins Fest. Laudner will join pitcher Carl Pavano and KFAN's Paul "Meatsauce" Lamber on stage for Q&A and meet attendees. You can still get tickets at a special price right here, but even the additional tickets are running out, so don't delay.
Laudner is best known to Twins fans as being the starting catcher of the 1987 World Champion Twins. In that seven-game Championship series versus the Cardinals, he started every game, hitting .318 (with a .444 OBP). He played nine seasons with the Twins, and has since worked as a project manager, run a Big League Baseball Camp and works as an analyst at Fox Sport North and Fox Sports Wisconsin.
Not only is the Meltdown going to be a great opportunity to get excited about the 2016 Twins season, and not only will you get a chance to meet Laudner, Pavano and Meatsauce, but there are fantastic door prizes and each ticket is good for two craft beers from get those tickets!
Gleeman & The Geek, Ep 232: Meltdown Preview (& Melting Down)
Aaron and John preview the Twins Daily Winter Meltdown, featuring Carl Pavano, Meatsauce and 612 Brew at The Pourhouse, and then proceed to meltdown at each other about the Twins starting rotation, and answer Family Feud questions. You can listen by downloading us from iTunes, Stitcher or find it at GleemanAndTheGeek.com. Or just click the Play button below.
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