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  • Juan Rincón

    Birth Date: 01/23/1979

    Juan Rincón Autograph

    Juan Rincón's Autograph

    Juan Rincón Bio

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    This bullpen featured many names familiar to Twins fans. Matt Guerrier and Jesse Crain had solid seasons. Dennys Reyes posted a 0.89 ERA while dominating his lefty specialist role. Pat Neshek made his Major League debut in July and quickly became a high-leverage staple during the second-half stretch run. But the guy in the eighth inning ahead of Nathan was veteran righty Juan Rincón.

    Forty-six of his 75 appearances in 2006 came in the eighth inning. Another four featured him pitching into the eighth after entering in the seventh. Rincón led the Twins with 25 holds that season. The Twins' only pitchers with a higher WPA in 2006 were Nathan, Cy Young winner Johan Santana, and breakout rookie Francisco Liriano.

    2006 capped off a dominant three-year run for Rincón. His 2.66 ERA from 2004-06 was the eighth lowest among major league relievers who appeared in at least 200 games.

    Rincón built his dominance around reverse splits, holding left-handed hitters to a .196 average and .528 OPS during that great three-year stretch. He was also a workhorse, pitching over 80 innings twice and posting a 2.22 ERA on zero days rest over his eight seasons in Minnesota.

    He owned a 5.19 postseason ERA in eight appearances with the Twins, but most of that is ballooned by one horrible appearance in game four of the 2004 ALDS. Rincón allowed just one earned run across the other seven appearances, covering 8.1 innings. His most notable playoff performance came in game two of the 2004 ALDS when he retired all six batters he faced in a tie game. This included strikeouts of Hideki Matsui, Jorge Posada, Ruben Sierra, and Miguel Cairo.

    Things began to fall apart for Rincón after 2006. He recorded a 5.13 ERA across 63 appearances during the 2007 season, as the Twins finished below .500 for the first time since 2000. His performance didn’t improve in 2008, and Minnesota designated Rincón for assignment in June. His struggles would continue over the next few seasons during stints with Cleveland, Detroit, and Colorado.

    Part of his career decline was tied to opponents' sudden spike in home runs. He once went 77 straight appearances without allowing a home run. LaTroy Hawkins is the only pitcher in Twins history with a longer streak, not allowing a home run in 79 consecutive outings between the 2000 and 2001 seasons. Through 2006, Rincón had allowed just 0.5 home runs per nine innings. But that number jumped to 1.2 per nine innings from 2007 onward.

    Current Twins manager Rocco Baldelli can say he hit Rincón at his peak, though, as his only career grand slam came against the Venezuelan righty in 2004. 

    Rincón began to find success in closing games in independent ball. He posted a 2.86 ERA with 56 saves in the Atlantic League from 2011-13, pitching for the Bridgeport Bluefish and York Revolution. The Angels signed him to a minor league deal in the second half of 2012, but he was never called up to the bigs after making 17 appearances in Triple-A.

    After retiring, Rincón coached for one season in the Toronto Blue Jays minor league system. According to his LinkedIn page, he is an Athlete Relations Consultant for a private jet company.

    Despite having a solid big-league career, Rincón is perhaps most remembered for being one of the first players suspended for using performance-enhancing drugs. His May 2005 suspension made him the fifth player suspended for steroid use by Major League Baseball. Under today’s policy, that’s an 80-game ban. It was just ten games back then, and Rincon was back in his set-up man role later that month. You wouldn’t even know he missed time by looking at the back of his baseball card, as Rincón still appeared in 75 games during the 2005 season.

    Juan Rincón Statistics

    Standard Pitching
    Year Age Tm Lg W L W-L% ERA G GS GF CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BK WP BF ERA+ FIP WHIP H9 HR9 BB9 SO9 SO/W Awards
    2001 22 MIN AL 0 0   6.35 4 0 1 0 0 0 5.2 7 5 4 1 5 0 4 0 0 0 28 75 6.58 2.118 11.1 1.6 7.9 6.4 0.80  
    2002 23 MIN AL 0 2 .000 6.28 10 3 0 0 0 0 28.2 44 23 20 5 9 0 21 0 0 2 135 72 4.71 1.849 13.8 1.6 2.8 6.6 2.33  
    2003 24 MIN AL 5 6 .455 3.68 58 0 20 0 0 0 85.2 74 38 35 5 38 7 63 4 0 7 370 124 3.79 1.307 7.8 0.5 4.0 6.6 1.66  
    2004 25 MIN AL 11 6 .647 2.63 77 0 18 0 0 2 82.0 52 27 24 5 32 1 106 2 0 2 327 180 2.50 1.024 5.7 0.5 3.5 11.6 3.31  
    2005 26 MIN AL 6 6 .500 2.45 75 0 18 0 0 0 77.0 63 26 21 2 30 3 84 3 1 5 319 182 2.46 1.208 7.4 0.2 3.5 9.8 2.80  
    2006 27 MIN AL 3 1 .750 2.91 75 0 22 0 0 1 74.1 76 30 24 2 24 3 65 3 0 2 315 155 2.84 1.345 9.2 0.2 2.9 7.9 2.71  
    2007 28 MIN AL 3 3 .500 5.13 63 0 16 0 0 0 59.2 65 38 34 9 28 3 49 3 0 4 272 84 5.12 1.559 9.8 1.4 4.2 7.4 1.75  
    2008 29 TOT AL 3 3 .500 5.86 47 0 15 0 0 0 55.1 67 39 36 8 24 2 39 3 0 5 254 73 5.07 1.645 10.9 1.3 3.9 6.3 1.63  
    2008 29 MIN AL 2 2 .500 6.11 24 0 6 0 0 0 28.0 33 21 19 5 16 2 20 2 0 3 133 69 5.95 1.750 10.6 1.6 5.1 6.4 1.25  
    2008 29 CLE AL 1 1 .500 5.60 23 0 9 0 0 0 27.1 34 18 17 3 8 0 19 1 0 2 121 76 4.16 1.537 11.2 1.0 2.6 6.3 2.38  
    2009 30 TOT MLB 4 2 .667 6.87 33 0 7 0 0 0 36.2 30 29 28 4 26 4 35 1 0 2 165 69 4.82 1.527 7.4 1.0 6.4 8.6 1.35  
    2009 30 DET AL 1 0 1.000 5.23 7 0 6 0 0 0 10.1 12 6 6 2 6 0 10 0 0 1 49 89 5.42 1.742 10.5 1.7 5.2 8.7 1.67  
    2009 30 COL NL 3 2 .600 7.52 26 0 1 0 0 0 26.1 18 23 22 2 20 4 25 1 0 1 116 63 4.58 1.443 6.2 0.7 6.8 8.5 1.25  
    2010 31 COL NL 0 0   4.50 2 0 1 0 0 0 2.0 3 1 1 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 11 120 3.08 2.500 13.5 0.0 9.0 13.5 1.50  
    10 Yrs 35 29 .547 4.03 444 3 118 0 0 3 507.0 481 256 227 41 218 23 469 19 1 29 2196 112 3.69 1.379 8.5 0.7 3.9 8.3 2.15  
    162 Game Avg. 5 4 .547 4.03 68 0 18 0 0 0 77 73 39 35 6 33 3 71 3 0 4 334 112 3.69 1.379 8.5 0.7 3.9 8.3 2.15  
                                                                   
    MIN (8 yrs) 30 26 .536 3.69 386 3 101 0 0 3 441.0 414 208 181 34 182 19 412 17 1 25 1899 122 3.57 1.351 8.4 0.7 3.7 8.4 2.26  
    COL (2 yrs) 3 2 .600 7.31 28 0 2 0 0 0 28.1 21 24 23 2 22 4 28 1 0 1 127 66 4.47 1.518 6.7 0.6 7.0 8.9 1.27  
    CLE (1 yr) 1 1 .500 5.60 23 0 9 0 0 0 27.1 34 18 17 3 8 0 19 1 0 2 121 76 4.16 1.537 11.2 1.0 2.6 6.3 2.38  
    DET (1 yr) 1 0 1.000 5.23 7 0 6 0 0 0 10.1 12 6 6 2 6 0 10 0 0 1 49 89 5.42 1.742 10.5 1.7 5.2 8.7 1.67  
                                                                   
    AL (9 yrs) 32 27 .542 3.84 416 3 116 0 0 3 478.2 460 232 204 39 196 19 441 18 1 28 2069 117 3.64 1.370 8.6 0.7 3.7 8.3 2.25  
    NL (2 yrs) 3 2 .600 7.31 28 0 2 0 0 0 28.1 21 24 23 2 22 4 28 1 0 1 127 66 4.47 1.518 6.7 0.6 7.0 8.9 1.27  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 6/17/2024.

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    Juan Rincón Set Up Many of the Twins' Best Bullpens

    The 2006 Minnesota Twins had an exceptional bullpen. Led by superstar closer Joe Nathan, the entire unit posted a 2.91 ERA that season. This was the best bullpen ERA in baseball for the 2006 season, and it’s currently the ninth-best by any American League bullpen this century. A critical component of that bullpen was Juan Rincón.

    Looking Back at Minnesota's One Hit Wonders

    Few players can live out their big-league dream, and even fewer get the chance to collect their first hit. Here are the stories of some of Minnesota’s players with one hit in their career.

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