It was November 2007 when Torii Hunter left the Twins to sign a free-agent contract with the Angels.
The Twins had a few good years after Hunter left, but it hasn't been the same as when he was manning center field, when they won four division titles over a five-year stretch.
The Twins have lost a number of key players, but, in the opinion of manager Ron Gardenhire, none of the departures hurt their ability to win more than the loss of Hunter.
"He's killing me. I'm not exactly happy when he does it against us, but I'm proud," Gardenhire said Sunday, after Hunter hit his 300th career home run against his old team and drove in three runs in Detroit's 5-2 victory at Target Field. "He started in this organization and has had a heck of a career. … You know he still plays the game with all the enthusiasm that he played with when he was here. I tip my hat to him. He's one of the classiest guys in the game."
In the seven seasons since his departure, Hunter has hit .291 with eight home runs and 27 RBI against his old team, including his big day Sunday.
Hunter repeated what he has said in the past — that he never wanted to leave here.
"Me and Bill Smith didn't come to an agreement, we didn't agree to some things, and that's the business side of baseball," Hunter said. "I hate that it went that route, but I'm still playing the game that I love and loved to play when I was a child."
To give one an indication why the Twins have not dominated the division like they did when Hunter was on the team, Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau are the only players left on the Twins roster from when Hunter played at the Metrodome.