Mike Redmond says the current Twins team, which could be headed for the playoffs if the Tigers beat the White Sox today, reminds him of the 2003 Marlins. Florida beat the Yankees in the World Series that year.
"It definitely has the flair for the dramatic," said Redmond, who is now in his fourth year as a backup catcher for the Twins after seven serving a similar role with Florida.
"That team in Miami, we were lights out in the second half of the season. Obviously, this team is way younger than that team. It's amazing. We play great at home."
The Marlins won the championship that year despite a very young rotation, a trait the 2008 Twins share. "We have a lot of young pitchers, good young arms like we did there. We had Josh Beckett, A.J. Burnett, Brad Penny, Carl Pavano, Dontrelle Willis," he said. "We had young pitchers that were just at the start of their career like these guys are."
Burnett, 26 years old in 2003, missed most of the season because of elbow ligament replacement surgery, and Willis, a 21-year-old rookie, pitched out of the bullpen much of the postseason. But Beckett was named World Series MVP at age 23.
The Marlins had speedy position players, too, similar to the Twins' Alexi Casilla, Carlos Gomez and Denard Span. Redmond cited Juan Pierre, who stole 65 bases that season for Florida, and Luis Castillo, who stole 21 bases that year and was traded to the Twins three years later.
Another member of that Marlins team was Miguel Cabrera, a 20-year-old rookie that year now a member of the Detroit team that will try to beat the White Sox today. Cabrera hit 12 home runs in 87 regular-season games that year and another four in the postseason.
"We hit some home runs, too, whereas this team here doesn't hit as many home runs," Redmond said. "We rely a little bit more on our bunts, hit-and-runs, getting guys over and getting runs one at a time. It's a little bit different that way."