Ten players batted for Rochester during the Red Wings' 12-7 loss to Buffalo on Opening Day last April. Two of them will suit up Saturday night for the Red Wings.
Five different pitchers took the mound that day for Rochester. Only the starter, P.J. Walters, is in uniform today, and that's after a six-week midseason detour with the Twins.
"It's been a pretty fluid situation there all year," said Brad Steil, Twins director of minor league operations. "They've done a good job with a lot of interchangeable parts."
Counting rehab appearances by Trevor Plouffe and Josh Willingham, the Red Wings have used 60 different players this season, the most they've ever suited up at Class AAA since they became affiliated with Rochester in 2003.
But if the revolving door is affecting the Wings, they're not showing it. With 10 games to play, Rochester is clinging to its first International League playoff berth since 2006, entering the weekend with a two-game lead over Norfolk for the wild-card spot, just a half-game behind Pawtucket for the North Division title. Rochester plays eight of its final 10 games at home, where the Red Wings are 38-25.
"It's a tight race. Buffalo is still in it, Pawtucket's been playing really well," Steil said. "It's going to be a fun last few days."
Steil admits he hadn't expected that, not after the Wings opened the season as cold as the upstate New York weather. Rochester lost 11 of its first 13 games, and over the last six games of that streak, got outscored 37-5. The Red Wings had eight pitchers on the disabled list, their third baseman (Deibinson Romero) was stuck in the Dominican Republic as a visa problem was ironed out, and their No. 3 hitter, Oswaldo Arcia, was whisked away to the major leagues after playing only nine Class AAA games.
For a team that hadn't had a winning season since 2008 and endured back-to-back 90-loss seasons in 2010 and 2011, the dreadful start could easily have ruined their season.