The "transactions" section on Twins reliever Joe Smith's Baseball Reference page takes longer to read than it does to watch a typical Smith outing.
But that's to be expected, one supposes, since there a nearly 16-year gap between the first entry (drafted in 2006) and the last one (signed in late March this year by the Twins).
He agreed to a one-year, $2.5 million deal a few days after the Twins seemingly traded half their roster and right around the time they stunned the world by signing Carlos Correa.
The Twins are Smith's eighth MLB team. If his signing seemed like it flew under the radar, his relief appearances take on a similar shape: seeming footnotes best appreciated in retrospect.
He might be their most valuable new addition, at least so far — which I talked about on Tuesday's Daily Delivery podcast.
In his first 16 outings this season, the side-arming, right-handed, 38-year-old Smith did not allow an earn run. That streak was finally broken Monday when he gave up the tying run to Detroit in the seventh inning, though the Twins still won 5-4.
He's only been called upon to get more than three outs once — that was Saturday against the Royals, when he threw a season-high 21 pitches in recording four outs (without, of course, a run allowed).
Before Monday, Smith had faced 50 batters this season and allowed just 11 base runners — nine hits (seven singles and two doubles) and two walks (one of which was intentional).