On April 7, newly acquired
Twin Brant Alyea homered twice in going 4 for 4 and driving in 7
RBIs. The RBI total set a record for
major league baseball's
Opening Day. On May 20, in a 10–5 win over the
Kansas City Royals,
Rod Carew became the first Twin to
hit for the cycle—going single, homer, double, triple. Over time, his feat will be matched by nine other Twins (
César Tovar, 1972;
Larry Hisle, 1976;
Lyman Bostock, 1976;
Mike Cubbage, 1978;
Gary Ward, 1980;
Kirby Puckett, 1986;
Carlos Gómez, 2008;
Jason Kubel, 2009; and
Michael Cuddyer, 2009). On June 5, pitcher
Bert Blyleven debuted, allowing a home run off the first batter he faced. Four Twins made the
All-Star Game: first baseman
Harmon Killebrew, second baseman
Rod Carew, outfielder
Tony Oliva, and pitcher
Jim Perry. On September 16, Blyleven struck out the first six batters he faced to tie a major league record. However, the
Twins lost the game to the California Angels, 5–1. The Twins are
no-hit for the second time in their history, losing 6–0 to
Oakland's
Vida Blue. The Twins won the
American League West, led by leadoff batter
César Tovar (120 runs), Oliva (.325, 23 HR, 107 RBI) and Killebrew (41 HR, 113 RBI). Carew was batting .366 (after 51 games) when his knee was injured turning a double play. Perry won 24 games and became the first Twins pitcher to win the
AL Cy Young Award.
Jim Kaat added 14 wins and rookie
Bert Blyleven won 10. Kaat also won his 9th
Gold Glove Award. Reliever
Ron Perranoski led the AL with 34
saves. 1,261,887 fans attended Twins games, the third highest total in the
American League.
Season standings Record vs. opponents Notable transactions • June 27, 1970:
Craig Kusick was signed as an amateur free agent by the Twins.
Roster == Player stats ==