In the mid-90s, the Twins were a sorry team. Middle School Me quickly fell out of love with the organization, and every player, save for former rookie of the year and World Series Champion Chuck Knoblauch seemed to be trash. Largely, that was true. After Kirby Puckett and Shane Mack (more on him on another day) Knoblauch was the only position player that regularly had more than three wins above replacement.
Against all odds, the Twins were able to garner a Rookie of the Year in Marty Cordova, but otherwise, the outfield lacked a real star after Puckett and Mack. The infield, aside from Knoblauch, did as well. In that wasteland, Rich Becker's 1996 season should stand out in our memory more than it does.
Maybe it is because it followed the strike in 94 and 95, after which Puckett and Kent Hrbek were no longer playing, and it was the beginning of an era in which the Twins were, to say the least, adrift. Also, 1996 was Paul Molitor's first and best season with the Twins. Having a future Hall of Famer join the roster and do quite well is a significant headline stealer. With all of that said, Rich Becker's 1996 season was the best WAR of any non-Knoblauch player after 1992, and until Corey Koskie, Cristian Guzman and Torii Hunter surpassed his 4.3 wins in 2001.
And for what it's worth, that shouldn't necessarily be seen as a left handed compliment to Becker, this whole "diamond in the rough" narrative for his '96 season. Another Twins center fielder put forth an exactly 4.3 win season - Puckett in '91. That's a good year! For what it's worth, Becker also had the second highest position player WAR in '97 as well, before he was sent to the Mets for Alex Ochoa, who was also a pretty good player, so long as he wasn't wearing a Twins uniform.
Another reason it is likely easy to forget Becker was that much of his contribution was through defensive brilliance. The Twins, famously, have enjoyed some really good defensive center fielders before and after Becker, but he added value in the role as well. Still, his '96 campaign with a .291 average with an on base percentage of .372 allowed him to slot between Knoblauch and Molitor on most games.
A major difference between the '90s Twins and the current Twins is that they got on base all the time. Becker wasn't an offensive standout by any stretch of the imagination, not even on that team, which by mid July had 5 regulars batting over .300, and nobody hitting more than 16 home runs. With a team that put the ball in play regularly, no power and abysmal pitching, a player that could move on the basepaths and play good defense was going to be especially valuable.
Which Rich Becker was.
