gold star for USAHOF
 

147. Camilo Pascual

Camilo Pascual left Cuba in 1951 at the age of 17, and a year later, he was part of the Washington Senators’ farm system. Pasucal was impressive and made the Washington main roster in 1954.

Pascual was largely unimpressive in his first few years, but he came of age in 1959, when he went 17-10 and led the American League in Complete Games (17) and FIP (2.44).  The Cuban was an All-Star for the first time and would be in four of the next five seasons.

The Senators relocated to Minnesota, becoming the Twins in 1961, and in the first three years of the franchise's relocation, he was the league-leader in Strikeouts.  The Twins won the American League Pennant in 1965, of which Pascual was a part, but he was no longer the same Pitcher by this time.

He was traded back to the city of Washington and the new version of the Senators at the end of the 1966 season, and he had a pair of 12 Win years.  He finished his career with Cincinnati, Los Angeles, and Cleveland, retiring in 1971 with a 174-170 record with 2,167 Strikeouts.

Although Camilo Pasucal was a five-time All-Star over his tenure with the Washington Senators/Minnesota Twins, the Cuban is a somewhat underappreciated player historically.  Dubbed “The Little Potato” (in reference to his older brother, Carlos, who was nicknamed (The Potato”) Pascual was a three-time Strikeout Champion and would win 20 Games twice.  While Pascual would not finish in the top ten in MVP voting, he did receive a smattering of votes in three different seasons.

Pascual went 145-141 for the franchise, fanning 1,885 Strikeouts.  The Twins inducted him into their franchise Hall of Fame in 2012.