Glen Perkins is headed back to the All-Star Game, and he won't be Twins' only representative.
"I have a knack for bringing catchers," he said.
Kurt Suzuki, for the first time in his eight-year career, is headed for the Midsummer Classic on July 15 at Target Field. The Twins felt they had four candidates, but Perkins and Suzuki were their best two, so the club will have multiple representatives for the eighth time in the past 10 years.
"Ever since we got named as the host team for it, it was something a lot of guys in the clubhouse looked forward to," Perkins said. "Things broke my way, and I kind of did everything I could do to be here. I don't think it's really sunk in yet, but I'm excited to represent the Twins and the state.
"It's a dream come true. It's overwhelming to think about, and hopefully I'll be able to step back and enjoy it a little bit."
Perkins is 3-0 with a 3.22 ERA. He's tied for third in the American League with 20 saves. He's had a few rough outings and he's given up hits at a higher rate than in the previous three seasons, but he's also reduced his walk rate to 1.7 per nine innings while increasing his strikeout rate to 11.9, which would be a career high.
In just his second full season of closing, Perkins has become one of the best in the game. And being a local product who starred at Stillwater High and for the Gophers before being selected in the first round by the Twins in 2004, it means a lot to him to make the team the year the game is in his hometown.
"I talked to him after I talked to [AL manager John Farrell]," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "He took a deep breath and sighed he was really excited. It was good for him. It was weighing on his mind heavily."