Al “Red” Worthington (1929–2026)

Al Worthington (Credit-MN Twins)

The Twins’ first great closer — and one of baseball’s most principled men

Al “Red” Worthington, the calm, ethical, late-inning anchor of the Minnesota Twins’ first golden era, passed away on June 16, 2026, at the age of 97. Born February 5, 1929, in Birmingham, Alabama, Worthington lived a baseball life that stretched across eras — from the New York Giants of the early 1950s to the pennant winning Twins of the mid-1960s — and he carried a reputation for honesty that became as defining as his pitching.

A Stunning, Unforgettable Beginning

Worthington’s arrival in the Major Leagues in 1953 remains one of the most extraordinary debuts in modern baseball history. In his first two big league starts, he threw back-to-back complete game shutouts, blanking the Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies in succession — a feat reflected in his rookie line, which shows 5 complete games and 2 shutouts in just 20 appearances . Eighteen innings. Zero runs. Six total hits. A beginning worthy of a future ace.

But Worthington’s early career was complicated. Even as he showed front-line stuff, he openly objected to sign-stealing practices he witnessed — a stance that cost him favor in clubhouses and front offices. In an era when silence was expected, Red refused to compromise.