BERT BLYLEVEN
The righthander was 287-250 in 22 seasons, including 149-138 in 11 seasons during two stints with the Twins. He broke into the majors as a 19-year-old with the Twins in 1970, then returned in a 1985 trade with Cleveland. He pitched on two World Series championship teams -- Pittsburgh in 1979 and the Twins in 1987. Blyleven is fifth all time with 3,701 career strikeouts and ninth with 60 shutouts. He completed 242 of his 685 major league starts.
ROBERTO ALOMAR
The second baseman won 10 Gold Gloves and finished with a .300 career batting average in 17 seasons. Alomar had a .371 on-base percentage and .443 slugging percentage to go with 2,724 hits, 1,508 runs, 1,134 RBI and 474 stolen bases. He was a member of Toronto's World Series championship teams in 1992 and 1993. Alomar also played with San Diego, Baltimore, Cleveland, the New York Mets, Arizona and the Chicago White Sox.
PAT GILLICK
The highly successful general manager was selected by the Hall of Fame's Expansion Era Committee (formerly known as Veteran's Committee). Gillick was the architect of three World Series championship teams in his almost 50 years in baseball. He is only the fourth Hall of Famer whose career was defined nearly exclusively as a team architect. As a general manager, Gillick built playoff teams with Toronto, Baltimore, Seattle and Philadelphia. He had two World Series winners with Toronto and one with Philadelphia.