Here are five things Yankees fans should know about the Twins before Friday’s Game 1 of the ALDS at the Stadium:

1. Randy Dobnak is lucky the Twins clinched the AL Central before the final weekend of the regular season, and even luckier he didn’t schedule his wedding for a week later.

Hardly anybody could have seen it coming when the season began — with Dobnak at High-A — but the undrafted starting pitcher became a valuable part of the Twins’ playoff chase.

The 24-year-old former Uber driver tossed six strong innings Sept. 25, the night the Twins clinched the division, then was excused to attend his wedding Saturday. The honeymoon will have to wait, though, as Dobnak (1.59 ERA) could be in line to start an ALDS game.

2. The Twins (101-61) won 100 games for the first time since 1965 and did so with a payroll that includes just two players (Nelson Cruz, $14 million, and Marwin Gonzalez, $12 million) earning more than $10 million.

They are not quite the Rays ($63 million) or the Athletics ($93 million), but their payroll ($125 million) is still under league average and almost $100 million less than that of the Yankees. Their success has come without any brand-name stars, though Byron Buxton may have been on his way before undergoing surgery in September for a torn labrum.

3. Mitch Garver was not the Twins’ full-time catcher this season and still put up some ridiculous numbers.

The 28-year-old had a nearly even split with veteran Jason Castro behind the dish (Garver made 73 starts, Castro 72 and Willians Astudillo 17), but he crushed 31 home runs anyway, breaking the Twins’ single-season record for a catcher (26).

His 10.03 at-bats per home run would have been the best in MLB if he had enough plate appearances to qualify. Together, Garver, Castro and Astudillo broke the MLB record for home runs from the catcher position with 44.

4. Twins manager Rocco Baldelli (38) is the youngest manager in the major leagues and still younger than his oldest player, Nelson Cruz (39). But he became the seventh rookie manager, and the third in two years (joining Aaron Boone and Alex Cora), to lead his team to 100-plus wins.

Baldelli, who is also a thoroughbred breeder on the side, had his playing career cut short by mitochondrial disease, which causes muscle fatigue.

5. A 5-foot-9, 225-pound, nine-year minor leaguer has become a cult hero for the Twins since making his MLB debut last season. Astudillo — a catcher/first baseman/third baseman/corner outfielder — is nicknamed “La Tortuga,” Spanish for “the turtle,” and has become a viral sensation on more than one occasion, with his unique look and style endearing himself to fans.

He is also uncanny with the bat; in 2,864 career plate appearances as a pro, he has struck out just 94 times — or 47 fewer strikeouts than Aaron Judge had in 447 PAs this year.