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Minnesota Twins: Ron Gardenhire serious about Camp…

FORT MYERS, Fla. – After watching some of his infielders kick the ball around in a split-squad loss Sunday against Boston, Minnesota Twins manager Ron Gardenhire addressed the issue with his players prior to tonight’s game against the Red Sox at Hammond Stadium.

“We spoke about it when we talked, before I sent them out, about controlling the baseball,” the manager said. “Yesterday, in one game, we didn’t control the baseball.”

Gardenhire has been candid about the team’s zero-tolerance policy on lackluster play, whether it’s a mental gaffe in a game or a failure to appreciate the details in a drill. For instance, he said, a number of coaches approached minor league left-hander Tyler Robertson because he wasn’t bringing his glove

tight to his chest in pitcher fielding practice.

“He had six coaches who had him through the minor league system go tell him, ‘What the heck are you doing?’ ” Gardenhire said. “They’ve all had relationships with him; they’ve all dealt with him; they know he’s a good kid. So that’s good, that six people went up to him and said, ‘Get your head out of your back pocket.’ ”

But, Gardenhire added, don’t read too much into any of it.

“It’s not like we’re running around yelling at people,” he said. “We just make sure if we see something, we say something. If we don’t like something, we talk about it and we make sure the player understands. That’s all we’re doing.”

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Minnesota Twins beat themselves on basics in 8-3…

FORT MYERS, Fla. – While the Twins rallied to win a split-squad game against Tampa Bay in Port Charlotte on Sunday, the other half of the team was providing the kind of low-brow entertainment the big-league team traded in last season.

Yes, it was another comedy of errors.

From shortstop Tsuyoshi Nishioka’s bobble and slow-hopping relay throw to Jason Bulger’s four walks in an inning to Ben Revere getting picked off first with no one covering for a steal attempt, the Twins were a perfect patsy for the Boston Red Sox, who opened their $80 million JetBlue Park with an 8-3 victory over their local spring rival.

“Couple of funny plays, but we have to be better than that,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said.

This would be of

little concern on the second day of spring games had Minnesota not been so bad last season – 99 losses and 32 games out of first place in the American League Central. Management acted by adding three days to early camp and hammering home the team’s commitment to fundamentals.

“It’s a work in progress,” Gardenhire said.

It started with one out and Boston’s Dustin Pedroia and Cody Ross on first and second. Sean Burroughs was eaten up on a hard grounder by Adrian Gonzalez, loading the bases. But as the ball skipped into left field, Ross rounded second and Pedroia stayed on third. Nishioka, backing up the play, bobbled the ball before turning on the run and heaving it home.

The ball bounced in so slowly that catcher Rene Rivera charged

it, but it trickled under his glove. The Twins were bailed out when Pedroia, forced to break for home when Ross trotted to third, was thrown out. Pitcher Phil Dumatrait was backing up Rivera and flipped him the ball in time for the tag.

“The ball got away. We still got somebody out at home,” said Gardenhire, spinning positive before speaking his mind. “It wasn’t fun. It wasn’t fun. We don’t want to see the ball bounce around. We just want to catch the ball and not panic. If we miss a play, we

can’t react like we did after that. A couple of people trying to hurry got all excited – even our catcher.”

Ross scored when Mike Aviles singled him home for a 2-0 lead in the next at-bat.

The Twins tied the score with a pair of RBI singles by Revere, whose performance at the plate couldn’t make up for his base-running error in the seventh inning. His second RBI scored Burroughs, tying the score 2-2 and putting runners on first and third with two outs. With the go-ahead run at third base, the Red Sox were conceding a stolen base, yet with Nishioka at the plate Revere broke for second before pitcher Tony Pena threw home.

Darin Mastroianni, forced to try to score with Revere in a rundown, was gunned down at the plate. Gardenhire was

Minnesota Twins catcher Rene Rivera tags out Boston Red Sox Dustin Pedroia in the fifth inning, Sunday, March 4, 2012, at Jet Blue Stadium in Fort Myers, Florida. The Twins lost 8-3. (Pioneer Press: Chris Polydoroff)

livid.

“They are not covering second base, and he got picked off. They are letting him go, and he takes off running before the pitcher throws the ball,” the manager said. “Did you recognize that? They are not covering; you can’t get picked off. What are you working on? That’s the fundamentals of the game; that’s the basics. He runs, they pick him off and they’re not even throwing the ball.”

In the bottom of the inning, Bulger – a nonroster invitee with major league experience in Anaheim – walked four and gave up a grand slam to Lars Anderson for a 7-2 lead that, for all intents and purposes, ended the game.

“He just didn’t have it,” Gardenhire said. “He couldn’t throw the ball; he couldn’t get the ball where he wanted to. And then

when he started trying to spin the ball and grooved it in there, you saw what (Anderson) did.”

There were positives. Francisco Liriano fanned two in two scoreless innings, and right-hander Jared Burton – a favorite to earn a bullpen spot – pitched a perfect inning of relief. Though charged with an error, Burroughs doubled and scored, and Revere was 2 for 4 and drove in two runs.

But with the acrid taste of last season still in the mouths of most Twins fans, it was the bad stuff that stood out. That, after all, was why the Twins lost by five runs.

“We talk over and over about catching it, getting the ball in your glove, and then we’re going to do something with it,” Gardenhire said. “And every time we try to get too quick, and we’re

spinning and turning, that’s when something (bad) happens – it becomes that.”

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Minnesota Twins turn the page in spring opener…

FORT MYERS, Fla. – Well, so far, so good.

With one spring training game in the books, the Twins have one victory and no one on the disabled list. For a team that finished 32 games out of first place last season, this is progress.

“We’ve played one game,” manager Ron Gardenhire said, warning anyone so inclined not to read too much into his team’s 7-3 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Saturday at Hammond Stadium.

Still, after swallowing 99 losses in 2011, Twins fans should be allowed to enjoy this one.

Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau, out for a combined 173 games last season, each drove in runs and five pitchers pitched shutout innings as Minnesota rallied from a 2-0 deficit to beat the visiting Rays, who stranded 17 runners.

Closer

Minnesota Twins catcher Joe Mauer drove in a run and was in good spirits as the team won their spring training opener against the Tampa Bay Rays 7-3 at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers, Florida, Saturday, March 3, 2012. (Pioneer Press: Chris Polydoroff)

Matt Capps, trying to make up with fans after a rough 2011, coaxed three ground-ball outs and stranded a leadoff hit in his first outing, and shortstop Tsuyoshi Nishioka, a highly paid bust in his major league debut last season, was 2 for 3 with a triple.

Prospects Joe Benson, Chris Herrmann and Michael Hollimon also drove in runs for the Twins.

“We’ve been working out, we’ve been kind of going at it for quite a few days here,” Gardenhire said, “so it was nice to get a lineup out there and put the boys out there and watch them run around.”

It’s been a somewhat charmed spring for the Twins, who arrived here with trepidation after using the disabled list a major league-high 27 times last season. Though they lost Joel Zumaya to a torn

elbow ligament on Feb. 25, the marquee names have shown signs of recovering the form that helped the Twins win Central Division titles in 2009 and 2010.

Morneau was recovering a concussion and three offseason surgeries but made his spring debut by going 1 for 3 with a two-out RBI while playing five innings at first base. Denard Span spent the offseason healing from a concussion that limited him to 70 games but already has survived a brush with the center field wall and went 2 for 3 Saturday.

Mauer, limited to 82 games by leg and neck injuries and, ultimately, pneumonia, was 1 for 2 with an RBI.

“It was a good first day to hit the ball on the nose and hit with a guy on base,” said Mauer, who nearly took the head off right-hander Jhonny Nunez with a line drive up the middle that scored Alexi Casilla with the Twins’ first run.”

After spending most of last spring in the trainer’s room – he played only eight games – Mauer has participated in every day of camp since reporting on Feb. 18.

“It’s fun getting back out there and playing games and getting that adrenaline going,” he said.

Mauer, of course, had been promising this since declaring himself fit to local reporters in early December. Morneau was different. While

recovering from his second concussion in 13 months, the first baseman peppered all optimism with a dose of reality. With his concussion history, he wasn’t making any promises. Though he still isn’t, Morneau’s enthusiasm has grown with each full day of practice.

On Saturday, he grinded out an at-bat with two outs and a runner on third, finally poking a single through a hole at short left by the Rays’ defensive shift. It scored Span from third and tied the score 2-2.

In his first two at-bats, Morneau struck out looking and grounded to short.

“Gardy was asking where I was at after that second at-bat, and I wasn’t too pleased with it, so I kind of wanted a third one,” Morneau said. “I tell myself, sitting there, is this smart? But I’m

Taking the field for the first spring training game are, from left to right: Jamey Carroll, Alexi Casilla, and Trevor Plouffe as the Minnesota Twins played the Tampa Bay Rays at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers, Florida, Saturday, March 3, 2012. (Pioneer Press: Chris Polydoroff)

not playing (today), I knew that going in – Gardy told me that before; I’m playing Monday night – so it doesn’t hurt to take that extra at-bat today knowing I have that extra day off.”

It had been awhile since the Twins’ two American League most valuable players had each driven in a run; and if not an omen, at least some good news.

“That’s fine. I’d rather have them like April (6),” Gardenhire said, referring to the Twins’ season opener at Baltimore. “Same thing, April (6) they start getting those hits. It’s the first (game) of spring training. But…it’s nice to see them out on the baseball field and playing and feeling good.”

So far, so good.

Follow John Shipley at Twitter.com/ShipleyKid.

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Minnesota Twins: Danny Valencia pushing himself to…

FORT MYERS, Fla. – When Danny Valencia assesses his 2011 season, he reveals a perfect distillation of what makes him Danny Valencia.

“I’m better than that,” he said.

While an acknowledgment of a sophomore slump, it’s also a bold declaration of his strength and skill as a baseball player. It’s part humility but mostly hubris – and all Danny Valencia.

Say what you will about the kid who played college ball and majored in confidence at Miami (Fla.), he has made himself a major league baseball player. Entering just his second full major league season, Valencia is hardly surrounded by predators ready to swoop in and take his job at spring training.

“There are plenty of people that could play third base,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said, “but not as good as Danny should be able to; that’s the key.”

The Twins brought in Sean Burroughs but mostly to fill in defensively and give the lineup some good at-bats. Luke Hughes has been a steady fielder and has shown some pop, but his batting average – .223 last season – hasn’t inspired management to project him beyond a utility role. Valencia, on the other hand, has shown glimpses of major league longevity.

“He’s got a lot of talent. I think that’s the apparent visual of him,” general manager Terry Ryan said. “He can do everything most third basemen that make all-star teams can do. He can hit it a long way, he can really throw and he’s a better runner than you’d think.”

As a rookie in 2010, he turned a June

call-up into a full-time job by hitting .311 with 40 runs batted in in 85 games and fielding his position. He had a down year all around last season, earning public scrutiny from Gardenhire for his defensive shortcomings while watching his average (.246) and on-base percentage (.294) drop precipitously. Still, he led the Twins in games (154) and RBIs (72).

Valencia, 27, went home for the offseason knowing he can be better in 2012. Rather than work out in Miami with a group that included major

Minnesota Twins throws home after fielding a ground ball during spring training at Lee County Sports Complex in Fort Myers, Florida, Tuesday, February 28, 2012. (Pioneer Press: Chris Polydoroff)

leaguers such as Alex Rodriguez, he stayed home in Boca Raton and worked with a trainer.

The results are evident. Valencia is noticeably bigger, almost 220 pounds, yet still lean, and his defense already is receiving positive notices from the manager.

Last year, Valencia threw away a lot of at-bats – he walked only 40 times in 608 plate appearances – and became less steady at third; after six errors in 80 starts as a rookie, he was charged with 18 in 146 starts in 2011.

“I hold myself to high standards,” he said. “Obviously, I feel a little disappointed with last year, mainly my on-base percentage – that really bothers me, looking back at it. It’s really unacceptable. I’ve got to take my walks when I can and swing at better pitches and do a better job of controlling the strike zone.”

Though he finished with a .246 batting average, he hit well in the clutch, .471 with the bases loaded (8 for 17) and .444 with runners on second and third (4 for 9).

“He should hit for a higher average, but I thought he was pretty good,” Gardenhire said. “I don’t have all the numbers to prove it, but as far as driving in big runs for us, he was one of our better ones last year. He came up with a lot of big hits for us that I remember. Those things stick in your mind.”

They also help smooth over personality clashes. Notably confident – cocky, to some – Valencia has irritated a few teammates. As a rookie, he led the team in kangaroo court fines, joking last offseason that he financed the team party by himself. A common complaint was that he didn’t know his place in the hierarchy of a major league clubhouse.

For that, he is unapologetic.

“I have a personality,” Valencia said. “They can’t take that away from me.”

But he also had a tendency to take his at-bats onto the field, which is a nice way to say he cared more about hitting than defense, a no-no in Minnesota. Gardenhire, in fact, accused him of simply not paying attention at times at third base.

“Danny had things that he knew he needed to improve on, and as I told you at the end of last year, Danny made a lot of improvement toward the end of last year,” Gardenhire said. “I thought he was handling himself a lot better; a lot of guys would make the same statement. He wasn’t trying to be out there all the time; he wasn’t trying to be in Danny World. He was fitting in really nicely. I thought he made a great effort toward the end of last year. He worked hard on his defense. He was working hard.

“Do we all have opportunities to be better people? Every one of us in here can all be better at something, and Danny’s been working at it.”

If Valencia has changed the way he behaves behind closed doors, it’s not evident in public. He’s still smiling and chatting with fans, teammates and coaches – and swinging for the fences in batting practice. When he was hit by a Francisco Liriano fastball in BP on Tuesday, he ran out of the cage and yelled at the pitcher, “It’ll take more than that to destroy this body!”

“I’m a guy who likes to be loose, but I work hard,” Valencia said. “I feel like I get along with everybody. I like to keep it fun in here. We don’t have too many guys here who have big personalities. I think it’s a good thing; it changes things up. You don’t want to get too dull and boring.”

Then Valencia smiles with more than a hint of mischief and says, “It’s nice to brighten people’s days, you know?”

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