The team will be asking a lot of Francisco Liriano. He's a rookie, the only lefthanded reliever and a newcomer to the bullpen.
FORT MYERS, FLA. - Forget the concept of bringing a young pitcher along slowly.
The Twins have seemingly adopted a new slogan: In Francisco We Trust.
They cut veteran lefthander Dennys Reyes from their spring roster Wednesday, meaning Francisco Liriano will open the season as their only lefthanded reliever.
Barring an unforeseen change, the 11-man pitching staff is set. The Reyes move cleared a path for both Liriano and fellow rookie Willie Eyre to make the team as relievers.
"This is the way we feel is the best way to go right now," said Twins General Manager Terry Ryan, who had been openly reluctant to use Liriano in the bullpen instead of letting him gain experience at Class AAA Rochester.
With Scott Baker on his way to securing the No. 5 spot in the starting rotation, Twins manager Ron Gardenhire lobbied to have Liriano in the bullpen and got his wish.
"I think we're all confident that this young man is a pretty special guy," Ryan said. "I hope we can give him enough work. That'd be the only reservation I have."
Gardenhire said the team is still exploring potential waiver moves and trade options, so he didn't want to formally name his 11-man pitching staff.
Nonetheless, the team seems poised to open the season with a starting rotation of: Johan Santana, Brad Radke, Carlos Silva, Kyle Lohse and Baker.
And the bullpen looks like this: Joe Nathan, Juan Rincon, Jesse Crain, Matt Guerrier, Liriano and Eyre.
The Twins brought Reyes to camp with a minor league deal, hoping he might help them replace J.C. Romero, who was traded to the Los Angeles Angels in December.
Reyes posted a 1.59 ERA in four appearances after returning from the World Baseball Classic. But the Twins were frustrated with his troubles holding runners on base.
They assigned Reyes to minor league camp, giving him two days to accept the assignment or become a free agent.
"I was shocked because at the beginning, they told me to throw strikes, and I had a pretty good chance to make the team," Reyes said. "I think I did my job. I threw well. I don't think I got a fair shot. I'm disappointed."
It was a bold decision for the Twins because it left them without an experienced lefthanded matchup specialist, which they've had in recent years with Romero and Terry Mulholland.
"I think Liriano can match up with anybody, to tell you the truth," Gardenhire said. "He's in line with the way we used Romero. It's not just one inning [at a time]. And if we want to match him up with a tough lefty, I think he'll be fine."
Ryan said with the three pitchers at the back of the bullpen -- Nathan, Crain and Rincon -- he's not overly concerned with lefthanded matchups.
Nathan held lefthanded hitters to a .158 average last season, Rincon .218 and Crain .209.
"All you've got to do is look at the statistics," Ryan said. "They don't get hit much, no matter which way you go."
But the test will come when the Twins reach a crucial middle inning at-bat against a lefthanded slugger such as Cleveland's Travis Hafner or Chicago's Jim Thome.
And if Liriano handles that, another test will come if he's asked to come back again and do it the next day.
Liriano said he's not used to pitching on back-to-back days.
"I want to be a starting pitcher," Liriano said. "But whatever it takes to make the team."
Liriano made another relief appearance in Wednesday's 5-4 victory over Baltimore and pitched two scoreless innings before giving up three runs in the eighth. That left his spring ERA at 6.43, but he's recorded seven strikeouts in seven innings and only one walk.
"I'll be comfortable [in relief]," Liriano said. "I'm going to get used to it soon."
Minnesota Twins players worked as waiters Sunday night to raise money for the Boys and Girls Club.
Animation created by Mortenson Construction showing the process of building the new Twins stadium.
On June 26, the Twins released a one-minute time lapse movie of how the construction has progressed over the past year.
Twins fans and players alike shrugged off the snow for opening day and heralded the arrival of the baseball season.
Twins catcher Mike Redmond talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Final of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins pitcher Boof Bonser talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Eighth of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins infielder Nick Punto talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Sixth of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins first baseman Justin Morneau talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Fifth of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins second baseman Brendan Harris talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Fourth of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins shortstop Adam Everett talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Third of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins third baseman Mike Lamb talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. Second of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins catcher Joe Mauer talks about his hopes for the season and how things are going this spring. First of nine in a series leading up to Opening Day.
Twins coach Ron Gardenhire is looking for Nick Punto to improve offensively and for Brendan Harris to be patient at the plate, but the competition for second base is close.
Assorted Minnesota Twins read reader-submitted Haiku with flair ... or not.
Michael Cuddyer says he's probably a natural fit to lead the team since he's got the most experience with the organization.
Baseball writers La Velle E. Neal III and Joe Christensen think Wednesday's lineup against Boston features the A-listers or as close as it can be given the tough competition.
Francisco Liriano's success will be about patience, according to Twins pitching coach Rick Anderson.
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