With the Twins finishing 83-79 last season, and a number of great young players on the roster, expectations are high for this season. But there are also a lot of questions to be answered as the team enters its second season under manager Paul Molitor.
One of the biggest questions is how Korean slugger Byung Ho Park will adjust to the major leagues.
Park isn't any old rookie, as he won MVP awards in 2012 and 2013 in the KBO League in South Korea, and won the league home run title in each of his final four seasons there. Last season, he hit .303 with 52 home runs and 146 RBI in 124 games for the Nexen Heroes.
That's what led the Twins to bid $12.85 million just for the right to negotiate with Park. They signed him to a four-year, $12 million contract.
While it's impossible to project how international players will adjust to the majors, the Twins must have felt good after watching Jung Ho Kang, who played for the same team as Park in South Korea.
Kang was a career .298 hitter with 139 home runs and 545 RBI in nine seasons in South Korea. Then he came to the Pirates last year and hit .287, with 121 hits, 24 doubles, 15 home runs, 58 RBI and 60 runs scored. The infielder finished third in the NL Rookie of the Year voting despite missing the final weeks of the season because of a broken leg.
Ready for the challenge
Speaking through a translator, Park said that when it comes to hitting, he doesn't expect much of a challenge. But the bigger challenge may be adjusting to playing and living in America.
"I think that baseball is baseball, baseball is the same anywhere I go," he said. "But culturewise, and other factors like the players and the environment, I'll have to adjust."