FORT MYERS. FLA.
There was Joe Mauer on Monday, with all his equipment on, catching righthander Trevor May on the first day of live batting practice. What a difference a year makes.In 2012, the Twins slowly eased Mauer into catching during spring training because he was coming off of an injury-plagued season during which he was criticized for being unable to stay on the field. Now Mauer, who will turn 30 one month from now and should be in his peak production years, is telling everyone how good he feels. And how he wants more time behind the plate.
"You have to remember that in 2011 I had offseason knee surgery and was kind of behind the 8-ball then," Mauer said following Monday's workout.
"This is the best I've felt in a couple years coming into camp. I'm trying to get my legs underneath me and get ready to catch."
Mauer split time between catcher (72 games), first base (30) and designated hitter (42) last season but expects to catch as many games as his body allows in 2013 to help the Twins put their most dangerous lineup on the field. A second consecutive offseason, during which he was able to work on his conditioning instead of rehabbing some sort of injury, has helped significantly.
Mauer reaching 100 games caught, or more, is not out of the question. That means that Justin Morneau, who began last season as the designated hitter as he returned from concussion symptoms and other injuries, will be a fixture at first base and Ryan Doumit will spend most his time at designated hitter.
"I liked how it worked out last year, and I think he did too," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said of Mauer. "But I also know that Joe likes to catch. More than anything else, we had a unique situation with Mourny last year where I wanted to give Mourny some more DH days and give Joe the opportunity to play first base and DH and not kill him behind the plate.
"But the season is going to dictate how we do that. I do know this: We have to keep him in the lineup, and whatever it takes to keep him in our lineup that is what we are going to do."