FORT MYERS, FLA. - Terry Ryan has become the ghost in the Twins' machine, a quiet but omnipresent figure who influences the team's biggest decisions and analyzes their most obscure prospects.
Despite his popularity in Minnesota as the man who transformed a dying franchise, Ryan these days works in the shadows of men who rose to authority under his tutelage. While he left the general manager position to spend more time at home and shed some of his least favorite aspects of public life, he remains a strong voice and maniacal worker whose presence is felt every day in the organization.
"He's a great asset to the Twins organization, and especially me," said Twins General Manager Bill Smith, Ryan's successor and former assistant. "Down here, I talk to him hourly. He's in the next room. During the season, we swap e-mails, we call each other.
"We've got a great relationship, and he's one of the few people who could step sideways from this position and have it be 100 percent positive."
Ryan's title is senior advisor to the general manager. On the team's masthead in its media guide, his is the 29th name listed. A few pages away, you can read the biographies of 14 team executives, but not Ryan's.
He doesn't like attention, and yet it's hard to spend a day at Twins camp without hearing his name.
One day last week, a visitor to Hammond Stadium at 6:30 a.m. found all of the doors to the press box, front office suites and clubhouse locked. The visitor saw one light shining in the building -- in Ryan's office, where he was reading scouting reports.
About 10 hours later, Twins third base prospect Danny Valencia, standing in the clubhouse after hitting a game-winning home run, was asked about his reputation as an emotional player.