Larry Wolfe was a Twins rookie in 1978 and the righthanded part of a third base platoon with Mike Cubbage. Wolfe was going through a tough stretch in midseason, to the point a St. Paul baseball writer was forced to offer this theory in an afternoon edition:
"Larry Wolfe must wake up in the morning, look in the mirror and say to himself, 'I can't believe I'm still in the big leagues.' "
Wolfe finished that season batting .234 with three home runs and 25 RBI in 235 at-bats. He also drew 36 walks compared to 27 strikeouts for an on-base percentage of .332.
In other words, if Wolfe was around in 2010, the fans would have been calling him "Thumper" and lobbying with manager Ron Gardenhire to get more duty for the rookie.
The puzzle at the moment over an infielder's major league status concerns Brendan Harris. He's a player with nothing to offer when he can't hit, and he's currently sitting at .160 with one home run and four RBI in 106 at-bats.
The Twins signed designated hitter Jim Thome on Jan. 26 and that left only three places on the bench: a second catcher, a backup infielder to also serve as a pinch runner for Thome and a righthanded hitter with some versatility.
The last of those jobs went to Harris, mostly because the front office had chosen to give him a two-year contract for $3.2 million during the offseason. Asked why the Twins would give two years to such a modest contributor, a team executive said the deal was extra-reasonable and Harris would be easy to trade, if necessary.
Reporters visiting Florida for spring training kept suggesting that Harris and Nick Punto were in competition at third base. Gardenhire didn't discourage this conjecture, yet the manager always had preferred the speed and fielding excellence of Punto over Harris' occasional contributions as a hitter.