FORT MYERS, FLA. - Twins pitching coach Rick Anderson had finished watching a bullpen session from Carl Pavano. They talked for a couple of minutes before Anderson gave his Opening Day starter the traditional slap on the back and began taking the enclosed route from the bullpen to the clubhouse.
Jose Mijares was walking behind the batting cage and toward a back field in order to do some running. Anderson stopped for a quick chat with his lefty reliever, then said to a reporter:
"See here. Jose's headed off for a 20-minute run. Hey, Jose, I was telling him about that two-seamer you're now throwing. What do you think of that pitch?"
Mijares smiled widely and made a gesture with a hand that indicated the downward movement of an imaginary baseball.
Anderson had been discussing his bullpen earlier Monday morning and said, "I would be a lot more concerned if we didn't have those three guys at the end."
He was referring to righthanders Matt Capps and Joe Nathan, and to Mijares, the lefty. Capps was the closer for the stretch drive in 2010. Nathan was closer from 2004 to '09 before missing last season after Tommy John surgery. Mijares has been prominent in the Twins' plans since he showed up from Class AA New Britain in September 2008 and became the setup man for Nathan.
Anderson's mention of his "three guys at the end" led to this question: "Do Mijares' pitches have as much life as they did a couple of years ago?"
Said the pitching coach: "More life. He's added the two-seamer. It's going to be a great pitch for him."