There is a strong possibility Twins center fielder Byron Buxton will miss a hunk of the 2022 schedule and it would have nothing to do with his health and wellness to compete.
Buxton arrived at a Target Field news conference to celebrate his seven-year, $100 million contract extension a couple of minutes after 11 a.m. on Wednesday.
The session was over and there still was some mingling of interested parties taking place at 11:59 (Central) — or 11 hours before baseball owners imposed a lockout on Buxton and every other athlete on a 40-player big league roster.
The last such battle between the owners and the players union led to a strike that canceled a World Series in 1994, a slapstick version of spring training with replacement players in March 1995, and eventually a 144-game season that started on April 25.
If you remain in that ever-dwindling group of devoted baseball fans, the reaction to that timeline right now should be: "Opening Day on April 25 … I'll take it."
And here's a confession that's painful to make: When it comes to the current MLB version of the game, I'm about ready to vacate the devotees and become part of the dwindling.
That's because every time there's a leak of news from the camp of the Manfred Meatheads — named here in honor of baseball-hating commissioner Rob Manfred — I get nauseous.
It's not a surprise, but there were enough leaks a few days back to confirm this is the big bonus the Meatheads plan to offer the sporting public: