Janie Reed and her teammates on the U.S. Olympic softball team would have been three months into a "Stand Beside Her Tour" and taking a two-week break before resumption in Sacramento on May 17.
Jake Reed likely would have been a righthanded bullpen presence for the Class AAA Rochester Red Wings as they faced the Columbus Clippers early in a six-game homestand at Frontier Field.
Then again, the constant cries of "mayday" for bullpen assistance generally have started around May 1 for the Twins, and perhaps Jake would have refined his new approach of side-arming to the point that, at last, he would have been called to the manager's office (Toby Gardenhire) and told to catch Delta Flight 2873 the next morning from Rochester, N.Y., to MSP.
Jake Reed was signed by the Twins as a fifth-round draft pick out of Oregon in 2014. He was in Class AA by his second season and received an invitation to spring training in 2016. Since then, he has pitched in more than 100 games in the Rochester bullpen, but only Florida exhibitions in a big-league uniform.
Janie Reed, Jake's wife, has waited longer to be an Olympian. She earned a place on Team USA as a college senior at Oregon in 2015. A lefty-hitting outfielder, she helped the U.S. to gold medals in the 2016 and '18 world championships, and to a silver and two golds in the Pan-Am Games of 2015, '17 and '19.
The Olympics? None had been available for softball players after 2008, as the sport was dropped from the IOC schedule along with baseball for 2012 (London) and 2016 (Rio de Janeiro). Those two sports are missing again in the 2024 schedule for the Paris Games, so this was the chance:
Tokyo 2020.
So meaningful was this Olympic opportunity that Cat Osterman, the 6-foot-2 lefthanded pitching legend, came out of retirement to claim a spot on a third Olympic team, after gold in 2004 and silver in 2008. She would be 38 when softball opened the entire Olympic schedule July 22, a day before the Opening Ceremony.