FORT MYERS, Fla. – Nick Gordon was lining up for infield drills in the hot sun Thursday when his face lit up with shock and delight. The Marlins' team bus had just arrived, and the team's All-Star second baseman had immediately jogged over to the minor league complex for a quick reunion with his little brother.
"Just letting him know that I'm excited for him," said Dee Gordon, the fourth-year major leaguer who was traded by the Dodgers to Miami in December. "He's been waiting for this day."
Yes, Thursday was the first day of workouts for the Twins' minor leaguers, and Nick Gordon's first day of spring training as a professional. The 19-year-old shortstop, drafted by Minnesota with the fifth overall pick last June, joined more than 100 players in fielding, hitting and baserunning drills, most of it with an All-Star audience: Gordon's big brother, who stuck around for five minutes to enjoy the moment, and his father, three-time All-Star pitcher Tom "Flash" Gordon.
"This has been Nicholas' dream come true, and he's worked really hard for it," Tom Gordon said. "He's excited. And we're hoping someday soon he can really start to showcase the talents he has."
That was the plan all winter, and the Twins' top infield prospect impressed his family with the disciplined way he rose by 6:30 every morning, made sure to eat breakfast, did plenty of fitness work, and always showed up on time for regular sessions with a fielding and hitting tutor his father had arranged for him. Sensing that even his own 21 years of major league experience, all of it as a pitcher, wasn't a perfect fit for his son's skills, Gordon enlisted the help of a ballplayer who he's known for more than a decade. Wait, what was the teacher's name again?
"Barry," Gordon said matter-of-factly. "Barry Larkin."
Yeah, a first-ballot Hall of Famer probably knows a thing or two about turning the double play and spraying hits all over the diamond.
"You can't get any better than that," Nick Gordon said. "He taught me some great stuff, some things he learned during his career."