FORT MYERS, FLA. - Tom Kelly's stoicism and combativeness during his career as manager of the Twins forged his reputation as a gruff, serious man; Minnesota's Lombardi.
Saturday morning, the supposed curmudgeon spoke softly of the charms and rhythms of spring training, of the dew on the morning field.
This is the effect spring training has on baseball lovers and lifers -- the sight of pristine grass in the sunlight can elicit free-verse poetry from even a tough guy from Jersey.
"To walk out each morning at 9 o'clock and see the grass, and a little dew, and see the players go to work, that's pretty good," Kelly said in the Twins clubhouse as he prepared for another day of teaching. "You are immediately elevated, your mind and your body."
Spring training baseball is the anti-sport, a season in which craft and atmosphere trump competition. If the rest of sport is a neon billboard, spring training is as subtle as a watercolor.
Saturday at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers, the Twins held their first full-squad workout of the season. If you don't like baseball, what you would see are repetitive drills and a little batting practice.
Kelly always sees more.
"Anybody who likes baseball that is able, in this day and age, to save some money, you can come down here and get a little closer to the action and see what big-league players go through on a daily basis, how they work and prepare," Kelly said. "Especially if you've got a youngster who really likes the game, you can push them -- or ease their way toward baseball here.