FORT MYERS, FLA. - Twins closer Matt Capps still remembers the feeling in the pit of his stomach last Sept. 29, when he hopped into his black Ford F-250 and put the Minneapolis and St. Paul skylines in the truck's rear-view mirror.
He was headed home to Atlanta, where his wife, Jennifer, was expecting their first child.
The Twin Cities had been so good to them just one year earlier, after his trade from the Washington Nationals. To that point, Capps had grown used to pitching in empty stadiums, but he thrived off the energy from the sellout crowds at Target Field and relished his first playoff experience.
But 2011 had been the most trying season of his career, stirring a sadness he hadn't felt since his father died in 2009. At one point last year, Twins fans booed Capps off the field after four consecutive appearances.
"I've never felt that empty about a season ending," he said. "I didn't think the opportunity to come back would be there, and Twins fans were going to think that what they saw last year was me. That's not how I wanted to be remembered."
Six weeks later, General Manager Terry Ryan called Capps and said the Twins wanted him back. The fact Capps was even interested in returning impressed manager Ron Gardenhire.
"That told me a little something about his courage," Gardenhire said.
Capps called his agent, Paul Kinzer, and said he'd like to make something work with the Twins. After Joe Nathan signed his two-year, $14.75 million deal with the Rangers, Capps and the Twins agreed to a one-year, $4.75 million deal with an option for 2013.