Joe Mauer is fretting. He is sitting in the Twins dugout, long before gametime Tuesday, worrying about the marriage of his new thoughts and his old swing, thinking about filing for an annulment.
The kid is hitting over .300, is about to extend his hitting streak to 11 games, but it is early afternoon and Mauer is headed for a round of early batting practice, more aware of his perceived weakness than his proven strength.
His old swing gave him a .347 average in 2006 at the age of 23, making him the first American League catcher to win a batting title. We wanted more.
We wanted a guy bigger than Paul Bunyan to yank the ball over the baggie, so after an injury-filled 2007, Mauer made the biggest mistake an athlete can make. He listened to us.
Local boy wins batting title, local fans crave power, local boy tries to make good.
This is like daytime TV fans asking Oprah Winfrey to break dance or Ellen DeGeneres to conduct a presidential debate. Mauer's success has always been based on the natural inside-out swing that made him the first pick in the 2001 draft, rocketed him through the minors and made him the toughest out in baseball in '06.
This spring, though, he started worrying about the inside pitch. He started spinning on his back heel, trying to torque the bat head around like Barry Bonds, and he lost his hitting equilibrium.
"I feel real comfortable driving the ball the other way and up the middle, when I'm feeling good," Mauer said. "I was trying to add to that, where if they do come inside, I wanted to feel as good with that pitch as I do when I go the other way."