Miguel Sano is a 6-4, 272-pound international baseball star who played on national television against the Yankees in a playoff series last fall.
He is tired of being so anonymous.
Sano showed up for a news conference Tuesday to announce his $30 million contract extension with the Twins wearing a blingy necklace supporting a piece of jewelry containing all of the world's remaining diamonds, formed in the shape of the word "Sano."
It's like a personalized license plate, only flashier.
In many ways, Sano is the same guy who told me, in his first big-league spring training, that he planned to hit .300 with 30 homers and 100 RBI and to win a Gold Glove and make the All-Star team. He is to shy what P.J. Fleck is to quiet.
In some important ways, Sano has changed, which is why the Twins rewarded him with three-year, $30 million contract. The signing of Josh Donaldson will mean Sano will make his long-anticipated shift to first base. He could play there at Target Field for a long time.
Sano worked himself into shape last winter, cut his heel, missed spring training and the first two months of the season and then slumped.
On June 27, Sano went 0-for-7 with three strikeouts in an 18-inning loss to Tampa Bay, looking helpless against fastballs high in the strike zone. His batting average fell to .195.