CLEVELAND – Miguel Sano's new team has the weekend off, but Sano does not. The Twins' sidelined slugger arrived in Fort Myers on Friday and will begin his new workout program Saturday morning at the team's spring training complex.
Sano will, in essence, be working through a second spring training: He'll work with hitting coaches in the batting cage, with trainers in the weight room, and with fielding coaches on the infield. And several times a week, but probably not every day, he'll play in a game.
"The number [of games] will be determined by the program he's on. There might be some days with heavy workdays, some days where he just plays in a game," explained Derek Falvey, the Twins' chief baseball officer. "He'll have some days where he travels, and some where he stays back."
The Class A Fort Myers Miracle, idle due to the Florida State League All-Star Game, will resume their season Monday, presumably with Sano in the lineup. He'll earn minor league wages, less than half of his $602,000 big-league salary but still far more than most of his teammates.
The Twins don't have any weight target for Sano, Falvey said, nor do they have any plans yet for sending him to higher affiliates. "We just want him to be strong and healthy." And when will that be?
"We'll just assess it, week to week. … We'll track it like we would with any player, with assessments from a strength standpoint and the moves he needs to make," Falvey said. "It's going to be fluid."
Mauer returns
Joe Mauer's concussion-like symptoms didn't completely disappear until last week, the Twins' first baseman said Friday after being activated from the disabled list. That they lingered for three weeks after his initial neck injury, suffered while diving for a foul ball on May 17, is just a risk he accepts.
"I've been having some good days, and we checked all the boxes off. I'm here and I'm feeling good," Mauer said. "I'm not going to play any different." He won't try to be careful about diving for balls or anything that could bring them back? "My experiences is, when you try to do that, you end up getting hurt," he said.