Emilio Pagán picked up his fifth victory of the season on Sunday, a career high. But for a few minutes there, he thought he might be able to contribute so much more.
The Twins had used all of their position players by the 10th inning vs. the White Sox, including a couple who were battling conjunctivitis and were having trouble seeing. So when a foul tip by Jake Burger in the 11th inning ricocheted off catcher Ryan Jeffers' knee and hit him in the chin, causing him to bite his tongue, it occurred to manager Rocco Baldelli that he might need to conscript a pitcher into the batting order — and at another position.
"They've asked me about that before — could I do it? I mean, I would love to, absolutely," the righthanded reliever said. "Short bench today. I knew we were short due to the [virus] going around, so when I saw Willi [Castro] and Joey [Gallo] come into the game, I thought, hmm, it could happen."
That's what Baldelli thought, too, and he insisted afterward he's not afraid to put himself in that position.
"How many games have we ever run out of players? Could it happen at some point? Absolutely," the manager said. "It's not likely. Knock on wood, hopefully, it doesn't happen this year. But we're going to use our guys to try to win a ballgame. That's what they're there for."
Jeffers, though, wasn't going to be the reason a pitcher had to play the field. He signaled for the trainer right away because his mouth was bleeding, but he insisted he could stay in.
In the dugout, Baldelli and his coaches mulled options if Jeffers couldn't play. Cole Sands was considered, and Pablo López, too. Kenta Maeda always wants to do more than pitch, but trying that as he is coming back from elbow surgery seemed reckless.
Pagán was the obvious choice, Baldelli said, because he played third base at Belmont Abbey College a little more than a decade ago, but he was going to be needed to pitch if the game went another inning. "You might have to move him to a position and then have Jovani Moran [pitch] and then [have them switch places] if you're forced to," Baldelli said. "We had a few options."