A bandage stretched across Joey Gallo's left knee Friday in the Twins clubhouse. Considering all the serious injuries the Twins have dealt with already this season, it seemed almost refreshing to see one that could be treated by anyone with a medicine cabinet.
"My knees get banged up, just from sliding on dirt. And they never heal," Gallo said. "And once you slide, they open right back up. It's just part of the season."
Gallo's sore hamstring, though, has healed, or at least improved enough so he can play, though he wasn't in the starting lineup Friday. That too is just part of life amid a 162-game schedule, where every day starts to feel like mid-August. "It's started to get to the dog days, two months in," he said. "You're playing every day and guys are going to get beat up a little bit, and you'll be playing through different types of injuries."
Carlos Correa, too, has recovered enough from the plantar fasciitis that gave him pain on Wednesday, a huge relief to his team. The Twins didn't post a lineup until after 5 p.m. in order to watch the shortstop work out on the field and make sure he was able to move around without pain.
"Plantar fasciitis is a very difficult issue, because it's different for every single person that deals with it. I dealt with it for one year as a player, and never felt it again in my life," manager Rocco Baldelli said. "It was excruciating," but he was able to play with the pain, he said.
Twins, appropriately
Baldelli said he didn't know ahead of time Thursday that his wife, Allie, would be revealing on Instagram that the couple are expecting twin boys in September, but "we've been kind of quietly preparing" for the big arrival since they learned about it during spring training.
"We're really excited. There's going to be a lot going on," especially with the birth due during a possible pennant race, he said. "It's going to be great. We're going to need some help, though."
The couple's first child, Louisa Sunny Baldelli, will turn 2 in September, too.