There were three Most Valuable Players on Target Field on Wednesday, and this time the most valuable of those gentlemen was Dustin Pedroia, the Boston second baseman.
Pedroia's overall excellence was crucial in a 6-3 Boston victory that put the Twins at one up, one down in the new yard.
The American League's MVP from 2008 offered these contributions: an RBI double in the first, a home run that broke a 2-2 tie in the fifth and an over-the-head catch of a pop fly that prevented an early Twins rally against John Lackey, the expensive addition to Boston's rotation.
The Twins' MVPs did not have the same success: Joe Mauer (2009) had a scratch RBI single and an intentional walk in five plate appearances. Justin Morneau (2006) had a game-turning opportunity after Mauer's walk and popped out to leave the bases loaded.
There might have been an excuse for the M&M lads. First, it's going to take some time for our heroes to adjust to being wet when playing at home. And second, Mauer might have been exhausted from the trips to the mound required to consult with Kevin Slowey.
Tony Soprano was more willing to take suggestions from Dr. Melfi than Slowey seemed to be with his catcher. Slowey asked for new signals so often in the first couple of innings that you got the impression Mauer was going out to say, "Hey, Slow-man, you got to throw something."
Slowey's main problem came from the dynamic mite, Pedroia -- 5 feet 9 in the record book and 5-7 in reality.
The Red Sox selected him in the second round of the 2004 draft. He was a tremendous player at Arizona State, yet there was skepticism that a player so small -- even one playing in the middle of the infield -- could be worth a second-round selection.