Things will be different, Paul Molitor vowed Tuesday as he took control of a baseball team for the first time. The St. Paul native, hired as the 13th manager in Minnesota Twins history, might change elements as sweeping as the starting rotation or as mundane as the bunt sign. He understudied for Ron Gardenhire last season and has been in the Twins organization for a decade, but as owner Jim Pohlad said at Molitor's introductory news conference, "I suspect we'll see him doing a lot of things differently, during games and in the clubhouse."
Which is fine, as far as it goes. But those aren't the changes Molitor was hired to make. Fortunately, he also pledged to address the only transformation that matters: "I'm coming here to win."
"It's very important to lay that out there right from the start," Molitor said, despite the Twins' average of 96 losses over the past four seasons. "Things can change very dramatically at this level, very quickly. … I want [players] to believe they can win now. I hope to set that tone right away."
Nothing about his promotion to the Twins' top on-field job happened right away — General Manager Terry Ryan referred to the process as "our five-week ordeal" — but Molitor said the wait didn't bother him, especially considering how long it took him to get here.
"It's been a long journey for me. I've had opportunities to think about this for many years," the 58-year-old Hall of Fame player said. "I have no doubt I'm exactly where I'm supposed to be today."
And where he'll be next season: in the dugout. Molitor was the winner of what evolved into a three-man derby to become only the third Twins manager in 29 seasons, with Class AAA Rochester manager Gene Glynn and Red Sox bench coach Torey Lovullo the other two contenders. Pohlad flew to Los Angeles to meet Lovullo, summoned Glynn from Venezuela (where he's managing a winter-league team) for a one-last-look interview, and said he was impressed by both.
But he agreed with Ryan's recommendation that Molitor, who grew up about 10 miles from Target Field, fit the team's needs best.
"Any of the three would have been great, I had no doubt about that," said Pohlad, who insisted the decision was Ryan's, not his. "But Paul is an insider. He has a lot of institutional knowledge, about the team and the players coming up. Mostly, Paul's been a winner in just about everything he's done."