DENVER – Justin Morneau wasn't going to do it. He was going to stay home and not participate in the Home Run Derby.
"I said if I was in the game I would like to do it," the Colorado first baseman said Friday, before the former Twins star faced his old team for the first time. "I'm not sure how I would feel if I wasn't in the game. Being there while not being selected, it would be one of those hard things to take. Maybe it would have been a pride thing or something else."
His wife, Krista, warned him of a different feeling he would have if he didn't return to the town where he played for 11 years and was American League MVP in 2006.
"My wife told me I would probably regret it if I was offered the chance and not do it," he said. "The kids will remember it. And that's one of the main reasons why, the family, the friends and all that stuff."
He also will be able to acknowledge a fanbase he said was great to him through the years. Morneau took out ads in Twin Cities newspapers when he was traded to Pittsburgh last August, thanking fans for their support.
Monday, he's looking forward to looking around Target Field and tipping his cap to them.
"That will be special," he said. "Everyone will be there for the event, they won't be there for me and I understand that. But it will be special for me to look around and see everybody and see all those familiar faces. It will be special and I hope I do well."
As for Friday's game, Morneau admitted it was strange to look across the field at the Twins. While he spoke in the Rockies dugout, Trevor Plouffe and other former teammates waved at him from the other side of the field. Morneau was able to chat with pitching coach Rick Anderson, hitting coach Tom Brunansky and assistant trainer Tony Leo.