The Twins were crisp on Saturday afternoon and, thankfully, we're not talking about Coco Crisp.
If the Boston Red Sox had their way, Coco would be the Twins center fielder, lefthander Jon Lester would be in the starting rotation, and Johan Santana would be getting adulation in Fenway Park rather than boos in Shea Stadium.
We're only three weeks into the post-Johan era, but you would rather take your chances on the potential of center fielder Carlos Gomez and pitchers Kevin Mulvey and Deolis Guerra than to have a deal featuring a mediocre veteran (Crisp) and a capable lefty (Lester).
The crispness that a Cap Day audience announced at 34,210 witnessed Saturday in the Metrodome came in the field. This was a trademark of the Twins -- making plays -- during the franchise's Great Turnaround early in this decade.
The Twins were nothing special in this area last season, with the exception of Torii Hunter's ongoing excellence in center field. They finished in the American League's middle -- seventh -- in fielding percentage.
That was more an irritant than a primary reason for the Twins' finish below .500 for the first time since 2000.
The '07 Twins were so feeble with the bats that they were willing to sacrifice making plays for getting a few hits this season. The evidence of this was bringing in Mike Lamb to play third base and Brendan Harris to play second.
To counter this, the Twins also added Adam Everett, the very solid Houston shortstop who missed much of last season because of a broken leg.