FORT MYERS, FLA. - Pepperdine University, nestled among 830 acres that overlook the Pacific Ocean, has been ranked as one of the most beautiful college campuses in the world.
It was there that Trevor Plouffe completed his course of Outfield 101. Plouffe spent much of his offseason continuing his transformation from shortstop to outfielder -- and clearing his mind after a 2011 season during which he struggled mightily when given the chance to take over at shortstop.
Plouffe, a first-round pick in 2004, batted .238 with eight home runs and 31 RBI in 81 games over two call-ups to the majors. He committed 12 errors, many of them with his arm, and his mistakes exposed a farm system that failed the Twins when they needed to replace injured players.
The Twins used Plouffe in the outfield in 13 games last season, but it wasn't until General Manager Terry Ryan called Plouffe in October that the move to the outfield became official.
So it was back to school for Plouffe, who was drafted out of high school but lives a few minutes away from Malibu, Calif., where Pepperdine is located.
"They opened their facilities up, so they have a weight room to work out in and cages we can hit in," Plouffe said, "What was nice for me was that they had practice where they would hit on the field. I would get to shag their [batting practice]. I would go out there as much as I could, pretty much every day I was out there. A couple rounds a day and just seeing balls off the bat. This is the best way for me, taking the balls off the bat."
Part of him feels bad about leaving a position he's played for so long, but when Ryan explained that the move helps the club and that they were going to add Jamey Carroll to solidify short, Plouffe said he was all for it.
"I didn't play well last year in the infield," Plouffe said. "I wasn't happy about it. I thought I was a better shortstop than I showed. At the same time, like Terry said, this is a move that helps our team and I'll give that up 100 times out of 100 to not experience the losses like we had last year. The main thing that everyone wants now in this clubhouse, after experiencing last year, is just winning. By any means."