FORT MYERS, FLA. - Like most interested observers of the Twins, Josh Willingham was floored by General Manager Terry Ryan's decision to trade both Denard Span and Ben Revere last December. But the lumbering left fielder said he had another reaction to the moves, too.
"I looked at that as my opportunity to play center," Willingham deadpanned. "Always wanted to play center field."
Great. Yet another candidate.
OK, Willingham was joking. But like everyone else, he is intrigued by this spring's open competition to play next to him in the Target Field outfield this season, one of the most critical and certainly the most visible decision the Twins must make about their roster and their lineup over the next six weeks. The winner, after all, probably will lead off against Justin Verlander on Opening Day.
That's no easy task, but the Twins have a wide variety of petitioners hoping to take on the challenge. Trouble is, none of them ever has attempted anything this daunting.
"You tell yourself it's just baseball, it's no different than what I've been doing all my life. But the truth is, the big leagues are different," said Darin Mastroianni, the 27-year-old holdover whose five games of major league experience in center field make him the most experienced of the three top candidates. "It's exciting. A little nerve-racking. If I wasn't a little nervous about it, I'd be even more concerned."
Twins fans are a little nervous, too, because they are conditioned to expect excellence in center field. Kirby Puckett, Torii Hunter and Span rank among the best and most popular players in franchise history, and Revere became renowned for his incredible catches. Ryan resisted the urge to pursue a free-agent stopgap such as Scott Podsednik or Endy Chavez or an expensive solution such as Hunter or Michael Bourn.
"We felt like we have players in our system who are ready, or close to it, to grab the position and make it their own," Ryan said last month. "Now it's a matter of which one will do it."