SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – The World Series had ended two days earlier, and that ultimate goal loomed large in the minds of players at Salt River Field. As the pitcher looked in for a sign, it wasn't difficult to imagine these same young players, potential All-Stars and maybe a future Hall of Famer or two, reaching their sport's biggest stage someday soon.
In fact, they are all wearing major league uniforms, save the obscure hats, giving this matchup between a soon-to-be Diamondbacks pitcher and Reds hitter a sheen of stars-in-waiting, of ... wait a minute, what's all the commotion?
"Joyce! Joyce! We're over here!" a booming voice bellowed from just behind the visitors dugout, breaking the silence and interrupting the concentration. The pitcher stepped off the rubber and glared while fielders relaxed a moment as two members of the night's sparse crowd connected across the diamond. "And get some nachos!"
OK, where were we?
"Yeah, the surroundings are all big-league here," laughed Jeff Smith, manager of the Glendale Desert Dogs. "But at the same time, you get reminders that you're not there yet."
No, but the Arizona Fall League, even with its unique combination of highly concentrated talent and laid-back atmosphere, can be a huge step in the right direction. For more than two decades, some of the best prospects in baseball — Derek Jeter, Albert Pujols, Bryce Harper and Mike Trout are among the alumni — have gathered in Phoenix each October to wear the uniforms of the Desert Dogs or the Saguaros or the Solar Sox, and extend their season by six weeks, an extra audition for those closest to the Show.
"It was designed to be sort of a finishing school for guys headed to the majors," said Mike Radcliff, Twins vice president of player personnel, who fills notebooks with observations about players from behind home plate. "It was the last stop for a lot of guys. Like one final test against the closest thing you can find to major league competition."
Yet competition isn't really what it's about, and that lack of intensity gives the AFL its odd mixture of pressurized significance and easygoing indifference. The 210 minor leaguers are here to play well and develop skills that will help them win — someday. But like spring training, winning each day's game is more a byproduct than a goal.