It's tough to gauge public sentiment these days. Online, anger dominates.
What you hear from angry voices about Joe Mauer is that he is overpaid, fragile and powerless. That he should have left his newborn twin daughters last week to return to Seattle in time to help his team over the weekend.
Whether that's what most people think or not, that's what you hear from the loudest voices, and they're wrong.
Mauer deserved criticism at times early in his career when he wasn't always eager to play. He deserved criticism in 2011 when he looked reluctant to rush back onto the field following his so-called "bi-lateral leg weakness." He failed that summer as a franchise player either by appearing less than eager to play, or by refusing to satisfactorily explain his absence.
Between those lapses, and since the latter, Mauer has been everything the Twins expected him to be. He has won three batting titles, the first three by an American League catcher. He has won a Most Valuable Player Award, one more than Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett.
He has honored his St. Paul roots and St. Paul brethren like Paul Molitor, Jack Morris and Dave Winfield, by playing with intelligence and skill. He has played in six All-Star Games, two more than Justin Morneau and one more than Earl Battey.
When the Twins took the sideburned kid from St. Paul with the first pick in the 2001 draft instead of celebrated college pitcher Mark Prior, they could not have hoped for much more than Mauer has given them. He should play his entire career in his home state and enter the Hall of Fame wearing the cap of the team he cheered as a boy.
Now, the foremost Twin has fathered twins, just to show off. His wife, Maddie, delivered Maren and Emily early Wednesday morning, after Mauer had flown home from the Twins' series against the Angels in Anaheim, Calif.