When the Houston Astros visit Target Field starting Tuesday night, a familiar face will be waiting for them, a former teammate to many of the current Astros and one of the Twins' hottest hitters.
But not who you think.
Carlos Correa's right middle finger is still sore from being hit by a pitch last Thursday, and the Twins' shortstop is as likely to land on the injured list for a week as he is to face the team that allowed him to walk away as a free agent last winter.
Gilberto Celestino, however, hopes to build on the most effective month of his big-league career this week, and do it against the team that paid him a $2.5 million signing bonus just five months after his 16th birthday.
"He was a high-dollar, high-profile signing for the Astros," Twins president of baseball operations Derek Falvey said shortly after acquiring the Dominican outfielder, along with righthander Jorge Alcala, in exchange for current Astros closer Ryan Pressly in 2018. "Next to [Byron] Buxton, Gilberto may be the most natural center fielder in our system, in terms of going to get balls."
Next-to-Buxton, however, is a difficult spot to occupy on Minnesota's depth chart, given that the Platinum Glove outfielder leads the major leagues in home runs and is signed for the next seven seasons. Yet Celestino, despite having played only 72 games above Class A, has begun carving out a role for himself as a backup outfielder, having inherited the job from Jake Cave, who held it for four seasons.
"He's got a great feel for the position. He's a very instinctual, Jim Edmonds-type center fielder, not a true burner but someone who gets tremendous jumps and takes great routes," Falvey said, referring to the Angels' eight-time Gold Glover. "We exposed him to more playing time in left and right field at the alternate site in 2020, where those instincts continued to show up well, so we feel comfortable with him playing all three outfield positions."
And now, less than a year after his major-league debut, they feel more comfortable with Celestino in their lineup, too.