FORT MYERS, FLA. - Jason Bartlett thought he was in a three-way battle for the Twins starting shortstop job this spring.
He wasn't counting Trevor Plouffe.
But in a moment only spring training can provide, the 19-year-old Plouffe staged a one-man coup Friday, stealing Bartlett's spot during a 3-1 victory over the New York Yankees.
The Twins had invited Plouffe (pronounced ploof) to spend a game with the big league squad, rewarding the promising 2004 first-round draft pick who has yet to climb above Class A.
In the sixth inning, bench coach Steve Liddle told him to be ready. Plouffe apparently took that to mean he was going in immediately. When the inning ended, Bartlett was supposed to remain at shortstop, but the kid was already in his spot, taking ground balls.
"He just ran out to shortstop!" Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said, laughing hysterically afterward. "He took [Bartlett] out! He just went in! ... That's why you never know what might happen in this game. You turn your back for one second, you've got a whole new team out there."
Bartlett had a good chuckle, too, even though it cost him an at-bat. He was 1-for-2, singling and grounding out against All-Star lefthander Randy Johnson.
Plouffe took his turn in the seventh inning, popping out against Yankees minor leaguer Jose Enger Veras.