PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. – Anibal Sanchez's three-week career with the Twins came to an end Sunday morning, a couple of hours before he was supposed to face the Rays. As Sanchez gathered his equipment for the one-hour bus ride to Charlotte Sports Park, manager Paul Molitor called the veteran righthander into his office to tell him that the Twins were releasing him instead.
"That was a tough one," Molitor said of the meeting. "I can't say he got a very large opportunity in the short time he was with us."
The reason had nothing to do with how Sanchez pitched this spring, General Manager Thad Levine said. It was about the Twins' increasingly crowded roster, and particularly the impending signing of free-agent righthander Lance Lynn. The Twins needed Sanchez's roster spot, but the bigger issue was that they could no longer deliver the innings they promised him when he signed.
"When we signed him, we did not have Jake Odorizzi, and we did not have something else in the pipeline," said Levine, referring to Lynn without confirming his arrival. "So really, the opportunity for real innings was dwindling. … We had represented an opportunity that was no longer there for him, so we wanted to give him every opportunity to get another chance with another big league team."
Sanchez pitched four innings in Grapefruit League play: two hitless innings vs. Boston on Feb. 27 followed by a six-run, five-hit outing vs. Pittsburgh on March 4.
By releasing him Sunday, the Twins owe Sanchez one-sixth of his nonguaranteed $2.5 million contract, or $417,000. Had they waited until Monday, the termination pay would have risen to $625,000.
Mauer bats leadoff
Joe Mauer batted leadoff Sunday for the first time this spring, but it wasn't really a signal that the first baseman might bat atop the order much this season, Molitor said.
"There's going to be times, maybe, whatever the circumstances might be — a day off for somebody or an injury — where he's always an option for that spot," Molitor said of Mauer, who batted first only three times last year, and eight times in 2016.
Mostly, Molitor said, Mauer batted first to make sure he batted three times before the customary mass substitution in the fifth inning.