Once it became clear that Josh Donaldson, the walking symbol of the Twins' urgency to finally win in the postseason, could not play third base this week, Rocco Baldelli did what any championship-hungry manager would do: He tried to find something else for the former MVP to do.
"The question we had to answer was [whether] we were going to have Josh on the roster as a pinch hitter," Baldelli said of Donaldson, who on Friday reinjured his right calf, the same one that kept him on the sidelines throughout August. "We weren't going to be able to play him at third, we weren't going to be able to let him run the bases. So it was, 'Are we going to use him once a game to take an important at-bat for us?' "
The Twins clearly wanted the answer to be yes, and Donaldson was willing, Baldelli said, but their instincts toward caution prevailed.
"We didn't want him to push it if he was feeling something that he could potentially do some long-term damage to," said Twins President of Baseball Operations Derek Falvey, who signed the third baseman through 2023 for $94 million in January.
"Hopefully we're talking about it again after this series if we're lucky enough to move on."
Jettisoning Donaldson from the 28-man roster meant Marwin Gonzalez would play third base against the Astros, and the Twins added the pinch-hit bat Baldelli craved by promoting 2016 first-round pick Alex Kirilloff from their taxi squad.
The Twins also left Rich Hill, who threw 93 pitches Sunday and wouldn't be available anyway, off the roster, along with righthanded relievers Jorge Alcala and Sean Poppen. In addition to Kirilloff, they added a fourth catcher in Willians Astudillo and a pair of starting pitchers, Jake Odorizzi and Randy Dobnak, who will be available in the bullpen.
Odorizzi warmed up in the ninth inning Tuesday, but he did not appear in the game.