Twins fans these past three years have learned to assuage the pain of losing by focusing on the farm system, by picturing a wave of young and super-talented prospects arriving in Minnesota and creating a dynasty.
Jim Pohlad isn't one of them. Byron Buxton, Miguel Sano, Kohl Stewart and lots of others might be just over the horizon, but the Twins owner understands that projecting championships and producing them are two very different efforts.
"We've been doing this for 30 years now. And a player who is not here yet is not yet a player," Pohlad said bluntly this week. "I've heard that for too long. People are excited about these [prospects], but they were excited in '85, '95, 2005. They're always out there."
No, as the second half of the Twins' 2014 season gets underway Friday with a 10-game homestand at Target Field, Pohlad is more interested in the team in front of him than one that right now is nothing more than dreams, hope and planning. "I'm a half-empty guy, I guess," Pohlad said.
And that's true when he looks at his last-place team, too. Others see improvement this season, however incremental. Pohlad sees a 44-50 record and five teams between the Twins and the final playoff spot.
"Right now, our stats say we're no closer to [a World Series] at all. There's just no denying that," he said. "Does it feel differently, the spirit? Yeah, but we're not that close to [success]. The World Series, you get there eventually on your won-loss record."
That's why the next 10 games, starting with this weekend's matchup with the Tampa Bay Rays, could be pivotal. They could position the Twins for a late-season charge, something the players believe is possible after a 5-2 road trip to end the first half — or they could trigger changes to the roster, the lineup and the rotation.
"That's something we hope we don't have to do. We hope we're in it all the way, but realistically, you never know," said catcher Kurt Suzuki, fresh off an All-Star appearance and playing for a new contract this winter. "I've been on teams in Oakland where they've brought up a lot of young guys in the second half to see what they can do. But the players can't control that kind of stuff."