The weather didn't break any records on Monday. Just some bats.
The temperature at Target Field when Vance Worley threw the first pitch of the 2013 season was 35 degrees, only slightly higher than the 33 degrees that the 1962 Twins faced at Metropolitan Stadium 51 years ago. Not that those 2 degrees meant much on the field.
"In the sun, it wasn't bad," said Detroit star Justin Verlander, who earned the victory with five shutout innings as the Tigers beat the Twins 4-2. "As soon as the shade set in, it was a different ballgame. It was miserable."
The Twins certainly agreed, and said that, while the 15 miles-per-hour wind wasn't too much of a factor, thanks to the stadium's below-street-level playing field, the contrast with six weeks of spring training definitely was.
"You can't prepare your body for that. We've been where it's warm," Twins designated hitter Ryan Doumit said. "You can kind of run around out there as best you can, but you can't simulate that [ahead of time]. There were 18 cold guys on the field today."
So naturally, the game lasted nearly 3½ hours.
"I couldn't feel my hands" by the end, Tigers right fielder Torii Hunter said. "I was closing my eyes and swinging."
Showing how it's done
It didn't take Hunter long to victimize his former team for a new team. One at-bat, actually.