FORT MYERS, FLA. — By the third and final inning of Sonny Gray's first competitive outing of the spring, catcher Ryan Jeffers realized Gray had a "problem."
He was pitching too well.
"He didn't have any runners on base because [he's] just carving it up out there," Jeffers said. But Gray, who struck out six of the first seven batters he faced Monday, wanted to pitch from the stretch instead of a full wind-up, wanted to vary the speed of his delivery as though a base-stealing threat was standing on first, wanted to see if he could pitch out of a jam, even if the Class AAA Worcester Red Sox hitters didn't appear capable of mounting one against him.
Thus motivated, Gray continued carving: Foul pop up. Routine grounder to short. Shallow fly ball to center.
"It was awesome," Jeffers said. "A guy who can move the baseball around, have that intensity on the mound, it's always fun for me. [Gray is] a guy who knows what he wants to do and how to execute it. And that's what he did."
Since Gray's throwing day happened to land on the Twins' lone day off during spring training, the former Athletics, Yankees and Reds pitcher was assigned to pitch for St. Paul for a day, with Twins pitching coach Wes Johnson supervising.
It was a mismatch. Using a fastball, cutter, slider and some hard-biting curveballs, Gray retired nine of the 10 hitters he faced, throwing 32 strikes among his 44 pitches, and getting ahead 0-2 on half of them.
"It was fun to do that. You get to two strikes, you know what to do when you get there," Gray said. "You have to know how to put guys away."