FORT MYERS, FLA. – The best news the Twins have received in recent memory arrived in the home clubhouse at Hammond Stadium early on Sunday morning. Around 8 a.m., Twins beat writers had started to assemble and Miguel Sano was sitting at his locker, talking in quiet fashion for brief moments with teammates and various coaches.
He was wearing a stocking hat and a light jacket, and yet just looking at Sano's 25-year-old mug offered assurance that the Twins' reports of an offseason commitment to conditioning had not been fiction.
Over the previous three winters, the Twins had presented excuses and made up yarns as to the workouts in which Sano was participating, alleged as they were to be taking place in either Florida, New York City or home in the Dominican.
A year ago on reporting date, he was enormous, and there was not one moment when an observer felt as if the Miguel Sano from the late summer of 2015 – the rookie Sano – would be seen in 2018, and maybe never again.
Many of us saw him becoming the closest thing the Twins have had to Harmon Killebrew as a power hitter after those first two months in 2015. By the time the Twins sent him to Class A Fort Myers last June 15 for rehab and conditioning, Sano's strongest potential seemed to be becoming one of the memorable busts in the six decades of the Twins.
Sano did make the All-Star team in 2017, even as the flailing was getting out of hand and playing at 280 pounds was becoming more of an issue. He took a foul ball off the shin in August, and since then, his career has consisted of injury-plagued misery.
It would be a mistake to get carried away without seeing a swing in an exhibition game, but the Miguel Sano who was in the clubhouse on Sunday morning took that possibility of becoming a baseball bust seriously and has done something about it.
We saw a hint of Sano confronting reality when he came back from the minors in late July 2018 and was 20 pounds lighter than the 290-plus that he had been at the start of the season.