FORT MYERS, FLA. - In a way, it's a little odd that the Twins would sign Jeff Clement and assign him a spring-training locker four stalls away from Joe Mauer. It's not as if Clement has a contagious disease or anything, but he definitely serves as a reminder of how "sure things" occasionally can go wrong. And how much punishment the body absorbs behind the plate.
Their résumés are so similar, it's spooky. Clement and Mauer are both catchers born in the Upper Midwest in 1983. They each earned national attention for their high school exploits, and they both originally were drafted by the Twins. Mauer, the first overall pick in 2001, turned pro right away. But Clement decided to attend college, where he became so highly valued, he was chosen almost as high -- third overall by Seattle in 2005 -- as Mauer in baseball's amateur draft.
Both were projected to be future All-Stars, about as certain a payoff as a baseball team can ask for.
But while Mauer flourished almost right away, Clement took far longer. Too long, in fact -- because as he gradually began to gain confidence as a hitter, his body betrayed him.
And this is the part where Twins officials, with $138 million still owed Mauer, might want to avert their eyes.
"My [left] knee just couldn't do it anymore," Clement said of a gradual deterioration over several seasons. "I felt like I was improving as a player every year, but it all got washed out by the [three] knee surgeries. And catching was the main reason I got hurt."
A torn meniscus in 2006. Two ligaments scoped in 2008. And when the pain in his knee gradually grew worse in 2010, his surgeon used the word that pro athletes fear: microfracture.
"At that point," Clement said, "it was very clear that my everyday catching days were finished."