FORT MYERS, FLA. - Justin Morneau noticed Delmon Young's constant texts filled with excitement about the upcoming season. Bill Smith noticed Young running from the Twins' clubhouse to the weight room, instead of waiting for the golf cart most players ride.
Ron Gardenhire noticed Young smacking a ball into the gap this week and sprinting for a triple. Michael Cuddyer noticed Young's dramatic weight loss. And Trevor Plouffe, perhaps Young's closest friend in the Twins' organization, noticed a newfound "maturity."
Young, the Twins' still young, still promising outfielder, looks transformed this spring, after a season in which he had to fight for playing time while mourning his mother's death.
Winter diets and workouts don't always translate to summer production, but Young has earned points throughout the organization for his work ethic and attitude.
"I just feel like I'll play like I'm supposed to play this year," Young said Thursday night.
Plouffe, the Twins' shortstop prospect, said Young admitted to feeling the effects of playing with excess weight last year "for the first time."
"He wasn't running like he wanted to," Plouffe said. "He wasn't getting jumps on fly balls like he wanted to. I saw him leg out a triple the other day, and he was really moving. He's running to first base hard. He looks like he's 19 or 20 again.
"He's going to have a big year. He's always worked hard, but this year I think the difference was the change in his diet and his strict regimen."