Chattanooga Times Free Press

Twins powered by former Lookout

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

MINNEAPOLI­S — Given the green light to let his bat fly with a 3-0 count in the third inning of a game last month, Miguel Sano drove an inside fastball into the second deck above right-center field.

The announced estimate of 414 feet didn’t quite do that home run justice. Going so deep with an opposite-field swing was a feat of physical prowess few players other than Minnesota’s massive third baseman could pull off.

“Nothing is difficult in life if you’re positive,” said Sano, who played for the Class AA Chattanoog­a Lookouts in 2015 before his first call-up to the majors that summer. “In your mind, you can do whatever you want. When you stay positive, everything is good.”

Attitude is helpful. Fortitude, too.

“He’s someone at the plate you’re very mindful of every time he comes there, because you know something can happen,” said Chicago White Sox manager Rick Renteria, whose team witnessed that homer the Twins were still talking about in the clubhouse the next morning.

Sano had a greater goal on his mind, though, with the Twins unexpected­ly in the thick of the American League Central race.

“He whispers, and he’s like, ‘Playoffs. Playoffs,’” second baseman Brian Dozier said. “A couple of years ago, he probably wouldn’t have said it. His body has changed and everything. He kind of gets it now.”

As with his weight, which has been around 270 pounds for much of his major league career, the 6-foot-4 Sano must also make sure to keep that stout swing under control to stay on a thriving path.

Major League Baseball’s postmodern embrace of science and data has paved the way for the Statcast tracking system and with it another set of leaderboar­ds measuring the strongest sluggers, fastest runners and the hardest throwers to rival the traditiona­l races for most home runs, stolen bases and strikeouts.

Entering the weekend, Sano trailed only New York Yankees rookie sensation Aaron Judge (97.3 mph) with an average exit velocity of 95.2 mph on his homers. Eye tests that have long concluded Sano consistent­ly crushes the ball can now be proven with facts.

Analytics, though, aren’t the reason the 24-year-old will

“Nothing is difficult in life if you’re positive. In your mind, you can do whatever you want. When you stay positive, everything is good.”

— MIGUEL SANO

play in his first All-Star Game on Tuesday in Miami with plenty of family members from his native Dominican Republic in attendance.

“The Statcast thing is the worst thing for him, the exit velocity and all that crap of how far you can hit it and stuff,” Dozier said. “If he just stays with what he’s been doing, so short and just smooth and really quieting everything down, he’s got the power to do the same stuff.

“That’s the biggest thing: slowing the game down. He’s done a phenomenal job at the plate of doing that. You look at his walks. You look at his on-base percentage. He’s going to hit his homers. He’s going to strike out. That’s what it is, but he’s more discipline­d. He’s really, I would say, grown up in the baseball aspect of it.”

Sano led the Twins at their 85-game mark with 20 home runs, 61 RBIs, 51 runs and a .910 on-base-plus-slugging percentage, a formidable start that makes it easy to forget the majors-most 116 strikeouts through Thursday for a pace just short of the record 223 for the Arizona Diamondbac­ks’ Mark Reynolds in 2009.

What the Twins haven’t lost sight of, though, is the commitment Sano made to improve his conditioni­ng and defense entering his third year in the majors. The failed experiment of playing him in right field last year set an inauspicio­us tone for the whole season, a discouragi­ng setback from a rookie year in which he won the team’s MVP award with a mere half-season of play.

This time, Sano was more determined to make a greater impact. He’s not exactly a Gold Glove Award candidate, but he has a reliably strong arm and a surprising­ly agile body for its size.

“Work from 6 in the morning until 4 p.m., and then take a little break,” he said, proudly reflecting on his offseason regimen.

Count the player responsibl­e for catching his throws at the opposite corner of the diamond impressed.

“I can definitely see him a little more relaxed and even improving on the defensive side, too,” first baseman Joe Mauer said.

That’s the way leadership is built — with a display of maturity.

“Nowadays I think a lot of people want a finished product right away, and that’s just not how it works, especially in this game,” Mauer said. “He’s one talented guy. I see why everybody’s so excited and was so excited a couple of years ago.

“I’ve seen him asking a lot of the right questions — that progressio­n — and that’s fun for me to see.”

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miguel Sano, who played for the Class AA Chattanoog­a Lookouts in 2015 before being called up to the majors, is thriving with the Minnesota Twins this season. The 24-year-old third baseman, who had 20 home runs entering Friday, will play in Tuesday’s...
FILE PHOTO BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miguel Sano, who played for the Class AA Chattanoog­a Lookouts in 2015 before being called up to the majors, is thriving with the Minnesota Twins this season. The 24-year-old third baseman, who had 20 home runs entering Friday, will play in Tuesday’s...

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