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<issued>2006-07-21T11:00:00-07:00</issued>
<modified>2006-07-21T18:01:18Z</modified>
<created>2006-07-21T18:01:18Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/19/2006<br/>MINNEAPOLIS -- The July 31 trade deadline remains just a little over two weeks away, and the Twins aren't exactly sure how they will approach the anticipated date.<br/>Prior to the club's streak of winning 21 of 23 games, it had appeared very likely that the Twins would be selling in this year's market. But their run before the All-Star break and the continued strong play of the team has changed matters.<br/>"If we stay in the race, then we're not going to be in the seller mode, and that's the goal," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "The goal is to play good baseball and stay close with what we have.<br/>"We have a couple weeks here to decide [our approach], and that's good because it gives us a chance to see where we're going to be at here at the deadline and what we have to do."<br/>Much of the Twins' outlook hinges on the club's upcoming road trip. To remain in the race for the division, the Twins have to improve upon their 17-29 record away from home.<br/>The team has yet to win a division game on the road outside of Kansas City so far this season, and with the Twins approaching three games at Cleveland followed by three more at Chicago, there is no question this is a critical junction.<br/>"This road trip is going to be very big for us," Gardenhire said.<br/>There are a few areas that could be strengthened, such as adding another starter or adding infield and outfield depth. But the market dictates that there isn't a strong chance of that occurring.<br/>"It's going to be hard to find awful much right now," Gardenhire said. "So we'll go with our infield as long as it stays healthy."<br/>That means sticking with Nick Punto at third base despite the rumors that the Twins are shopping for an everyday third baseman. Punto's recent knee scare caused some concern, but as long as Punto is able to continue playing, the Twins will leave him as their starter at third.<br/>"I think he brings a lot to the lineup and has been very good for us if we can keep him out there on the field and healthy," Gardenhire said. "If he were not able to play, then you probably have to look for a third baseman if you can find one. But I don't think find too many awful big names out there that we can attack."<br/>Next step to return: Matt Guerrier is making his final step toward returning to the Twins from his broken right thumb injury. He leaves for a rehabilitation assignment on Thursday with Double-A New Britain.<br/>Guerrier will join the team in Erie, Pa., and is scheduled to throw one or two innings on Friday. The goal is to stretch Guerrier to around 50-60 pitches before his return, which likely will take somewhere between four or five outings. If everything goes well, Guerrier could be set to return during the team's next homestand when they host the Tigers on July 28-30.<br/>Before leaving on his rehab stint, Guerrier threw a simulated game of around 30-35 pitches on Wednesday afternoon. Everything seemed to go as anticipated.<br/>"He was letting it go pretty good," Gardenhire said. "He was using his breaking ball and his slider, and he threw his changeup, too."<br/>Guerrier got plenty of support in the simulated game, with teammates Jesse Crain, Kyle Lohse and Joe Nathan all wearing "Guerrier" jerseys and holding up a sign with cutout holes for their heads and the words, "You're Grrrreat!"<br/>It was much appreciated by Guerrier, who admitted there was a little extra adrenaline in his first real pitching experience since being sidelined on June 8 with the injury. Guerrier said there is still a bit of pain while throwing, which the doctors told him was normal.<br/>"It relaxed me a bit to see those guys," Guerrier said with a laugh. "My heart was beating fast and I had to step off a few times to just relax. I think maybe that made my hand feel better, too, with the adrenaline. I just hope there is more of that in a real game."<br/>Twins tidbits: Rondell White was slotted into left field for the third consecutive day on Wednesday. Gardenhire has been happy with the way the veteran has played since his return, but could give him a rest from the outfield for the club's day game on Thursday. ... According to Elias, the matchup between Francisco Liriano and Scott Kazmir on Tuesday was the first time in 80 years that two left-handed pitchers both 22 or younger and with at least 10 wins for the season went head-to head. The last time was Babe Ruth (Red Sox) vs. Harry Harper (Senators) on Aug. 12, 1916. ... Since the beginning of the 2003 season, the Twins are 235-10 when they hold a lead after seven innings.<br/>Down on the farm: Garrett Jones blasted his 13th home run of the season as Triple-A Rochester defeated Syracuse, 6-0, on Tuesday night. Mike Smith pitched a complete-game shutout, allowing just four hits and striking out 11. ... Daniel Matienzo doubled to drive home the only run in Double-A New Britain's 6-1 loss at Reading. ... Brandon Roberts went 4-for-5 with two runs scored in Class A Fort Myers' 8-4 victory over Jupiter.<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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<issued>2006-07-21T10:58:00-07:00</issued>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/19/2006<br/>MINNEAPOLIS -- The Twins didn't quite know what to expect from Rondell White when he made his return from a rehab assignment with Triple-A this past week.<br/>And frankly, neither did White.<br/>With his callup coming a bit earlier than expected due to the rash of injuries the Twins had in the outfield, White wasn't sure if his swing and his shoulder were ready to come back to the big leagues.<br/>An impressive night on Wednesday, when he belted two home runs and a double in the Twins' 7-2 victory over the Devil Rays, officially signaled the rebirth of the power hitter the club had expected when it signed him in the offseason.<br/>"It ranks No. 1," White said of how much this game meant to him. "With all the things I've been going through this year and how I've been struggling, it felt really good to come out and help the team and swing the bat well."<br/>White's timing couldn't have been better. Having lost three of their outfielders to the DL, the Twins needed a veteran to fill a hole. And having that veteran help carry the team to its sixth straight victory was a big boost.<br/>"[Twins general manager] Terry Ryan has been telling me that this guy is going to be a big lift for us in the second half, and this is a good start," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "And right now, because of the injuries, we need it."<br/>White's first homer came in the second inning, when the Twins trailed, 1-0. The 395-foot blast to left field off Devil Rays starter Jae Seo knotted the game at 1.<br/>The game remained tied until White's next at-bat in the fifth. Leading off the inning, White delivered another shot to left -- this one carrying 410 feet to put the Twins up, 2-1. It was the first multihomer game for White since Aug. 22, 2000, when he played for the Expos.<br/>The best part of White's night may have come when he came to the plate for his final at-bat. White was greeted by the fans with a standing ovation, to which White tipped his helmet.<br/>"It felt great, man," White said. "I've been struggling all season and those fans have been behind me."<br/>White's homer in the fifth sparked a four-run inning courtesy of a two-run triple by Nick Punto and an RBI sacrifice fly by Michael Cuddyer. The hit by Punto extended his hitting streak to 12 games.<br/>More runs were added to the team's lead in the sixth, as the Twins drove home two on a Jason Bartlett RBI triple and an RBI single by Luis Castillo.<br/>Every Twins batter recorded at least one hit, and Brad Radke continued his hot streak with another quality start.<br/>Radke (8-7) allowed just two runs, both coming on homers, on four hits. Besides the two mistakes, Radke was able to show good command, issuing no walks and throwing just 87 pitches over seven innings. Radke has not lost since June 3.<br/>"I felt I had good command of my fastball and had a pretty good breaking ball," Radke said. "I just kept them off-balance, and for a team that is going to come out swinging, they did that quite a few times tonight and I got quite a few quick outs.<br/>"I'm just so happy for Rondell," Radke said. "It's just great to see him have a night like that. ... Everybody felt bad for him [during his struggles], but he stayed professional about it and didn't get down on himself. He just kept trying and didn't give up."<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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<issued>2006-07-21T10:56:00-07:00</issued>
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<created>2006-07-21T17:58:42Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006<br/>MINNEAPOLIS -- The Twins have long believed that Justin Morneau could be the type of power hitter they've been lacking for nearly two decades. And with his numbers this season, he's certainly proving himself capable.<br/>One of the biggest reasons behind the change in the first baseman's power numbers may be due to Morneau's improvement against left-handers.<br/>Morneau has blasted nine homers off southpaws this season after recording just four last year. Some of those have come off impressive left-handers such as Cleveland's C.C. Sabathia and 22-year-old Devil Rays phenom Scott Kazmir on Tuesday. For Kazmir, it was only the third homer he has given up to a lefty over 341 career innings.<br/>So what exactly has made the difference?<br/>For Morneau, it seems to be a combination of getting more playing time facing lefties and changing his approach. Early in the year, Twins manager Ron Gardenhire would often take the first baseman out of the lineup with a tough lefty starter. But in May, that changed as Gardenhire began sticking with Morneau -- good performance or bad -- and it's appeared to pay off.<br/>"Now, I come to the field knowing that I'm going to play," Morneau said. "Earlier in the year, I was looking over my shoulder a bit because you never know if you're going to get pinch-hit for, or what. It never happened, but when you are struggling and the team is not doing well, it's easy to try to make changes. Gardy stuck with me and kept putting me out there and letting me face them, so he showed confidence in me, too."<br/>The result of keeping Morneau in against lefties has been an overall increase in his average from .201 against southpaws in 2005 to .281 through 88 games, heading into Thursday, this season.<br/>"He's swinging the bat good and if they make a mistake, he puts a good swing on it," Gardenhire said of Morneau's changes. "He's not trying to do too much with it. He's been working very hard with [hitting coach] Joe Vavra, doing a lot of different things and it's all coming into play now. He's feeling very comfortable at the plate -- lefty, righty, it doesn't matter."<br/>Morneau isn't the only batter doing well against left-handers, as the entire Twins squad has improved its numbers. The Twins are hitting .287 vs. left-handed pitchers, the third-highest average in baseball, compared to last season when they hit a Major League-low .247 vs. lefties.<br/>It's something that teams used to be able to count on when facing the Twins with a left-handed starter, but that clearly has changed.<br/>"Cleveland set up its rotation so that it could throw three lefties against us the last series," Morneau said. "That's how it used to be, you throw a lefty against us and it messed us up. But we're proving that the more you see them, the better chance you are going to have at having success."<br/>Bring on the burns: The Twins have been a part of some pretty funny game promotions, but none may be more entertaining than the one the club recently announced.<br/>The Twins, along with sponsoring partner Mall of America, will host "Joe Mauer Sideburn Night" on Thursday, Aug. 10 when the club plays the Toronto Blue Jays at 7:10 p.m. CT.<br/>As part of the promotion and in honor of Mall of America's 14th birthday, the first 10,000 fans will receive replica Joe Mauer sideburns. The synthetic hair will include double-sided tape so that fans themselves can look like Mauer.<br/>The night is just part of an onslaught of attention being directed at the 23-year-old catcher and his impressive season. But for Mauer, it's still a little bit surprising that it's his sideburns that have been the topic of so many questions, along with being the focus of one of the Twins' commercials.<br/>"I don't know why everybody is so into my sideburns," Mauer said with a laugh. "It should be a funny day, though, to look in the stands and see people with blond and red hair wearing brown sideburns."<br/>Sticking with what works: The initial plan for the Twins had not been to keep Rondell White as the everyday starter in left field upon his return to the club.<br/>But with the way that White's been hitting since his callup -- going 8-for-14 with three home runs, six RBIS and five runs scored -- it's been almost impossible to take him away from the position.<br/>Though White never blamed his offensive woes on changing to the designated hitter role, it's becoming clear that maybe the extra time in the outfield has helped his confidence a bit.<br/>"With Rondell swinging like he's swinging out there and feeling comfortable, you're thinking that if this works out for him, and he's playing good defense, you're not going to change it," Gardenhire said. "You might mix it up every once in awhile, but I don't think you go and take a guy out when it appears that the outfield is helping the situation."<br/>Twins tidbits: Both Shannon Stewart and Torii Hunter will not make the upcoming trip with the team due to their inability to really do any type of rehabilitation with their injuries. Hunter will head home to Dallas to work on some weights, upper body work and throwing, while staying off his injured foot. "By the time we get back, Torii should have three or four days to be ready and that should be plenty for him," Gardenhire said. ... Mauer got a day of rest from catching during Thursday's day game. He was slotted in the DH role in order to keep his bat in the lineup. ... The Twins' 36 wins in their first 47 home games set a new franchise record, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The last time a team won at least 36 of their first 47 home games was in 1998 when the Yankees were 39-8, the Padres were 36-11, and both teams went to the World Series that season.<br/>Down on the farm: Boof Bonser threw five innings, allowing three hits as Triple-A Rochester beat Syracuse, 1-0, on Wednesday. Andres Torres went 2-for-4 with an RBI. In Game 2 of the doubleheader, Pete Munro lasted 5 1/3 innings and gave up five hits and four runs as the Red Wings lost, 4-2. ... Third baseman Matt Moses went 2-for-5 with four RBIs to push Double-A New Britain over Reading, 8-7. ... The club's Class A affiliates -- Ft. Meyers and Beloit -- were off on Wednesday.<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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<issued>2006-07-21T10:52:00-07:00</issued>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006<br/>MINNEAPOLIS -- The goal for the Twins coming out of the All-Star break was simple: Take advantage right away of an eight-game stretch at home, the place where they had played their best baseball all year long.<br/>Completing the homestand by winning seven of those games, including a 6-4 victory over the Devil Rays on Thursday afternoon, it appears that it was mission accomplished for the Twins.<br/>"We were hoping out of the break that we could get off to a good start, heading into this upcoming road trip," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "And that's exactly what we did. Right now, we're playing good baseball."<br/>After completing a four-game sweep of the Devil Rays on Thursday, it didn't take long for the focus to shift to the team's six-game road trip, as the Twins take on two of their American League Central rivals -- the Indians and the White Sox.<br/>The Twins have yet to pick up a win in either Cleveland or Chicago this season, as part of a woeful year of road play where the club is just 17-29 away from the Metrodome. So these two series have long been circled as what could be a turning point for the club and its postseason hopes.<br/>"These next two series on the road are a big test for us," closer Joe Nathan said. "We're going to need to start playing well on the road, and that's especially the case within our division."<br/>But before the talk could turn to playing their division rivals once again, the Twins had to concentrate on picking up that seventh straight victory at home.<br/>The Twins felt very comfortable heading into Thursday's finale with their ace, Johan Santana, taking the mound, knowing that, if they could score some runs, they would have a great chance at winning.<br/>But they would need those runs even more than expected.<br/>Santana didn't have his best outing of the year, as he struggled to find control, especially in the fifth inning.<br/>With the game knotted at 1, after Santana had given up a home run to Travis Lee in the third inning, the southpaw had trouble finding the plate. He walked three batters and allowed two runs on two hits to put Tampa Bay ahead, 3-1.<br/>Even more troublesome was the fact that it totaled up to be a 30-pitch inning that shortened Santana's outing to just six innings, as he threw a total of 101 pitches, giving up three runs on six hits, while walking four and striking out seven.<br/>"I think I had the worst performance of the starting pitchers in this series, and yet we still ended up with a win," Santana said. "Whatever it takes for you to keep winning and winning, that's all that matters. It doesn't matter for me if I had a good day or a bad day, as long as I do my best to help this ballclub."<br/>But in the bottom half of the inning, one that the Twins like to call "the fifth-inning misery," the club was finally able to take advantage of Devil Rays starter James Shields and put together a run that would help overcome Santana's problems just a half-inning before.<br/>The Twins scored four runs in the fifth, as Shields (4-4) allowed four hits, two walks and delivered a wild pitch that saw Jason Tyner cross home. Shields recorded just one out in the inning before being pulled.<br/>Mike Redmond jumpstarted the Twins' fifth-inning rally, leading off with a double to center field. Tyner followed with an RBI single to pull the Twins within one, 3-2. Two walks and a wild pitch would knot the game at 3, before Joe Mauer drove home the go-ahead run with a single to right. Michael Cuddyer added one more to the lead with his RBI single to left.<br/>The Twins gave the bullpen one more run to work with, as three pitchers combined to hold Tampa Bay to just one run over the final three innings. Pat Neshek struck out the side in the seventh, while Juan Rincon gave up one run in the eighth. Joe Nathan came in to pitch the ninth and recorded his 18th save of the season.<br/>For the Twins, it was just another day where almost every person on the field helped to capture the club's 20th victory at home.<br/>"That is what it takes, everyone to be a part of it, so we can continue to capture wins," Gardenhire said. "We have to find a way to do that on the road now, as it's going to be a big series for us facing Cleveland and Chicago."<br/>This road trip comes at a critical juncture for the club, with the team trailing the White Sox by just four games in the Wild Card race. Winning certainly hasn't been a problem for the club at home, where they have a Major League-best 37-11 home record. But the road has been an entirely different story.<br/>"We're playing perfect here at home, so hopefully, we can find a way to make it that way when we're on the road," Santana said.<br/>The goal for the Twins, now, isn't to try and replicate the success they've had capturing sweeps at the Metrodome, but rather, just to do what will keep them squarely in the postseason hunt.<br/>"At this time of the year, you have to win series," Gardenhire said. "That's what it's all about. We have to get back to winning series on the road. We're trying to win two out of three, that's the goal. And if we get more than that, that's great."<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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<issued>2006-03-24T10:14:00-08:00</issued>
<modified>2006-03-24T18:15:18Z</modified>
<created>2006-03-24T18:15:18Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/01/2006<br/>FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Left-hander Francisco Liriano didn't have his best command, but got through two innings unscathed against Concordia University on Wednesday morning.<br/>For a first spring outing, Liriano will take it.<br/>"It was kind of weird being out there," Liriano said. "I hadn't pitched to a hitter since September last year."<br/>Liriano will use Wednesday's outing as a springboard to the World Baseball Classic. He'll leave the Twins to pitch for the Dominican Republic.<br/>"I think I'm ready for it," Liriano said. "My slider wasn't very good today. I'm working on it. I probably threw five or six sliders."<br/>Twins manager Ron Gardenhire was just happy to see Liriano get in his two innings as Minnesota prevailed, 2-0, in six innings.<br/>"He was missing the plate a little bit, but he was throwing the [heck] out of the ball," Gardenhire said.<br/>Bouncing back: There are no givens, but Gardenhire emphasized Wednesday that first baseman Justin Morneau has put in the work to have a strong comeback season.<br/>Morneau hit just .239 in 141 games last year.<br/>"He has come down here and really worked hard," Gardenhire said. "He has a program every morning at 7:30. He has shortened his stride and is using his hands a lot better.<br/>"He got out of whack [last year] and once he did that, he had a hard time getting back to where he was consistent."<br/>Morneau will leave the Twins' camp to play for Canada in the World Baseball Classic.<br/>Around the horn: The Twins are encouraged that right-hander Juan Rincon doesn't appear to have any arm issues. "He threw off the mound today and we'll see if he has any soreness tomorrow," Gardenhire said. "He has been throwing long toss free and easy." ... With the intense competition for jobs, there has been an overall serious atmosphere in the Twins camp. "We were talking about it the other day in our 'good morning' drills," Gardenhire said. "Normally, there's some joking around and laughing. But there are some guys locked in right here. They know that not many jobs are open." ... The Twins have set their starting pitching for the opening four Grapefruit League games, including the split-squad games on Saturday. It'll be Johan Santana on Thursday versus Boston, Brad Radke on Friday against Cincinnati, Scott Baker on Saturday against Tampa Bay and Boof Bonser on Saturday versus Cleveland.<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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<issued>2006-03-24T10:13:00-08:00</issued>
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<title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Stingy Twins rotation in control</title>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/01/2006<br/>FORT MYERS, Fla. -- They are poised, polished and seemingly always in control.<br/>For the Twins pitching staff, control is the operative word. Want to get on base against Minnesota? You'd better be ready to swing the bat. Wishing and hoping for a walk generally gets you a one-way ticket back to the dugout.<br/>Last year, with starters Carlos Silva and Brad Radke setting the tone, the Twins led the Major Leagues in fewest walks with 348. It wasn't even close. Cleveland was second with 413 walks and the Astros and Red Sox were tied for third with 440 walks.<br/>There's nothing to indicate the Twins won't blow the competition away again in the fewest walks category, especially with Minnesota pitchers taking their cues from longtime control guru Radke.<br/>"This organization really stresses not walking guys," Radke said. "I think that as a staff, we've sort of been able to feed off each other in that regard. You learn. I know that when I walk guys, most of the time they are going to score."<br/>Silva led the league in fewest walks per nine innings (0.4) last year, finishing with just nine walks in 188 1/3 innings. Radke surrendered just 23 walks in 200 2/3 innings and Johan Santana and Kyle Lohse had 45 and 44 walks in 231 2/3 innings and 178 2/3 innings, respectively.<br/>"I always try to be around the plate," Radke said. "Sometimes, it backfires. There are times, depending on the situation, where you might want to be a little more off the plate and a little more careful. But for the most part, we're about putting our defense to work.<br/>"The organization wants you to throw the ball around the plate so hitters put the ball in play and our defense has a chance to do its job."<br/>Silva was on pace to set a record for fewest walks per nine innings late in the 2005 season. Giving up a few singles doesn't bother him because he's so confident he can get a double-play ball with a well-located sinker.<br/>"As the season progressed, it was like, 'Holy cow.' Carlos has such a nasty sinker and throws so many ground balls that he can be really confident about making the hitters put the ball in play," Radke said.<br/>Outstanding control can help a ballclub in many ways. One short-term effect is that fielders are always on their toes and generally less likely to make an error when the ball comes their way. By avoiding walks, pitchers generally throw fewer pitches, which lessens the chances of injury or fatigue through the grind of a long season.<br/>"A lot of times, when a pitcher has a history of good control, the hitters will come up really revved to hit the first pitch," Radke said. "Sometimes that works out for them and sometimes it doesn't. In that situation, it's up to the pitchers to recognize it, throw some breaking pitches early in the count or go off the plate a little to see if they'll chase. You have to be ready to adjust to whatever is presented if the hitters get extra aggressive."<br/>Radke said Santana is a special pitcher because he has extraordinary stuff coupled with control.<br/>"He's amazing because he overpowers guys and still has finesse, too," Radke said.<br/>Lohse, though he hasn't gained the overall prominence of the aforementioned three, takes the mound with a similar attack-the-hitter mentality. And there's every indication that Scott Baker, Francisco Liriano and the other quality young arms on the Twins staff will fall in line with the control theme as their careers unfold.<br/>"Keep guys off the bases by limiting walks and you really give yourself a chance," Radke said. "Guys are going to get hits. But if you limit those free passes, they have to work a lot harder to put up runs."<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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<name>David</name>
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<issued>2006-03-24T10:12:00-08:00</issued>
<modified>2006-03-24T18:13:21Z</modified>
<created>2006-03-24T18:13:21Z</created>
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<title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Castillo likely to skip Classic</title>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/01/2006<br/>FORT MYERS, Fla. -- After saying prior to Wednesday's workout that he won't play in the World Baseball Classic, Twins' second baseman Luis Castillo left the door slightly ajar after practice. Castillo said he is leaning toward not playing for the Dominican Republic, but will talk with Dominican officials once more before a decision becomes final.<br/>"That's the way I feel now [that he doesn't want to leave Twins camp], but I have to talk to the general manager of the Dominican team," Castillo said.<br/>Castillo talked early in the day about the advantages of staying in the Minnesota camp.<br/>"For me, it's better to stay here," Castillo said.<br/>The Dominican team already has Alfonso Soriano on the roster at second base and Castillo said wants to concentrate on getting acclimated to his new situation with Minnesota after being acquired from the Florida Marlins.<br/>"I want to work hard and be ready for the season," Castillo said. "I don't want to have any problem for the season."<br/>Castillo was a three-time All-Star with the Marlins and won his third consecutive Gold Glove last season. He had expressed to manager Ron Gardenhire on Tuesday that he was undecided on whether to play in the Classic.<br/>
<br/>Source: http://minnesota.twins.mlb.com/</div>
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