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Thursday, July 7, 2011

Mauer to first

Joe Mauer will make his Major League debut at first base tonight against the White Sox.

Many have called for the 27-year-old Mauer to switch positions full time because he's proven injury prone to this point in his career.

Opponents argue that until this year's strange bout with what was termed "bilateral leg weakness" that he had actually logged more innings than almost every big league catcher in the past five years. Furthermore, a good chunk of his value comes from being the best defensive catcher in baseball.

His numbers and his sweet stroke are special, but would they be as special coming from first base -- a position where gaudy offensive stats are more of a norm?

Mauer has resisted a long-term switch from catcher, and that's wise because of how valuable he is as a catcher. But will the occasional spell from squatting behind the plate donning the tools of ignorance be all that bad for his value?

Can Mauer be the type of player to catch four games a week, DH for one and play first for the other? Do the Twins have a competent catcher in the organization worthy of catching two games every single week besides Mauer?

What do you think? Vote in the poll on your opinion on the Mauer-to-first move. Drop comments if you've got something to say.

Twins and White Sox

The hometown Twins (38-47) are heading to Chicago to take on the Mighty Whities (43-45) in the final series before the All-Star break. There hasn't been a season in which Twins fans have scoreboard watched this much before the break in recent memory. In one of the weakest divisions in baseball, Twins fans have been teased into thinking the team is still in the division race. 


If that were the case, this is a huge series for both clubs. Minnesota has one six of its last eight games, but the starting lineup is still riddled with injuries.


Denard Span, Jason Kubel and Justin Morneau -- three huge contributors -- are sidelined indefinitely with injuries that vary in severity.


Scott Baker, the team's first-half ace, has a mild forearm and elbow strain and though not believed to be serious, will cause him to miss a start Sunday before the break against the Pale Hose. 


The Twins have been one of the best team's in baseball since June 1 and manager Ron Gardenhire deserves a lot of credit for continually winning with what most people consider a Triple-A lineup. That streak has gone largely unnoticed by national pundits and constant injury battles have dampened optimism within the state. Do they have enough healthy bodies to make a run at the Central?


This weekend could be an indication of which way the team is heading in the second half.