A worn-out gray notebook sits in Derek Falvey's desk in a corner office at Target Field. The notebook made the trip from Cleveland, where the Twins' new chief baseball officer kept it in his desk at Progressive Field.
There are 150 pages filled with scouting reports about prospects from the Cape Cod Baseball League in 2007. It all brings back memories for Falvey, memories of how he got started in baseball, how he made his own break, and how his path to running his own baseball operations department began nine years ago.
"It means something to me," Falvey said. "I know it wasn't that long ago, but it's always important to me to look at that and say, 'Hey, that was the start. This was the growth point. Don't forget the work you put in, and put in that same level of work every day.' "
Falvey is now trying to remodel a franchise scarred by losing records in five of the past six seasons, one facing declining fan support. On Sunday, he will head to Washington, D.C., for his first winter meetings as the Twins' 33-year-old boss.
He will probably pull out the notebook one more time before he leaves. He will remember what it took to get his foot in the door and how far he's come in nine years.
Then he will set out to make the Twins a better baseball team.
Grass-roots start
Falvey was a relief pitcher for Division III Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., earning a degree in economics in 2005. During his senior year, he started his own company, one that helped develop small-business marketing strategies. That lasted two years.
"I came from a really blue-collar background," Falvey said. "Both of my parents did not go to college. I'm the first in my family to go to college, and my sister soon followed me. It wasn't like I had a lot of resources to support me, so I had to go build that on my own. The business was doing well enough that it could be sustainable, [but] I felt like I had a passion for baseball. I thought, 'How am I going to work in it? How could I potentially get a job?'