As a player, Paul Molitor demonstrated competitiveness not with gestures or celebrations, but with stone-faced, head-first slides into spikes. As a coach, Molitor almost always masked his emotions.
In 2001, he hinted at the fires within. The baby Twins, having led the American League Central for most of the season, were ambushed by a veteran Indians team in Cleveland late in the season. Molitor, then coaching under Tom Kelly, thought the opponents and umpires were displaying disrespectfulness to his team. It took multiple people to keep him from bursting onto the field to physically make a point.
Last season, as the Twins lost 92 games, Molitor — promoted from coach to manager on Tuesday — again tried to remain below boiling temperature.
"There were times last year when we'd get on the team bus after a loss and Paul would look over at me and just shake his head," Twins assistant general manager Rob Antony said. "He had that look in his eye, like he was ready to explode. And I know that look, because I was sitting on that bus thinking, 'That was a game we should have won.'
"We won 70 games last year. I think we should have won 78. To go from 78 to 88, or something close, I don't think that's unreasonable. I think we should be competitive this year."
At his first news conference as manager, Molitor said: "I'm coming here to win."
His first order of business should be introducing a new mentality to the clubhouse.
During their four consecutive losing seasons, the Twins tried to exercise caution with injured or bruised players. Anyone complaining of an ache was given an extra day or two off. There is logic in that approach. There is also danger. The Twins clubhouse became a place where you could collect a check without actually taking the field.