"Hey, Josh, we want you to sign here!" boomed the accented voice on the video. "Come join the Bomba Squad!"
Josh Donaldson knew the Twins were eager to get him to commit to Minnesota. Their offer to pay him at least $92 million made that abundantly clear. But this was different. This was attention-grabbing. The voice playing on his cellphone belonged to the player whose job he would be taking away.
"Josh, I'll move to first base for you," a smiling Miguel Sano said on the video he made shortly after signing a long-term deal of his own. "You're the only one I'll go to first base for!"
Only Donaldson knows how much Sano's cellphone sales pitch swayed his opinion, or whether it eased any fears about walking into an awkward situation with the incumbent Twins third baseman. It's pretty likely, actually, that his decision had already been made when he saw it. But the video, delivered during an early-morning round of golf by Donaldson's friend Mardy Fish, a former top-10 tennis professional and lifelong Twins fan, added a lighthearted final act to a monthlong recruitment effort and contract negotiation, the most expensive and potentially franchise-altering such undertaking in Twins history.
"I texted my dad right away — 'Josh says he's going to sign with us! I think we're going to get him!' " Fish said from Lake Buena Vista, Fla., where he and Donaldson are competing in the celebrity bracket of the LPGA's Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions. "It was exciting, just to know such great news ahead of time. I would have loved to tweet it, but I couldn't break his trust."
The news broke soon enough anyway. By nightfall, word had leaked that Donaldson, one of the 10 best all-around players in the game when healthy, had agreed to sign a four-year contract with the Twins with an option for a fifth season, the most expensive free-agent deal in franchise history.
"I saw him the next day at the pro-am [event]. I pulled the cart over, ran over and basically tackled him — 'We got our third baseman! We got our third baseman!' " Fish, a former Edina resident who estimates he watched 155 Twins games last summer, said with a laugh. "I don't know if I had anything to do with it in any tiny, tiny way. But I had been hoping for this for a long time."
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Since early December, it became clear that the Twins — thwarted in their efforts to sign their top target, righthander Zack Wheeler, and alternatives Madison Bumgarner or Hyun-Jin Ryu — had pivoted instead to upgrading their shaky infield defense and their record-setting offense. Had a pitcher accepted their multiyear offer, the Twins probably couldn't afford Donaldson, the team's decisionmakers believed. Without one, though, the 2015 AL MVP's combination of steady glove and stellar bat was an obvious choice.