FORT MYERS, FLA. – Minor league baseball was not played in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The players with early assignments to those teams with the Twins also would not assemble for 2021 spring training until March 30, after the big-league club had departed to open the season in Milwaukee.
Which meant this: The Twins’ spring training assembly in 2021 included 40 players on the big-league roster, 21 traditional invitees to camp, and 14 minor leaguers termed “depth players.”
Even as players started to leave the big-league clubhouse, the Twins were taking a look at the pair of “depth” pitchers: righthanders Josh Winder and Matt Canterino, both seen as potential starters by 2023, at the latest.
They were both a touch older than prior generations of hot prospects: Winder, drafted in the seventh round in 2018, was 24, and Canterino, drafted in the second round and signed with a $1.1 million bonus in 2019, was 23.
There was a reason for that, of course. They didn’t get to play a competitive season in 2020 — a lost season that put many prospects behind schedule for reaching the big leagues.
The hopes the Twins carried for Winder and Canterino were on display on a sun-splashed late morning at Hammond Stadium in March 2021.
The Twins had an away exhibition game vs. Tampa Bay, with most of the regulars not making the trip. Six of those regulars were taking batting practice on the main diamond.
Those big-league bats would face Winder and Canterino. Winder would face five batters, then go sit in the dugout, replaced by Canterino, doing the same.