PHOENIX — Carlos Correa takes pride in never giving less than his best during a game, in competing his hardest no matter the score or situation. So even he had to grant grudging respect for the few dozen Seattle fans who, in the ninth inning of a dreary Mariners shutout loss Wednesday, hung around to vociferously boo him one last time.
"They stayed to the end," noted Correa, who struck out to exaggerated cheers. "That's pretty good."
Two and a half years after the most serious sign-stealing scandal in baseball history erupted, Correa has discovered that changing teams, swapping an Astros jersey for a Twins one, has not caused baseball fans to forget, and certainly not forgive, his role.
In Fenway Park in April, the boos began during batting practice, and there were brief chants of "Cheat-er! Cheat-er!" during his at-bats in the series finale. In Seattle last week — facing a team that Correa's Astros played 19 times per season during the time they were stealing signs via television cameras and relaying them via trash cans — the boos for the Twins' shortstop were perhaps the loudest they've been this season.
But the jeers have been evident to some extent in every road ballpark the Twins have visited in the season's first nine weeks. And they've even crept in occasionally at … Target Field?
"Yeah, when the Yankees or Dodgers come to town," Correa said. "Twins fans are terrific. They've been terrific to me and my family. But it's not all Twins fans [who are] there."
Here's the thing about the boos, though: Correa has discovered that familiarity breeds not contempt, but futility. If those booing so loudly hope to break his determination or inflict some psychic punishment, he said, they're likely going to be disappointed.
For one thing, he's batting .304 into this weekend, has an OPS of .829, and owns an OPS+ — a production-in-context statistic he says he values above most others — of 141, second-highest of his career. He's earning $35.1 million this summer, the most ever by a Twin. His manager, Rocco Baldelli, spoke of him last week as an obvious choice to represent the Twins in the All-Star Game.