WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. – Joey Gallo tries not to pay attention to his stats last season because it’s hard enough to hit without focusing on them.
With the Twins, his playing time dwindled in August and he was left off the postseason roster. He says he was genuinely surprised his numbers weren’t worse. He lived through a summer-long slump and the disappointment of not performing to his expectations.
“It’s not always going to go great,” said Gallo, now with the Nationals. “I mean, there is no ill will. I’m at peace with what happened. I wish I performed better for the team and that city, but I am still proud of what we did as a unit.”
Gallo, who was on a one-year, $11 million contract with the Twins, finished last year with a .177 batting average and a league-average .741 OPS. He hit 21 homers, which tied for the second most on the team, but he produced only 40 RBI. The other side of his power is he struck out in 42.8% of his plate appearances.
He was not activated to the Twins’ roster after a foot injury in early September.
“I totally understand what the situation was,” Gallo said. “There were guys playing better than me at the time and I was on a one-year deal, too, so I wasn’t inked for the future with them. They didn’t really have any ties to keep playing me. It was a mutual understanding that I knew I probably wasn’t going to be on the playoff roster. I worked as hard as I could to be ready if I did get called, but obviously I didn’t. That’s something I’ll have to live with.”
As Gallo stood in front of his locker Thursday, reflecting on his lone season with the Twins, the word he kept repeating to sum up his season was “strange.” He helped keep the Twins’ offense afloat in April when he hit .236 with seven homers and 14 RBI in 19 games.
Then it all collapsed.