KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Luis Arraez is off the crutches. Now he's on the clock.
The Twins must inform MLB which 25 players will face the Yankees in the AL Division Series by 9 a.m. Central time Friday, and Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said Sunday he plans to wait out every one of those roughly 6,000 minutes before deciding whether Arraez will be one of them.
"We're going to take this roster decision all the way up to the very end. There's no reason not to," Baldelli said before the Twins lost to the Royals 5-4 on the final day of the 2019 regular season. "We're going to do as much treatment as you can possibly do on someone between now and this Friday, and then we'll see where we're at."
Arraez collided with Willians Astudillo while trying to catch a popup on Saturday, an incident that has put the rookie infielder's availability in question for at least the first round of playoffs. Arraez underwent a magnetic resonance imaging test Sunday morning, and the results sparked renewed optimism in the Twins' clubhouse: No structural damage in his right leg, knee or hamstring, and only minor damage to his ankle. The injury was diagnosed as a Grade 1 sprain, the least severe.
"It wasn't a situation where we found any [more damage]," Baldelli said. "So he's going to basically be working on flexibility and getting to a point where he's weight-bearing, hopefully, in the near future."
He wasn't there yet on Sunday. Arraez, whose .334 batting average broke Tony Oliva's club record for a rookie, had ditched the crutches he used to leave the ballpark one night earlier, but he was far from recovered. The 22-year-old Venezuelan was limping badly in the team's clubhouse, walking slowly and gingerly to keep the weight off his leg.
"Fingers crossed," Baldelli said. But Arraez's status creates some complications for the manager as he deliberates over his roster.
Under major league rules, once a playoff team turns in its roster, it cannot make changes during the postseason series unless an active player gets hurt. If Arraez's ankle isn't healed enough for him to play on Friday, the Twins must decide whether to carry him anyway, in hopes of using him later in the best-of-five series, or rule him out completely.