KANSAS CITY, MO. – Josh Donaldson wrapped a strap around his waist and pulled large barbells in the Kauffman Stadium dirt several times before Friday's game. He jumped up and down on one foot. He took a couple of quick three-step bursts forward and back.
Then he conferred with two members of the Twins' medical staff, and went back inside. And 10 minutes later came the verdict: Not yet.
Donaldson's pregame test of his sore right calf convinced the Twins that their new third baseman needs more time, and they put him on the 10-day injured list to get it. The move is backdated to Tuesday, which means he will be eligible to play once the Twins return to Target Field next Friday.
Following the Twins' 3-2 loss to Kansas City on Friday night, the team used Donaldson's open roster spot to activate righthander Jake Odorizzi, who is making his first start of the season on Saturday night. Marwin Gonzalez and Ehire Adrianza figure to get most of the playing time while Donaldson is out.
"He looks fine to the eye doing a lot of these things, but we are going to make sure this is not going to be a long-term issue," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said of Donaldson, who missed parts of the 2017 and '18 seasons because of calf issues. Donaldson left the game against Cleveland on July 31 because of tightness in his right calf, but the Twins did not immediately put him on the injured list in hopes he could recover quickly. But progress has been slow.
"Even if you're close with a muscle injury and you're able to do a lot, it doesn't mean you're 100 percent," Baldelli said. "I want to make sure he's 100 percent out there."
Buck banged up
Donaldson isn't the only player trying to figure out how to deal with lingering soreness. Center fielder Byron Buxton admitted Friday that, 11 months after a surgeon stitched up the labrum in his right shoulder, he still occasionally feels minor pain in it. And his left foot, sprained during an intrasquad game July 13, still has minor flare-ups, too.
Which probably makes his sudden power display even more impressive.