A typical spring training camp normally starts with several days of increasingly intense workouts, then a week or so of live batting practice, leading up to the start of the exhibition season.
The Twins' hurry-up summer camp is already roaring past those mileposts.
Only four days into camp and one turn on the mound for most key pitchers, manager Rocco Baldelli said, the Twins will hold a lighter "regroup and recharge" workout Tuesday, then start actual gameplay, albeit only against each other. Baldelli plans to stage the first intrasquad game of camp Wednesday, and then switch to a more formal dress-rehearsal mode Thursday.
"Hopefully we'll even make that one more like a real game environment, with maybe some of the bells and whistles in the stadium," Baldelli said. "That will be good for all of our guys."
Music will play, perhaps even walk-up music, as hitters come to the plate, and those not a part of the game will be stationed in the stands behind the dugout, as they will during the regular season. It might sound like a small thing, but the manager believes trying to make these games, and the regular-season games as well, feel like they do in a normal season is helpful
"It keeps everyone's attention, helps guys stay locked in," Baldelli said. "We've talked about it a lot. There is a great energy when you show up to the ballpark and it's full of fans and the smells, and everything around you heightens the enthusiasm, even for us. So we're going to try to do that."
He's just not sure how. The Twins are consulting with other teams to brainstorm ideas about lessening the empty-stadium feeling, but have yet to settle on anything in particular. They might experiment with some ideas during camp, he said.
Meanwhile, Baldelli is happy with what he has seen on the field so far, saying: "Our guys have given us really good, full workouts. Pushed themselves, their legs. They've been throwing the ball and probably getting more [work] in than they have in a long time. They've gotten plenty of swings."