Nelson Cruz has something really unusual planned for his 40th birthday on Wednesday, but it's not exactly a party. For Cruz, in fact, it's the opposite.
"I'm not going to take any swings," Cruz said. "We're not allowed to go to [Target Field] yet."
Travel days aside, it's the first time since early February that Cruz will go 24 hours without wielding the bat that produced 41 home runs and baseball's third-highest average exit velocity last season. Cruz believes those explosive hitting sessions, a ritual he normally observes twice a day, are the reason that turning 40 isn't an occasion for cake and presents, for celebrating what he's already achieved.
He's too busy making sure he's not done.
"It's normal, I know, for people to say you're going to decline when you get to 40, to expect that," Cruz said shortly after arriving in Minneapolis for the start of the strangest season of his career. "But that doesn't have to be the case, not yet."
Cruz was enjoying the best spring training of his career, he says, when the pandemic hit and the Twins' camp closed down. "If you recall, every at-bat was a good at-bat. I felt like I was in control of everything out there," Cruz said of his .435 Grapefruit League average and team-leading three homers. "Unfortunately the virus came. I know [the regular season] might not be the same, but why not? I do everything possible to get ready — resting right, sleeping good, watching my diet, working out twice a day. It has an effect, and experience just makes you better, too. I do all the things you're supposed to do to stay sharp."
Sharp enough to keep him playing for several more seasons, Cruz said.
"I don't see it [soon]. A lot of people who retire from baseball do it because injuries start to come. They kill you during the game, and you don't want to be in pain," he said. "You start to not perform the way you used to, and the game takes you out. But my body is in good shape, and I'm doing everything I can to keep it that way. Why would I retire?"