Donaldson was 24 then, and still catching more than playing third base. But his game began to grow. He sweated the little details, worked on his swing, even played winter ball after the 2011 season. When Scott Sizemore injured a knee at the start of 2012 workouts, Donaldson got a chance to start at third base. He was sent to Sacramento twice that season, but he was never demoted again. He started barreling baseballs, playing strong defense and blossomed.
He batted .301 with 24 homers in 2013 and finished fourth in MVP voting. He batted .255 with 29 home runs and 98 RBI in 2014. Meanwhile, his agent was having a rough time getting Donaldson compensated. The Athletics ended up renewing Donaldson's contract before the 2014 season, when he had just over a year of service time and had little leverage. He ended up getting a $7,500 raise from 2013.
After the 2014 season, the A's dealt Donaldson to Toronto, where he hit .297 with 41 home runs and 123 RBI in 2015. His fire — yelling and chest bumping willing teammates before games were a couple of his antics — was perfect for a team learning to win, and the Blue Jays got within two games of the World Series. And he landed that MVP award.
He received a two-year extension worth $28.65 million after that. The second year of that deal was rough for Donaldson, who battled a calf injury for the majority of the season then was traded to Cleveland for a playoff push. He hit a combined .246 with eight home runs over 52 games. He needed the bounce-back season with Atlanta last year to re-establish his value.
The Twins, coming off their latest expulsion from the postseason at the hands of the Yankees — it's six consecutive postseason series losses now — bought in.
On Wednesday, Donaldson scrambled to his left while playing third base to gobble up a ground ball during an intrasquad game. He cut off shortstop Jorge Polanco while doing so, but then again, Polanco might not be used to someone who can go to his left that well.