tool name

close
tool goes here

Clement: ‘I've still got a uniform on'

FORT MYERS, Fla. — In a way, it’s a little odd that the Minnesota Twins would sign Jeff Clement and assign him a spring training locker four stalls away from Joe Mauer. It’s not as if Clement has a contagious disease or anything, but he definitely serves as a reminder of how “sure things” occasionally can go wrong. And how much punishment the body absorbs behind the plate.

Published: March 6, 2013 at 12:05 a.m. PST
0 comments
Former Mariners top draft choice Jeff Clement has turned in his catcher’s mitt for a first baseman’s glove and a shot at the Twins. (DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)

FORT MYERS, Fla. — In a way, it’s a little odd that the Minnesota Twins would sign Jeff Clement and assign him a spring training locker four stalls away from Joe Mauer. It’s not as if Clement has a contagious disease or anything, but he definitely serves as a reminder of how “sure things” occasionally can go wrong. And how much punishment the body absorbs behind the plate.

Their résumés are so similar, it’s spooky. Clement and Mauer are catchers who were born in the Upper Midwest in 1983. They each earned national attention for their high school exploits, and they both originally were drafted by the Twins. Mauer, the first overall pick in 2001, turned pro right away. But Clement decided to attend Southern Cal, where he became so highly valued, he was chosen almost as high — third overall by Seattle in 2005 — as Mauer in baseball’s amateur draft.

Both were projected to be future All-Stars, about as certain a payoff as a baseball team can ask for.

But while Mauer flourished almost right away, Clement took far longer. Too long, in fact — because as he gradually began to gain confidence as a hitter, his body betrayed him.

And this is the part where Twins officials, with $138 million still owed Mauer, might want to avert their eyes.

“My (left) knee just couldn’t do it anymore,” Clement said of a gradual deterioration over several seasons. “I felt like I was improving as a player every year, but it all got washed out by the (three) knee surgeries. And catching was the main reason I got hurt.”

A torn meniscus in 2006. Two ligaments scoped in 2008. And when the pain in his knee gradually grew worse in 2010, his surgeon used the word that pro athletes fear: microfracture.

“At that point,” Clement said, “it was very clear that my everyday catching days were finished.”

But not his baseball career. As his knee worsened, Clement began the transition to first base, and he’s in camp this year trying to earn a backup job at the position with the Twins, the team that brought him to the Metrodome for a workout more than a decade ago before drafting him in the 12th round.

“I guess I’ve come full circle now,” said Clement, who set a national high school record with 75 career home runs for Marshalltown, Iowa. “They drafted me a long time ago, and I’m finally here.”

Question is, can he stay here? That will depend, the Twins say, on his bat. Manager Ron Gardenhire would like to beef up his bench, and the left-handed Clement is confident he can reclaim the stroke that made him a .282 hitter with decent power in the minor leagues.

“He’s putting it into play, so he’s been fun to watch,” Gardenhire said of Clement, whose short stints with the Mariners and Pirates produced only a .218 average and 14 homers in 152 total games. “I think he’s comfortable here, and that’s a good thing. He’s going to be in some pinch-hit situations; he’s going to come off the bench.

Pinch hitter. Backup first baseman. It’s not exactly what Clement envisioned after winning the Johnny Bench Award at USC, but he’s come to terms with it.

“I don’t dwell on it. Being drafted as highly as I was, I would have thought by now I would be in a different position, but I’m not,” Clement said. “The bottom line is, I’ve still got a uniform on, and that’s what’s important.”

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • Twins bats come alive at Fenway

    Twins lefthander Pedro Hernandez, pitching with a heavy heart Wednesday, lasted only two innings. His struggles came, however, on one of those crazy Fenway Park nights. A night in which the Twins couldn't stop hitting

  • Jim Souhan: White Sox and Twins relegated to being a former rivalry

    The Twins blew it. With the White Sox in town, they could have given out the world's first profanity-spewing, bat-throwing bobbleheads, to honor what Ozzie Guillen and A.J. Pierzynski brought to this dearly departed rivalry.

  • Sheepish Youkilis reports to Yanks

    Teammates of Kevin Youkilis were waiting to razz him when the third baseman walked into the New York Yankees clubhouse Friday.

  • Red Sox compete sweep of Twins

    The best part of the game on Sunday - perhaps the series and the entire homestand - might have been the movie.

  • Red Sox compete sweep of Twins

    The best part of the game on Sunday - perhaps the series and the entire homestand - might have been the movie.