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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mauer’s patience paying off


Joe Mauer follows through on a single during a game against Baltimore.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Dave Campbell Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS – Joe Mauer is leading the majors in hitting, and makes it sound all so simple.

Patience.

The 23-year-old catcher for the Minnesota Twins with the smooth left-handed swing is hitting .386 in just his second full season.

“I’ve played with Joe a long time, and I’ve never seen him hit like this,” outfielder Jason Kubel said. “I’ve never seen anyone hit like this.”

Mauer, honored as the A.L.’s player of the week on Monday, is a fixture in the No. 3 spot in the Twins’ lineup. He has hit in 19 of his last 20 games and is batting .506 with 18 runs, three homers, 13 RBIs and 11 walks during that span. He has struck out only once in June, and he reached base four times in five straight games.

“He seems to be on just about anything they throw up there,” manager Ron Gardenhire said.

From the day he was chosen with the first pick in the 2001 draft, Mauer has been praised for his maturity and poise. After a knee injury limited him to 35 games his rookie year, Mauer hit .294 with nine homers, 55 RBIs and 13 steals last season. This season he elevated his game.

“Just trying to be patient,” Mauer said in his soft, shrug-it-off tone. “Just trying to get something I want to hit, instead of the pitcher’s pitch.”

A multisport standout in high school in St. Paul, less than 8 miles from the Metrodome, Mauer caught Minnesota’s eye long before the draft. The Twins also were highly interested in Mark Prior, a right-hander from the University of Southern California who went No. 2 to the Chicago Cubs. The debate over whom to take was intense.

Mauer’s signing bonus was $5.15 million and Prior’s was $10.5 million. College pitchers always command more money because they’re much closer to being big-league ready.

“We were going to sign Prior. That’s the one misconception,” scouting director Mike Radcliff said.

The Twins at the time were one of baseball’s targets in the failed plan to get an economic boost by eliminating two franchises.

“Mauer wanted to be here,” Radcliff said. “He was ready, willing and able. The other guy had no interest. Would he have signed at the end? Yeah, because of the money we were offering him.

“It was a bad situation. We didn’t even know if we were going to be around. … You couldn’t blame him for balking and not being that interested.”

Mauer wasn’t a consolation prize, though. Minnesota was more than satisfied with a position player projected to be a middle-of-the-order hitter with a strong arm and excellent defensive skills.

“It’s rare for our kind of market to get a premium anything,” Radcliff said. “The only way you’re going to get that is through the draft.