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Byron Buxton looks to be a calming presence in Twins' clubhouse after a flurry of deadline moves

Byron Buxton looks to be a calming presence in Twins' clubhouse after a flurry of deadline moves

NBC Sports15 hours ago
CLEVELAND — Every time Byron Buxton picked up his phone Thursday afternoon, there was a text message or news ping that one of his Minnesota Twins teammates was being traded.
Two days later, Buxton was still trying to take in all the moves the Twins made as the front office made nine trades and turned over nearly 40% of the roster.
Even though the All-Star center fielder is on the 10-day injured list with left ribcage inflammation, Buxton joined the Twins in Cleveland for this weekend's series as the franchise's clubhouse leader wanted to be there to provide support and be a sounding board for teammates.
'I mean ,trading nine guys like that is something that's not normal, so it was a little bit of a shock for sure,' Buxton said before Saturday's game. 'Right now, obviously, I haven't processed it. I don't know who has processed it, but something we'll talk about a little bit more at the end of the season.'
Manager Rocco Baldelli said that having Buxton on the trip was important, not only for the support that he can give, but also because he remains on track to rejoin the lineup on Wednesday when the Twins are at Detroit.
'Keeping him with our trainers here and being able to get on the field here with the group when he's ready was important, but also the support that he's going to be giving the guys around him. Everybody looks to him, everyone looks to see how he'll respond to things, and he's a passionate guy. He cares about his teammates and his team and guys respect him immensely.'
Buxton said he understands that baseball is a business and he anticipated moves were going to be made near the deadline. However, the amount of turnover was surprising.
The Twins' most-significant move near the deadline was when shortstop Carlos Correa was dealt to Houston. Correa broke into the majors with the Astros and still has a house in Houston as he waived his no-trade clause.
'It's one of those things where you didn't think he was going to leave but with the opportunity that was ahead of him and just him being an Astro before, it's hard to pass that up in his situation. I couldn't be happier for him and his family. It is what's best for him,' Buxton said about Correa.
While there are a lot of unknowns about the Twins as the team remains for sale, Buxton is trying to focus on the present. That includes making sure the new faces on the team can get acclimated quickly as well as trying to make sure the season doesn't spiral too much out of control.
Minnesota won the AL Central in 2023, but missed the playoffs with an 82-80 mark last season. The Twins entered Saturday at 51-58 and on a three-game losing streak.
'These guys coming up, I don't want them to look at this as 'I finally got a shot.' You came up here because you want to win and you want to be better. So it's just playing together and having each other's backs is going to be the biggest thing going forward,' he said.
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He has gone on to live a rich life, one that has included well-paying jobs in banking and asset management, a 41-year marriage that produced four children and six grandchildren, and absolutely no regrets about a baseball career that was so short it's remembered mostly for a teammate's base-running blunder. 'I never had a desire to be a major league ballplayer,' said Ardell, a retired real estate executive who made $1,250 for his big league cameo. 'I loved playing baseball, but once I started playing professionally, I was bored. I was disinterested.' In fact, the bookish Ardell probably never should have been there at all. But after winning the College World Series as a sophomore at USC, he accepted a $37,500 bonus to leave school five semesters short of a degree to sign with the Angels. Still, he hedged his bets just the same. 'They wanted to give me $35,000 and I said I need $37,500 because that would give me the $500 a semester [tuition] at 'SC that I needed,' Ardell said. 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I still have a dent,' he said with a chuckle, pointing to a spot in the center of his forehead. It wasn't until three decades after he walked away from the game that Ardell came to appreciate what he had accomplished — and only then after marrying Jean Hastings, who would shortly become a nationally recognized baseball academic and writer. Ardell and Hastings — a Brooklyn native who had always been a baseball fanatic — were living in the same Orange County neighborhood when a mutual friend suggested they go out on a date. 'She had just read 'Ball Four,'' Ardell said, referencing Jim Bouton's book about the raunchy, less-seemly side of baseball. 'So she said no, baseball players are to look at, they're not to touch.' She went on the date anyway, then married Ardell a couple of years later in 1981. Jean, 79, died in 2022 after a short, ferocious battle with leukemia, but in the more than 40 years she spent with Ardell, she slowly rekindled his love for a game he had all but forgotten. They went to conferences and symposiums, where Jean spoke on the magic and the poetry of baseball. They visited the Hall of Fame, traveled to Arizona for spring training and attended countless Angels games, watching on TV the ones they couldn't attend in person. 'It was definitely part of her,' grandson Garrett Tyler said. Jean not only helped Ardell put his baseball career into perspective, she helped put his life in perspective. Shortly after they married, 'I decided to have a mission statement,' Ardell said. 'And my mission statement was to make a difference in the lives of others.' 'Ten years later,' he added 'I changed it to make a positive difference.' He saw that desire at work in Jean, a political liberal who, in addition to her baseball writing, also worked with a nonprofit called Braver Angels that seeks to bridge the political divide by bringing Democrats and Republicans together. It was a philosophy she lived by marrying Ardell, a lifelong Republican who cast his first presidential vote for Barry Goldwater but later drove a car sporting a 'Republicans for Obama' bumper sticker. Ardell was already working with Opportunity International, a global nonprofit that alleviates generational poverty by microfinancing community projects both in Southern California and abroad. But now the bridge that he and Jean built became apparent through the difference being made — not only in those affected communities, but in his own soul as well. Tyler said he grew up playing catch with his grandfather, who attended all his Little League games. But it was his grandmother who told him about Ardell's professional career. 'He was always a little bit reluctant to talk about it. My grandma was the one that kind of opened him up,' said Tyler, 25, who followed his grandparents into baseball, where he works as manager of concessions for the Amarillo Sod Poodles, the double A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. 'I've talked to him a lot about that. He told me that he just didn't have the confidence. He knew that he was good, but I don't think he really understood it. I don't know if he necessarily misses it or feels like he missed out. I think he was more appreciative of the journey that it took him on and how he's evolved into a different love for baseball.' As he has grown older, Tyler said that's the part of his grandfather's journey that has stuck with him; the mission statement part that says it's not about the destination or the accomplishments, but about the influence you have on those you meet along the way. In that way, he said, Ardell's short career is now having an outsized influence. Tyler mentions a friend who is basically playing for free, stranded below the longest rung of the minor league ladder. But he still puts on a uniform every day. 'He plays for the love of the game and just because it's all he knows,' Tyler said. 'One of the things that Dan asks me that I ask my friend is, 'do you like what you're doing?' And at that point it's not about your career longevity or how much money you're making. 'As long as you're happy playing and you're making ends meet, then go for it.' Ardell wasn't happy playing, so he walked away. Three decades later with the love and support of a wife who saw baseball not as a sport but as a metaphor for life, as a game where the goal is to get home safely, Ardell began to understand the magic, too. His one month in the majors led him to a career prosperous enough that he could help others, one that still fills his mailbox with letters from fans and one that has given him the wisdom to counsel other 23-year-olds to keep putting on the uniform as long as it fits. Make a positive difference in the lives of others. 'It was a very inconsequential part of my life that was very consequential to other people,' Ardell said of his one month in the majors. 'I think of it every day.'

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