LAKELAND, Fla. -- The skies Sunday were as cloudy as. … well, as Troy Percival's future.
But that doesn't stop Percival, the Tigers reliever, from preparing for the season as if he's going to be part of it.
For instance, in one drill at spring training, Percival simulated throwing a pitch to the plate, then fielded a groundball hit back to the mound. It's one of the standard drills for pitchers in spring training -- and Percival didn't look out of place at all.
It's not until he has to throw that the current overcast of his career gets noticed.
Recovering from an arm injury that probably would have resulted in surgery if he'd been younger, Percival, 36, doesn't know if he'll be on or off the roster this season, or even if he'll ever be able to pitch again.
Some players, maybe even most, would be fretting about that. There's no such alarm with Percival. He can read the tea leaves. He knows his odds aren't exactly favorable.
But he's here to see if he can be of any help at all this season -- and because he loves the hope, the promise, the entire package of optimism that pervades spring training.
Plus, he signed a two-year contract before last year to pitch for the Tigers, and he's not going to say he can't until he knows he can't. You never know until you try, in other words.
"With my knowledge and the stuff I have right now," he said, "I can compete."