His day begins at 5:30, 6, 6:30 _ maybe as late as 7 a.m. if something the night before has kept Ron Gardenhire from an early bedtime.
He watches the news. Then he cooks breakfast, on his beloved Blackstone flat-iron grill, which he'll fire up later that evening, searing chicken or steak, shrimp or fish, or whatever entree he and wife Carol have opted for, alongside plenty of sizzling onions, peppers, or zucchini grabbed from Publix's fresh-produce aisle during rare trips to the store.
The Tigers manager is managing during a pandemic.
Best of all, Carol hasn't thrown him out of the house.
"I've challenged her to really like me," Gardenhire said, with the usual fun he pokes at himself.
This has been some May, the Tigers skipper agrees. No baseball games. No real sense for when, or if, games might be played in 2020.
So, after packing up during spring camp, when COVID-19 shut down TigerTown four weeks into spring camp, he and Carol trekked home to Fort Myers Beach, their Florida haven when not in Michigan during baseball season, or at their getaway in Oklahoma.
That would be Ron's place on Okmulgee Lake. It's not far from where he grew up and went to high school. And that's where he and Carol decided to head last week after too many weeks of confinement and after too many people were unleashed by a governor's preference to get on with life, coronavirus or not.
"Florida had opened up everything," Gardenhire said during a phone conversation. "It kind of scared me."
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Late last week they drove north on I-75. Two days and 20 hours later they were at Okmulgee, joining daughter Tiffany, her husband Michael, and their two grandchildren, Ronnie, who is 5, and Rosie, who's 2.
Ron had been busy since.
Well, not really.
The previous day he and Ronnie and the gang fished from their two-slot deck, in 15-20 feet of water in which last winter and before a bunch of Christmas trees had been dumped.
Burying those trees at sea was strategic.
Crappies, a savory freshwater pan fish, love the habitat decaying pines offer.
"Caught a ton yesterday," Ron said. "Filleted a bunch of 'em."
And, of course, those fillets soon were hissing on the Blackstone.
"I love to wok," Gardenhire said, explaining that he digs wok dishes, same as he relishes the high-heat way in which food sizzles on Japanese Teppanyaki griddles.
"I love to chop things up," he said. "Then, do 'em right on that hot flat-iron. Cut it all up, get the soy sauce and soak it in _ have fun with it.
"I always have loved cooking."
A critical question: How was the wine stash holding up? Ron and Carol know their wines.
"We've killed it," Gardenhire said, in his usual deadpan.
Their lives always have had baseball as an eight-month centerpiece.
Now, they aren't sure about any baseball reunions in 2020. No one is.
This week the Tigers were supposed to have been playing a four-game set against Gardenhire's old team, the Twins, at Comerica Park. Thursday night: a charter flight to Seattle for a weekend series against the Mariners.
Instead, he and Carol were cooling it this week with the kids in Oklahoma.