Twins, Fans Made
Final Days Special
I felt guilty about not attending the
Twins’ final scheduled game ever in the Metrodome. A family
commitment on Sunday took precedence in Rochester.
I did attend the final Twins game at Met
Stadium and skipped out on work that afternoon to attend. I feel guilty
about that, too. I thought going to the game was important but there
were only about 16,000 of us who thought so.
A story from long ago is that a new Twins
broadcaster, confident of his skills to promote interest in the club,
pronounced that attendance
would increase by 200,000 in his first season with the club. Before the
last game of the season he was told, “If the Twins don’t draw 176,000
today, you’ll miss your prediction.”
The last games in the dome might be a final
Twins goodbye to several players including pitchers Carl Pavano
and Glen Perkins, catcher Mike Redmond, third baseman Joe Crede and second baseman
Alexi Casilla.
Twins manager Ron Gardenhire
and his coaches did a lot with less including a starting
pitching staff that had two guys left from the five-man rotation that
began the year. Gardenhire, his staff and players deserved the capacity
crowds and roars of approval heard in the final days of the dome and the
regular season.
The fans turned out in attendance numbers
of over 40,000 four times in the last five games. The season total
of 2,362,149 is third best in franchise history.
Michael Cuddyer’s
inspirational hitting and play at first base will long be remembered by
Twins fans as one of the best late season performances in franchise
history. Leo Durocher was wrong when he said, “Nice guys finish
last.”
The Twins were 16-4 in their last 20 games. Their unlikely heroes included outfielder Delmon Young
who hit his first career grand slam home run on Friday night, the same
game that rookie starter Jeff Manship won his first game.
Then Young hit two home runs yesterday as
the Twins swept Kansas City in three games to tie Detroit for first
place in the Central Division and force a tie-break game at the dome
with the Tigers tomorrow afternoon.
The joy in Twinsville helped Minnesotans
feel better after a sixth straight loss to Wisconsin in football.
After the Gophers lost to the Badgers on
Saturday, Minnesota coach Tim Brewster said: “It just rips your
guts out.”