Twins Museum Talk & Other Notes
Clyde Doepner, the only full-time curator employed by a major league baseball team,
said there’s a possibility of opening a Twins museum. Club management
has discussed a possible museum and perhaps locating it in the Ford
Centre, the historic office building located near Target Field.
Doepner has been collecting Twins
memorabilia dating back to when the ball club played at Met Stadium. He
has more than 7,000 memorabilia items in his personal collection,
including not only Twins items but also from the franchise’s days in
Washington, D.C.
The former high school teacher and
baseball coach was hired two years ago as the franchise prepared for its
opening of Target Field in 2010. He credits team president Dave St.
Peter with his hiring. St. Peter and other club leaders wanted
Target Field to be a place that told the history of baseball in
Minneapolis-St. Paul including the Twins.
Although Doepner has collected items
ranging from the autographs of U.S. presidents to a Twins jersey that
incorrectly spelled Minnesota, there is a memory he described as more
special than anything else. “The day Harmon Killebrew knew my name,”
Doepner said.
Call them the “Smash Boys.” Miguel
Sano, 18, hit 20 home runs in 267 at bats for the Twins Elizabethton
team in the Appalachian Rookie League. Eddie Rosario, 19, hit 21
balls out of the park in 270 at bats for Elizabethton.
Since the July All-Star break Twins first
baseman Justin Morneau is hitting .235 in 14 games with no home
runs and nine RBI. He has been unable to play since August 28.
The late Angelo Giuliani, a famous
Twins scout, is among nine people being inducted into the Saint Thomas
Academy Athletic Hall of Fame on September 30.
Glenn Caruso,
football coach of nationally ranked St. Thomas, will be the featured
speaker at the C.O.R.E.S luncheon on Thursday, November 10. C.O.R.E.S
is an acronym for coaches, officials, educators, reporters and sports
fans.