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Game Thread: Twins v Rays, 5/28 @ 1:10pm CT


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Posted

My ten years as a stringer – a freelance sportswriter for The Associated Press – spanned two distinct baseball eras. During the first, 1983-88, stringers dictated stories by telephone to the New York baseball desk and most of the players were somewhat ordinary in size and shape. I left Minnesota for five years and, when I returned in 1993 for a second tour of AP duty, it was all about laptop transmissions and ginormous players.

 

Depending on assignment, the job entailed some combination of scorekeeping, hunting down postgame clubhouse quotes from players and managers, and writing three stories: a bare-bones gamer, an alternate account including quotes and, finally, a feature on a specific player. Not an easy or lucrative side job, but usually rewarding and often fun.

 

post-3262-0-79265800-1495987630_thumb.jpg

 

When I began, cigar smoke frequently pervaded the press box, while Tony O regularly sat watching the game from the back of the room. And nobody I encountered in any sport was more approachable than Kirby Puckett. "What can I do for you today?" was his typically smiley greeting – win or lose and whether he was wearing a suit and tie or a towel. Plus, in the '80s, pregame dinners in the Twins dining room were free of charge and surprisingly good.

 

Yesterday I coughed up three lowlights. Today I submit three peculiar scenarios from the roughly 100 Twins games I covered:

 

1) Once, on my way into the visitors’ locker room for postgame interviews, something unusual for a major-league clubhouse caught my eye: a briefcase. It was closed and sat on a chair next to a top-shelf player as he stood near his locker. I made my way around the room, collected enough quotes from that day's key players and headed back toward the door. The briefcase, now wide open, was filled with countless gold chains and necklaces.

 

2) The AP's assigned front-row seats in the Metrodome press box were adjacent to the Strib writers, who were reasonably cordial to someone like me – essentially a replacement's replacement. A few were downright friendly. And then there was Sid, who seemed totally self-assured and a bit standoffish (and, especially amazing in retrospect, appeared on the verge of retirement even way back then). Anyway, I sat next to Sid on several occasions and don't know if we ever exchanged more than a word or two. But one time as I sat watching the game, he came up behind me and provided a friendly shoulder rub for several seconds as he loudly (his only volume) made some sage pronouncement for all to hear. I remember cringing a bit and holding my breath for the duration – kinda like the G8 summit where Angela Merkel had a similar experience with George W.

 

3) Late in my "career" I was sitting next to Patrick Reusse, who was friendly in a terse and gruff sort of way (and I mostly minded my own business). The Metrodome's print-media press box, behind home plate, was at the back of the lower level and had a wide-open window running its entire length. A broad ledge served as desk space and a little lip rose several inches to the opening. Long before the first pitch, I noticed two early-arriving fans wearing ballcaps and clutching their beers at the bottom of the long concrete staircase that led to the ocean of blue seats. One of the fans pointed directly at us before they both beelined up the stairs – and were suddenly standing directly in front of us at the window. They wore the look of city mouse and country mouse, and I imagine city mouse was proudly showing country mouse what the big city was all about. With beer still in hand, he confidently introduced himself and his buddy to Reusse, who looked up from his computer just as city mouse set the plastic souvenir cup on the ledge. Then, as the guy reached through the window to shake Reusse's hand, his fingers clipped the cup and plowed the beer square into the storied sportswriter's lap. In a flash, both mice turned tail, zipped down the stairs and disappeared. Seconds later Reusse was on the phone. "Honey," he calmly said, "I'm gonna come home smelling like a brewery tonight, but I promise that I didn't fall off the wagon."

--

Lineups:

 

Rays

1. Corey Dickerson (L) DH
2. Kevin Kiermaier (L) CF
3. Evan Longoria ® 3B
4. Logan Morrison (L) 1B
5. Steven Souza Jr. ® RF
6. Colby Rasmus (L) LF
7. Tim Beckham ® SS
8. Michael Martinez (S) 2B
9. Jesus Sucre ® C

 

Alex Cobb ®

 

Twins

1. Brian Dozier ® 2B

2. Jorge Polanco (S) SS
3. Joe Mauer (L) 1B
4. Kennys Vargas (S) DH
5. Max Kepler (L) RF
6. Eduardo Escobar (S) 3B
7. Eddie Rosario (L) LF
8. Byron Buxton ® CF
9. Jason Castro (L) C

 

Kyle Gibson ®

 

Gametime Forecast: 68°F • Partly Cloudy

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Posted

Okay, now that I've liked the opener, probably should go back and read it. 

 

Now that I've read the intro, excellent job!

Posted

Methinks you eschewed about five minutes of cussing from the Reusse anecdote. Good stuff!

 

Yeah, no Sano again. Maybe they're saving him as a pinch runner?

Posted

 

Me too.

And that they get good use out of 'em.

Same goes for the gloves.

I wonder if that is a bit of Gibson's problem? He needs to trust the people behind him a bit more and relax. 

Posted

Great job. Thought for a second you would bring up Halsey Hall burning the press box down with his cigar and Herb Carneal going crazy. Those were the days.

Posted

 

Will Kyle Gibson attack inside, or will he continue to allow hitters to feel all warm and cozy at the plate?

Yes.*

 

*This has been a Chief stand-in remark. However, this in no way implies the person making the remark is, in any way, affiliated with aforementioned Chief.

Posted

 

Sid, while rubbing your shoulders: "Do you like gladiator movies?"

I was thinking more along the lines of "I see Scraps is a boy dog."

Posted

Good interview with Dozier. You can see that his attitude is what you want on the field. He's there to apply pressure any way he can, and then good things will happen. Sometimes you go 0 for 4, but you play good defense, sometimes you advance a couple runners... If everybody on your team keeps applying pressure, good things will happen. 

 

If the Twins are going to continue being competitive this season, they will have to have this attitude. Pitchers don't always have a great day, but the players around them can support with great defense and apply pressure with their offense. 

Posted

If Kyle Gibson had Jack Morris's attitude, he'd win 20 games. You've got to be a mean man on the mound. Gibson is just too nice. He won't pitch inside.

Provisional Member
Posted

 

Gibson is a disaster, they can't keep trotting this guy out there every fifth day. 

I agree but I don't like to click like on things I don't like.

 

Posted

If he doesn't come out throwing strikes I would like to see them warming someone in the bullpen and not let Gibby come out for the 3rd even if the second is scoreless.

This working to a 3-2 count is too sorrowful to watch.

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