The account of my through-the-mail, and sometimes in-person, quest to obtain autographed memorabilia from all my favorite Minnesota Twins.
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Success #13: Kent Hrbek
Well, after a longer wait than expected, I finally heard back from Kent Hrbek.
The Minnesota Twins have retired 6 numbers. Kirby Puckett (34), Harmon Killebrew (3), Rod Carew (29), Tony Oliva (6), Kent Hrbek (14), and most recently, Bert Blyleven (28). All but Blyleven have gate numbers named in their honor at Target Field. Blyleven and Hrbek are the only two to not have statues standing at Target Field either, although Hrbek's will be unveiled a few weeks from now during a home stretch. Hrbek is the only one with his own sports bar inside the ballpark. Kelli and I have had a few drinks inside, buying time during a rain delay last season. It's always packed, but it's a cool feature to Target Field with lots of unique memorabilia displayed.
Suffice it to say, Hrbek is a guy that Minnesota Twins fans know and love. Partly because he's a hometown talent (hailing from Bloomington, Minnesota), but partly because he was a member of two World Series teams in 1987 and 1991.
There were only seven players that were part of both '87 and '91 World Series ballclubs. Randy Bush, Greg Gagne, Dan Gladden, Kent Hrbek, Gene Larkin, Al Newman, and Kirby Puckett. That makes Hrbek one of a kind.
Hrbek's "name" might not be as important to the casual MLB fan as it is to Twins fans. His career numbers are good, but not Hall of Fame worthy (.282 batting average, 293 homeruns, 1,086 RBIs). He was only an All-Star once, in 1982. And besides the two World Series titles, the Twins weren't much to write home about in the early 1980s, when Hrbek first came up through the organization. But the World Series titles are special, and the fact that he finished second in the MVP voting in 1984, surprising many by leading the Twins in competing for the AL West title (he lost the award to a closer), tells you he had some special seasons besides the World Series runs.
But the World Series runs are where many Hrbek memories were made. His overall statistics during the two series' are not that impressive. But he gave Twins fans a Grand Slam in Game 6 of the 1987 Series, a pivotal 3-2-3 double play late in Game 7 of the 1991 Series, with the score tied 0-0, and his controversial tag of Ron Gant during Game 2 of the 1991 Series will forever live in infamy.
Hrbek was always battling injuries and retired after the strike in 1994 so he could spend more time with his wife and daughter at his home in Bloomington. An avid outdoorsman, Hrbek hosts his on hunting and fishing show in Minnesota and often is a fixture helping out at camp in the Spring. Since his father died of ALS, Hrbek has started a foundation and keeps himself busy doing lots of charity work raising money.
In 1995 his number 14 was retired by the Twins, only the fourth at the time behind Killebrew, Carew, and Oliva (his number was retired before Kirby's!). And in 2000, when the Twins established their own Hall of Fame, Hrbek was elected in with the initial class of players (Puckett, Carew, Killebrew, Oliva, and former owner Calvin Griffith).
On April 14 this year, a fitting date, a statue commemorating Hrbek will be unveiled at Target Field.
Mailed: 2/7/12
Received: 3/16/12 (37 days)
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Hey! I am doing pretty much the same thing as you. I think it would be great if I could put some of my own finds on this blog as well. Let me know.
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