FORT MYERS, FLA. – This is Fantasy Camp Week at the Twins' complex in Florida. I stopped by to talk with Dick Stigman, the veteran among the 20-some ex-Twins who make this a nostalgic and laugh-filled week for the campers.
I wanted to ask him about Lenny Green, the Twins' first center fielder, and a popular figure in those earliest years when Minnesotans couldn't believe our good fortune to be blessed with major league baseball.
Green died Sunday on his 86th birthday, in his hometown of Detroit. Green was with Baltimore in 1959 when he was traded to Washington on May 28 – in exchange for Albie Pearson.
Albie also was a center fielder and had been voted the American League's Rookie of the Year in 1958. Pearson was hitting .188 and Green .292 in late May 1959, and I can hear Senators owner Calving Griffith saying: "I don't care if little Albie was Rookie of Year and fans like him; Green hits better and runs faster.''
Green had range in center, and he could get on base and score a run, and he would be out there every day, so we forgave Lenny for his subpar throwing arm. Then again, it must be admitted that with original Twins' fans still around 20 years later, it wasn't unusual to hear this assessment of an outfielder with modest throwing ability:
"He has an arm like Lenny Green.''
Stigman became a Twin before the start of the 1962 season and, early this week, he was asked about losing another teammate. He shook his head and said:
"What a sweet man. We were very good friends. Lenny's daughter lives in the Twin Cities. Our daughters are friends. Our daughter had been following on Facebook and told us Lenny was very ill …