ST. CLOUD - Joe and Lisa Vavra were walking to a Menomonie (Wis.) High School football game in October 2005. Tanner Vavra, the oldest of three sons, would be playing linebacker for the Indians.
"Joe's cell phone rang and he stopped to take the call," Lisa said. "It was Ron Gardenhire. He told Joe that the Twins wanted him to be the hitting coach in the big leagues. It was an amazing moment for us."
The Vavra boys -- Tanner, Treysen and Terrin -- found out that night. "We thought it was cool that our dad was going to be a big-league coach," Tanner said. "My dad and mom probably felt more a sense of relief. As a player, he had worked so hard, and he got hurt before he was going to get called up by the Dodgers.
"To have your dream almost a reality, have it taken away, and then to achieve it as a coach was quite an accomplishment."
Vavra was an infielder at Wisconsin-Stout in Menomonie and taken in the eighth round by the Dodgers in the 1982 draft. In 1985, he was batting .272 at Class AAA Albuquerque, making the plays at second base and the word was Los Angeles would be calling up an infielder the next day.
There was a play at second base and Vavra suffered a broken thumb. The next spring, he started feeling weak and was diagnosed with desert fever. He wobbled through 38 games in 1986 and his playing career was over.
He became a coach and then a manager in Dodgers system. And that's how the Vavra family -- Joe, Lisa, 3-year-old Tanner and baby Treysen -- were taking in the splendor of a river near Mount Rainier on Aug. 23, 1992.
It was late in the season, and the Yakima rookie team that Joe was managing had an off day. "Joe was fly fishing for trout," Lisa said. "I had the baby in a backpack and we had a rule for Tanner: If he was going to be near the river, he had to have his hand in either Joe's back pocket or mine."