What sports fan hasn't dreamed of being buddies with one of their idols? Having a beer with Kent Hrbek, talking football with Randy Moss.
For one Minnesota fan, that dream came true — 70 years later.
After a lifetime as a professional photographer, John Peterson discovered a trove of photos last year in the basement of his Hibbing home. They were pictures he'd taken of the Minneapolis Lakers when he was a teenager in the early 1950s, photographs forgotten and unseen for nearly seven decades.
After a news story about his discovery, Peterson wound up connecting with Bob Harrison, one of three players still living from the NBA's first dynasty.
Now, a year later, the 82-year-old Peterson and the 93-year-old Harrison are pals, talking on the phone every couple of weeks about life and rehashing basketball moments they shared a lifetime ago, when Harrison was an NBA All-Star and Peterson was a star-struck kid sitting courtside with a camera.
Both widowers, both quarantined by the coronavirus, the pair have bonded in their isolation and are having a wonderful time reliving the glory days when Minneapolis was the center of the pro basketball world.
"It makes me feel good to think about those things," Harrison said on a recent call with Peterson. "If you've got good memories, you can survive."
Now residing in an assisted-living facility in Florida, Harrison is cut off from the world as visitors have been barred from his home.