There were tears, and there were hugs. There were tributes and thank yous. There were reminiscences and what-ifs and wisecracks. But as Joe Mauer, surrounded by family, friends and an impressive cross-section of the Twins' recent history, formally announced Monday that his playing career has ended, there were absolutely zero farewells.
"The beauty of being from Minnesota," Mauer said, "is I don't have to say goodbye."
That's because Mauer, a son of St. Paul who until this month had been an employee of the Minnesota Twins for his entire adult life, intends to remain in Minnesota, and perhaps even at Target Field. Though presumably not quite as frequently as his grandparents, Michael and Phyllis Tierney, who he said missed seeing him play at home perhaps a dozen times over his 15-year major-league career.
"I'm going to raise my kids here. My family is here, born and raised. I was a Twins fan before I was a Twin," Mauer said, daubing his eyes with tissue occasionally as he contemplated the people who helped him achieve more than all but a glorified handful of Twins before him. "I don't plan on going anywhere unless you guys don't want me. I'm here."
Whether that means coaching catchers or evaluating prospects or simply joining Tony Oliva as public goodwill ambassadors, well, that hasn't been decided.
"I definitely want to be connected," he said, but Mauer's third child — he and wife Maddie don't know whether it's a third daughter or a first son — is due in the next week or two, "so we'll be all-hands-on-deck for that," he said. And then he'll take some time to adjust to setting his own schedule, and not following one mandated by Major League Baseball.
That will take some getting used to, Mauer admitted, and though he left his touchingly sentimental final game knowing he probably wouldn't be back, he wasn't certain about that until getting away from the ballpark for awhile.
"I still feel like I can compete at this level, so [retirement] is a tough thing to swallow," Mauer said candidly. "But I know it's the right decision for me, and I made it. I'm excited and I'm happy for that."