Tony Oliva walks among us, and it has not been difficult for Minnesotans to track his joy over being inducted into the Hall of Fame last July, 46 years after limping through his final game for the Twins, the only big-league team he knew.
You could run into Tony at Target Field and get an "hola" and maybe a cellphone photo. You could see him at a David Morrell Jr. fight at the Minneapolis Armory and get a return wave.
You could just run into him out and about, and relay to Tony O. how danged happy you were to see him make the Hall — perhaps throw in the popular, "You should've been in years ago."
Sid Hartman used to always refer to him as "Mr. America," for reasons known only to Sid, but now at 84, maybe more than ever, Tony is "Mr. Twin."
As 2022 winds down, we have not been tracking as closely the Hall of Fame reaction toward Jim Kaat, also 84 — perhaps because he was well-traveled after Twins owner Calvin Griffith sent him packing in mid-August 1973.
Kaat pitched for another decade after that, with a 93-78 record, 414 appearances and 1,516 innings. And he remains either first or second with Bert Blyleven in Twins career victories, innings, starts and complete games.
So how is it down there in your winter home in Florida five months after induction, Mr. Kaat?
"We've moved; we got out of Florida," Kaat said. "We wanted a slower pace. We're living in Beaufort, South Carolina, one of those mossy, idyllic southern towns.