DENVER — The most reliable All-Star, the man whose success is largely predicated on his strict day-after-day consistency, did something Monday that was more shocking than hitting at a world-class level at the age of 41.
Nelson Cruz was a truant, a no-show.
"My plane broke!" exclaimed the Twins slugger, the only All-Star selection missing from the day's press conferences. "I waited for three hours [Sunday night], but it never showed up."
Cruz finally arranged for another charter jet and arrived at Coors Field as the AL All-Stars were lining up for a team picture, jogging out to center field to join them in the event's first ritual. And then the hugging commenced, with player after player approaching to welcome him to the party.
Turns out, it wasn't necessary for Cruz to attend the press conference after all. He had plenty of spokesmen ready to speak for him and about him.
"Everybody loves Nelson," San Diego's Manny Machado said. "He's probably helped just about everyone here in some way."
Machado included. The infielder was only 21 when Cruz signed with Baltimore in 2014, already a breakthrough star but still just learning about how to behave. Cruz was 33, had established himself as one of the most prolific home run hitter in the game, and a quiet force in the clubhouse. Even his 2013 suspension with 13 other players for being a client of the notorious Biogenesis steroid lab allowed him to serve as a model, in how he accepted his punishment and repaired his reputation.