The Twins were having a 30-year reunion weekend for the 1987 champs in late July. There would be a statue unveiled of manager Tom Kelly on Friday, and I had the coverage assignment for the Star Tribune.
Early in the afternoon, I parked in a ramp near the ballpark, and was using the Skyway to get to the Star Tribune office. As I walked above First Ave., I glanced at the front of the Loews Hotel and there was Rick Stelmaszek talking with a group of civilians.
Stelly had lost more weight since throwing out the ceremonial first pitch on Opening Day, as pancreatic cancer continued to do its damage. Yet, he was down there talking and gesturing, and his audience was laughing, making it clear that he was entertaining these fans with a few of his endless baseball stories.
This was a bittersweet scene to be sure: There was ongoing evidence that we were going to lose Stelly in the next few months, and there was a smile because this skinny version of Stelly still was doing what he loved – talking baseball and sharing yuks with anyone who stopped him to say hello.
The cancer that hardly ever gets beat took Stelmaszek's life on Monday at age 69, and for the people who wore uniforms, and for the staff members, and for the sports media, and for thousands of Twins fans that he chatted up … the Stelly stories will live on.
As a sportswriter, you always try to put a person in the best light when they leave this vale of tears. There is no such effort required with Stelly.
When I state this, I mean it: In the 40-plus years I've been covering the Twins, the most universally liked person in the clubhouse, in the organization, was Rick Stelmaszek.
He had 32 years in a Twins uniform to find an enemy, and I don't think he managed to do that.