COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. - Bert Blyleven was known for a pitch that curved and a tongue that protruded. Sunday, he found an even better use for his tongue, making the rare Hall of Fame speech that unearthed new stories and bared raw emotions.
On a steamy afternoon in Cooperstown, Blyleven entered baseball's Hall with grace and humor, speaking directly to his 85-year-old mother, trading pitching secrets with his idol, and telling rarely heard anecdotes about his adventures as a 19-year-old big-league rookie.
"Mommy, I love you," he said to Jenny Blyleven, as his mother, sitting in the front row, nodded and mouthed something back to him.
"I know a lot of you are probably waiting for me to do something silly or stupid," he said near the end of his speech. "Well, not today, but another day for sure. No hotfoots, and no mooning. ...
"You are all hereby circled."
To younger baseball fans, Blyleven is more identifiable as the Twins broadcaster who circles fans with a telestrator than as the pitcher who once screwed hitters into the ground with his curve. Blyleven, 60, cradled his Hall of Fame plaque, then took the crowd back to the formative moments in a career marked by determination and durability.
"I was like Forrest Gump," he said. "Forrest ran. I threw."
Blyleven was playing for the Evansville Triplets, on a road trip to Tulsa. It was June 1, 1970, and his Class AAA manager called him into his hotel room and handed him a telegram.