So that's what we'll eventually do here on the blog. We'll go back and replay some of the highlights from these mostly non-descript games.
June 10, 2001 - Pittsburgh 11, Minnesota 8: Of all the games I've gone to, I probably remember this one the most vividly. Our whole family went as part of a church trip and I'm pretty sure it's the only trip the church ever did of its kind. We rode a school bus and I remember being ecstatic about the game. I was nine years old at the time and what 9-year old kid doesn't love baseball. Even at the old age of 21, I'm still in awe of when you come up the concrete tunnel and you see the fake grass of the Dome. In my memory, it will be the game where my friend smashed open a bag of cotton candy on the nice Asian family sitting in front of us in the left field seats.
What I didn't remember was the specific details of the game. Quinton McCracken was the Twins' leadoff guy in 2001? J.C. Romero was the starter and went 6+ innings before the wheels came off in the eighth inning and the Pirates scored seven runs. The pitcher in the ninth inning of that game? Johan Santana. Those roles for Romero and Santana would soon be reversed, with Santana becoming one of the best pitchers of his time and Romero having a mostly average career and cleaning up his fair share of 9th innings.
October 24, 2004 - Minnesota 45, Illinois 0: What got into the Gophers on this day, I'll never know. Dad and I were sitting in the endzone in the third row. I don't exactly remember how we got those tickets but it was so awesome. Truly a kid in a candy store moment and right near that damn cannon they launch after every score, which went off plenty because Illinois sucked. Two Marion Barber III touchdowns in the second quarter made it 17-0 and then Barber hit one of my favorite Gopher receivers of all-time, Ernie Wheelright, on a halfback pass midway through the third quarter. A Lawrence Maroney touchdown and a Paris Hamilton (who?) 82-yard TD catch from Bryan Cupito made it 34-0 going to the fourth. Amir Pinnix had a touchdown that day and I remember thinking, "Oh yeah, he could be the next in this line of great Gopher runners." Yeah, not so much. The Illini were on their way to 3-8 season and Ron Turner was headed out the door. The game came in the midst of a typical Glen Mason season at Minnesota, except Minnesota was actually ranked to start the year. 5-0 out of the gate, rise to No. 13 in the polls, the Big Ten season comes, Gophers aren't as good as we thought, salvage a win against crappy Illinois, lose the rest of the games but make the Music City Bowl. Play Alabama and beat them because they weren't good yet. (Even then, I remember thinking "Minnesota beat Alabama. That shouldn't happen.)
May 11, 2008 - Minnesota 9, Boston 8: Another time where I saw history, folks. The only game in Twins history where both Adam Everett and Craig Monroe hit a home run and in the same inning, no less. In fact, Monroe hit two home runs, including what would be the eventual game-winner in the 7th inning. Monroe played just 58 games for the Twins with 8 home runs and Everett made an appearance in 48 contests, hitting just two blasts (the other one would be three months later at Yankee Stadium off former Twin Sidney Ponson! Fun fact: Sidney Ponson is only 38 years old in 2015!) Together, Monroe and Everett helped Minnesota build a 5-0 lead with two homers in the second inning on Sunday Night Baseball. I remember sitting in my seat and looking at the light blue screen behind home plate, knowing that they were showing virtual ads against that on ESPN.
The box score reminds me that Tim Wakefield pitched this game, allowing 7 runs in less than 3 innings and 6 of the runs were earned. It actually was a 2-run single from Mike Lamb, playing third base that night, who chased Wakefield, scoring Justin Morneau and Carlos Gomez. Nick Blackburn was the starter, posting a largely unspectacular game with 6 innings pitched and 4 runs allowed. Minnesota led 7-1 after three innings but the lead dwindled to 9-6 going to the 8th inning. Thankfully, Dennys Reyes pitched a solid 8th inning before Joe Nathan came in during the 9th inning. He allowed two runs but picked up his 12th save of the year. He had 39 saves in 2008 and 260 for his career (out of 288 save opportunities, by my count. He converted 90 percent of his save chances for the Twins. Not bad.)
I remember it was Mother's Day and Mom got something when we went in but I don't remember what that was. We sat down the right field line in the lower level, not far from the milk jug that they put in the corner where some of the seats were stored. Not enough foul balls hit that milk jug. (That wasn't my favorite Twins related advertisement at the Dome, though; mine was in right centerfield, where it said Old Dutch chips were "the best two-bagger in baseball" because they came in a box with two bags of chips.)
April 30, 2010 - Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 2: When I was a senior in high school (that very short period of time ago), we went to St. Louis for a band trip.
They handed out Snuggies at the game. St. Louis Cardinals snuggies with an AT&T logo all over them. Nice. The game was marred by a fit of rain and severe weather, delaying the game for two and a half hours. That was not good for our bus load of fans. Because we had one bus driver on the trip and federal regulations cap the number of hours they can drive in a day, the game would basically have to fit into a three-hour window in order to get back to the hotel in time. It didn't and we had to leave during the rain delay. They were showing the radar on the out-of-town scoreboard at Busch Stadium and there was reports of tornadoes in the Missouri suburbs of St. Louis.
From the official box score in that game:
THE GAME HAS RESUMED IN THE TOP OF THE SIXTH INNING AFTER A 2 HOUR AND 30 MINUTE DELAY. SITUATION: 2 RUNS IN, R HERNANDEZ ON FIRST, J GOMES ON SECOND, O CABRERA ON THIRD, 3 OUTS CURRENT SCORE: CINCINNATI 3, ST LOUIS 2I remember being pleased that I didn't end up missing any more runs, as the Reds bullpen locked it down. But I wasn't pleased with having to leave.
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