The on-air talent for Fox Sports North turned it into a cliché on Twins telecasts: Here comes Joe Nathan, the best closer in baseball.
On the occasion of a Nathan gaffe, we would be reminded that this was a rarity and then receive reassurance of his standing as the game's best.
Why our TV experts felt the need to voice that superlative was anybody's guess, when you consider baseball men such as Bert Blyleven and Ron Coomer realized that could not be the case ... not as long as Mariano Rivera still was finishing games for the Yankees.
The difference between Nathan, an effective closer, and Rivera, the all-time great, has been best demonstrated in the postseason: Nathan has pitched in eight games with a 7.88 ERA and two losses. Rivera has pitched in 88 games with an 0.74 ERA and one loss.
The other contrast has been the manner in which managers have used Nathan and Rivera in late-season games.
Ron Gardenhire basically avoided turning to Nathan for more than three outs, even in a must-win game. Joe Torre, during his long run as the Yankees manager, never hesitated in bringing in Rivera for six outs when ahead in a game he needed.
There was a time when I was among the foolish sold on the idea that a closer was the most valuable member of a pitching staff. This probably is based on a flashback to 1982 through 1985, when Ron Davis served in that role for the Twins.
Davis had more calamities than any human should undertake, but in retrospect, he was never used with the TLC that Twins closers have received first from Tom Kelly and now Gardenhire.