FORT MYERS, FLA. - General Manager Bill Smith offered a pen for Joe Mauer to use in signing his enormous contract to stay with the Twins through the 2018 season. As he did so, Smith notified the audience at Monday night's event that this was the same pen Mauer had used to sign his first contract with the organization in 2001.
Joel Lepel, now the Twins minor league field coordinator, was the Midwest scouting supervisor in those days and had the players use this pen for all of his signings.
Later, Smith was being interviewed on the Twins radio network and was asked for a look at the suddenly famous pen. As it turned out, Lepel wasn't exactly wielding a gold-plated Cross when signing players.
John Gordon, the voice of the Twins, looked at the skinny, beat-up writing instrument and said: "Does it say Hampton Inn on it?"
Smith laughed and said: "We are who we are."
Not anymore, Mr. Smith.
The Twins officially left the ranks of feisty, mid-market underdogs and became major players in the major leagues when Mauer used Lepel's relic to sign an eight-year, $184 million extension that shattered any previous Twins expenditure on a contract by more than $100 million.
The public and the media had been hearing for so long about this ballclub as a low-revenue enterprise that both entities were having a difficult time getting their arms around the idea of the Twins as big spenders.