Like so many other kids their ages, Josh and Tyler Lindgren can't wait for one of their favorite signs of spring: baseball season.
"Every morning before school, their grandpa comes over 15 minutes before the bus comes so they can practice hitting and catching," said their mom, Dawn Lindgren. "It means everything to them."
Saturday morning, it meant just as much to their mom to see Josh, 9, and Tyler, 6, hustling around the bases in the gym at Century College in White Bear Lake. The brothers have hypotonia, a condition that can affect physical and cognitive development. But with their Miracle League season just weeks away, they were eager to sharpen their skills at a clinic hosted by Century's fledgling baseball team.
The Wood Ducks, in their second season, are 21-7 and ranked eighth in the nation among Division III junior colleges. Saturday's clinic paired each of the 26 players with a child or teen preparing to play in the Miracle League, which allows 1,500 disabled kids in Minnesota to feel the exhilaration of smacking a single or scoring a run.
Former Twins infielder and manager Frank Quilici was there, too. The Miracle League was a favorite cause of his late friend, Twins Hall of Famer Harmon Killebrew. As he waved the players and their Century buddies around third base, Quilici never stopped smiling -- an inevitable side effect on a day that made baseball feel truly inclusive.
"This is why Harmon became so passionate about this," said Quilici, a member of the Harmon Killebrew Foundation board of directors. "When he was almost on his deathbed, he went to a game and stayed until the last kid made the turn around the bases, and he congratulated all of them.
"He really, really wanted to get as many of these fields as possible built. I hope to keep up his legacy. To participate in this wonderful day, I feel just as passionate about it."
That seems to be a common sentiment about the Miracle League, now in its sixth season in Minnesota. Its new facility in Woodbury, plus others in Blaine, Lakeville and Minnetonka, give a baseball home to players age 4 through 19 with a wide range of disabilities. Dwight Kotila, Century's baseball coach and athletic director, thought a clinic would be a good way for his players to connect with their community and deepen their appreciation for the game.