That Target Field was built on an 8½-acre wedge of land in downtown Minneapolis is considered miraculous, and the resulting ballpark intimate. That snugness is part of its charm, and makes it worthy of the 2014 All-Star Game that its success has delivered.
Just one problem: The All-Star Game doesn't do "cozy."
"It's a massive, massive event, about 10 times bigger than the one in the Metrodome" in 1985, said Matt Hoy, the Twins' senior vice president for operations, and the team's point man on the 2014 event. "It's a little intimidating when you see what it's grown into, how many moving parts there are. And fitting all of them into our space is going to be an enormous challenge."
So is the clock. First pitch of the 85th All-Star Game is only 362 days away, and now that Hoy, team President Dave St. Peter and 30 other Minnesotans have returned from closely observing how the Mets staged Tuesday's game in New York, there is a baseball term that sums up their responsibility:
Batter up.
"It's all ours," Hoy said. "Basically, we'll be working on All-Star preparations every day for the next year, and believe me, a lot of days it doesn't seem like enough time."
That's because, while the event was born as a showcase eight decades ago for baseball's best players, it has turned into a weeklong festival of the game, part Shriners convention and part World's Fair. The Twins get to stage a baseball game, but that's merely the climax of a three-page timeline of events:
Start with a lavish invitation-only night-before gala for 5,000 VIPs — that one was held on the retired aircraft carrier Intrepid in New York. Then add in another party of roughly the same size, on the evening of the game.