COOPERSTOWN, NY. – In their first full day as Baseball Hall of Fame inductees, Jim Kaat, Tony Oliva and David Ortiz shared a stage for a roundtable about their memorable moments.
Kaat talked about how the widow of former White Sox teammate Dick Allen called him to congratulate him for making the Hall even though Allen missed induction by one vote. Kaat pointed out that a one-vote swing could have turned the tables and he would have called her.
Oliva drew laughs as he talked about facing fellow Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax in the 1965 World Series. He drove a Koufax curveball for a double in his first encounter with him. In his next two at-bats, he got five fastballs and missed them all — and he rarely missed two fastballs in the same at-bat.
"After the World Series I came back and told my wife, 'Honey, I have to go check my eyes.' "
Ortiz lamented how Pedro Martinez would strike him out three times when Ortiz was with the Twins, then invite him to his house for dinner.
"At some point, if you can't fight 'em, join 'em," Ortiz said with a shrug. "I'm so glad he brought me to the Red Sox."
It was a time for storytelling as the three new Hall of Famers, in a talk moderated by Peter Gammons, continued to bask in the afterglow of their induction. They took part in front of a few hundred paying fans who had no problem sitting through intermittent showers to listen to story after story. Only when the storm knocked out one of the speakers did the crowd howl.
A couple of their victory laps will take place in the coming weeks. Ortiz left Cooperstown on Monday, with his plaque headed to Fenway Park to be displayed for Boston fans to see. Kaat's and Oliva's plaques will arrive at Target Field on Aug. 6 to be shown during a game against the Blue Jays.