Jim Rantz still was the right-hand man for the great George Brophy when he left baseball's winter meetings in Houston in December 1973 and headed east, to find a location for the Twins to place a rookie team in the Appalachian League.
The first stop was in Pulaski, Va., where a local baseball man gave Rantz a check for $3,000. The "Pay to the Order" portion was blank, and when Rantz asked to whom it should be made out, the man said:
"Whoever you want it to be."
Rantz returned the check and headed to Elizabethton, Tenn., a scenic place in the Appalachian foothills. There were no checks, but there were several "we'll take care of it" assurances from Carmen Duggar, a baseball disciple in charge of Elizabethton's parks.
The lights being inside the fences, with rubber tires at the bottom to protect outfielders? "They moved 'em behind the fences," Rantz said.
The road that went through a gate and across the field? "Carmen closed the road." Dugouts that can't be so close to the plate? "Moved." Where am I going to stay tonight? "My place," said Joe O'Brien, another baseball man.
Rantz recalled Friday: "Joe was 75 or so and a widower. We sat down at the kitchen table, he took out a bottle of Jack Daniels — I'm a beer guy — and said, 'We're going to have couple of drinks and talk baseball.' Turned into four hours with most of the bottle gone."
As the Twins farm director, Rantz had annual stays in Elizabethton for four decades. Those visits were good for an added 5 pounds, even without O'Brien's fine Tennessee whiskey.