Twins bench coach and catching instructor Terry Steinbach is the lone Minnesotan to win the All-Star Game MVP award.
Steinbach said that while his biggest accomplishment in baseball was winning a World Series in 1989 with the Oakland Athletics, being named the 1988 All-Star Game MVP isn't far behind. The 2014 game is at Target Field on Tuesday night.
"Well, it was obviously very important," said Steinbach, a New Ulm native who was an assistant coach for Wayzata High School for five years after retiring. "I think winning the World Series is really a team effort and that takes the whole year to accomplish that. The All-Star Game is really a one-night special moment, very, very exciting, a lot of fun and a lot of great players getting thrown together. It was very memorable personally for me to get MVP of that. But I think winning the World Series is most important."
Steinbach won the MVP by helping the American League to a 2-1 victory at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati. The biggest moment came when Steinbach homered off National League starter Dwight Gooden in the third inning. He also drove in the AL's other run with a fourth-inning sacrifice fly. He is the only person to have hit a home run in both his first at-bat in the major leagues and first at-bat in an All-Star Game.
Steinbach was in the AL starting lineup with fellow Minnesotans Dave Winfield and Paul Molitor in 1988, but he said he played with many big stars in three All-Star appearances (1988, '89 and '93).
"We had [Kirby] Puckett and Frankie Viola was throwing, Randy Johnson was on some of those teams, Roger Clemens, Nolan Ryan, the list goes on and on," he said. "It was an honor for me to be in the locker room with those guys, and it was really fun once the game started and you're part of those All-Stars."
Steinbach went 3-for-6 with one double, one home run and three RBI in those three All-Star Games.
He said players in that era were more inclined to leave quickly following their appearance in the game. He thinks camaraderie is higher now.