While waiting for a phone call he feared would never come, Jim Kaat said time was "moving backwards."
If Hall of Fame director Jane Forbes Clark called between 5:15 and 5:45 last Sunday evening, Kaat would be inducted into the Hall of Fame. If she didn't, he would remain without the career-defining honor he craved.
A little after 5:30, Kaat, 83, told his wife that he was out of luck again. Then a call came, from an area code he didn't associate with Cooperstown. He answered and heard Clark's voice.
That's when time really began moving backwards.
He received a call from the college teammate with whom he shared pitching duties at Hope College, Al Kober. As seniors, they divided their team's 84 innings equally, Kober pitching from the right and Kaat from the left.
Kober went into insurance. Kaat went to the big leagues.
Kent Hrbek called. Memorabilia businesses showed sudden interest in his availability. Kaat began thinking about his time with the Twins and teammate Tony Oliva, who will be inducted alongside Kaat.
Kaat remembered Oliva showing up from Cuba, failing to get signed in his first spring training and wanting to return to his homeland. Instead, Oliva began working on his fielding.