COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. – There were six distinct groups of fans who settled in on the lawn of the Clark Sports Center to watch the enshrinement of their baseball heroes on Sunday.
There were Twins fans for Tony Oliva and Jim Kaat, White Sox fans for Minnie Minoso, Royals fans for Buck O'Neil, Red Sox and Dominican Republic fans for David Ortiz and general baseball fans.
The Dominican contingent stole the show. It cannot be underplayed what Ortiz has meant to his country, as he joins Juan Marichal, Pedro Martinez and Vladimir Guerrero as Hall of Fame players from the island nation. A sea of Dominican flags waved all afternoon.
Ortiz, who slugged 541 home runs over a 20-year career that began with the Twins, ate it all up.
"I just want to let you guys know I'm real," Ortiz said. "I'm going to talk to you guys in English and Spanish."
Ortiz spent the next 18 minutes smoothly switching between the languages as he spoke about his life in baseball, what the Hall of Fame means to him and offering up his career as inspiration for others.
The Twins, an organization he was with for six seasons, were represented well in his speech. He credited former Class A Fort Myers manager John Russell and Class AA New Britain manager and former Twins infielder and coach Al Newman for giving him confidence that he could succeed in the majors.
"Those two guys were father figures," Ortiz said.