A second unveiling of a bronze statue took place Saturday at Target Field. This was in honor of Harmon Killebrew, the first star and the first Hall of Famer for the Twins.
Killebrew has shifted his weight and is getting full extension on a swing intended to send a baseball into orbit.
Bert Blyleven, the next player likely to be wearing a Twins cap on a plaque in Cooperstown, N.Y., had perused the Killebrew statue that stands at the front of the ballpark's plaza.
"It doesn't look like Harmon was trying to use the whole field," someone said.
Blyleven laughed and said: "That probably would get him in trouble with today's coaches. It was a beautiful thing to see him swing."
Just as Rod Carew did for his statue, Killebrew posed for hundreds of photos for sculptor Bill Mack. The assumption was that the prototype for this swing came from the weekend of June 3-4, 1967.
On that Saturday, Killebrew became the first player to reach Met Stadium's second deck with a three-run homer off California's Lew Burdette. On that Sunday, he hit a home run off the Angels' Jack Sanford that went farther to left-center and caromed off the façade of the second deck.
Neither of these monster shots was the source of Mack's creation. "It's the home run I hit off Jim Maloney in the All-Star Game," Killebrew said.