This was a long time ago. We were sitting around the sports desk at the St. Paul Pioneer Press, trying to get some copy edited before heading across the street for a refreshment break at Luigi's Saloon.
A story came rattling across the Associated Press teletype that reported Carl Pohlad, a Minneapolis businessman, was trying to buy the Philadelphia Eagles.
This led to a question: "Who the heck is this guy?"
Nobody knew, the Eagles were sold to another party and Pohlad disappeared from the sports wire for over a decade. Then, in 1984, with Twins owner Calvin Griffith alleged to be eyeballing Tampa-St. Petersburg for possible relocation, Pohlad surfaced and bought the franchise for the bargain price of $38 million.
A July news conference was held to announce the sale agreement. The event was historic, since in Carl and Calvin we had shoulder-to-shoulder the two worst public speakers in the planet's post-caveman era.
Pohlad said the sale was fortuitous since it was time for a younger man to take over the Twins. He was 68 and Calvin was 72 at the time, causing a smart-alecky St. Paul columnist to suggest that "only in the Vatican could this be considered a youth movement."
The Twins were contenders because of the mediocrity of the American League West in '84. They went in reverse as Pohlad spent two years firing most everyone connected with the Griffith regime.
The Twins were 71-91 in 1986. A serious shakeup of the baseball operation started with the firing of Ray Miller in September. Tom Kelly, the third base coach, was the interim replacement.