Like most tourists to the nation's capital, Joe Mauer came home from Washington two weeks ago with a few souvenirs. But these weren't gift-shop trinkets or D.C. T-shirts.
Mauer asked Bryce Harper, Stephen Strasburg and Ryan Zimmerman, the Nationals' three biggest stars, to autograph bats for him, and each obliged, sending via clubhouse assistants a bat with a personalized message on it. Someday, you will be able to read those inscriptions — you know, if Mauer invites you over to his cabin.
"I wish I had done a little more of that stuff earlier in my career," Mauer said of his memorabilia collecting. "I've played with and against some pretty amazing players, and you see a lot of that [trading souvenirs] now. And I realized a while ago, as I've gotten older, some of that means something to me, and I wish I had kept a few things from a few years back."
That sort of equipment is indeed common these days, and it's not at all unusual to see a Miguel Cabrera jersey or an Albert Pujols bat stashed in a visiting player's locker during a road trip. Mauer has reciprocated many times, of course, signing a jersey or a bat for an opposing player. And he has begun building an interesting collection of mementos from his own career.
"Up in my cabin, I have a couple of racks of bats from guys I've played against over the years. [David] Ortiz, Manny Ramirez, Jim Thome, Cabrera," Mauer said.
The jewel of his collection is a bat that Ted Williams signed for him a decade ago.
"I've got some pretty cool stuff. It'll be nice when my kids grow up to show them who their dad played with and against," said the soon-to-be father of twins. "Like I said, I've been trying to get better at it."
Someday — not until he's retired, "because I don't want to get content with anything yet; I don't want to look like I'm resting on my accomplishments," Mauer said — he'll create a display with all the baseballs, lineup cards, jerseys, caps and bats.