We hit the big time, finally, 50 years ago. We were finally a major league sports market. But, boy, it was not easy. We scrambled to get the new hockey arena ready for the new hockey team, and pro basketball returned, left, returned and left again, not to be seen for another 20 years. And if that chaos wasn't enough, the Twins flamed out at the finish of one of baseball's all-time great pennant races, while our football teams endured both the birth of a legend and the end of a legendary run. Chaos, yes, that's a good word to describe 1967. Patrick Reusse remembers it all.
1967 TWINS FELL SHORT OF A PENNANT AT THE WIRE
The 2017 Twins are involved in a chaotic competition of flawed, feisty teams to claim the American League's second wild card and earn a chance to play in a single-elimination game on the road.
The standards were higher and the stakes much greater when the 1967 Twins engaged in an ever-changing duel among four of the AL's 10 teams. The winner would advance to the World Series to play St. Louis, the runaway leader in the National League.
The media label for this pursuit came easily: "The Great Race" was a popular movie in 1965, and now there was a Great Race that would bring disappointment in Minnesota, Detroit and the South Side of Chicago, and invigorate a Boston baseball scene so moribund that there had been veiled threats the Red Sox might join the Braves (1953 to Milwaukee) in leaving town.
The Twins had stumbled at the start of 1967. The crowds had turned painfully small and owner Calvin Griffith was in a bad mood.
On June 8, bullpen stopper Al Worthington gave up four runs in the ninth and the Twins lost 7-5 to Cleveland. This put the Twins at 25-25 and in sixth place.
Griffith fired Sam Mele the next day after six-plus years as manager and brought in Cal Ermer, his manager at Class AAA Denver. Calvin said he was reacting to Twins fans' wishes, claiming he had received "400 letters" urging Mele's firing.