Brant Alyea had been interviewed on the phone a couple of times, and as the second conversation was concluding he had a question: "If I came back to Minnesota, would anyone remember who I was?''
The earliest generations of Twins fans never had forgotten, but the answer was: "Thanks to Chris Colabello, more Minnesotans are aware of the Alyea legend than in several decades.''
Alyea, now 73 and living in retirement near Philadelphia, was pleased to hear this. "What's the kid's name … Colabello?'' Alyea said. "Good for him. I hope he can keep it going.''
Colabello turned 30 last October, so baseball's time-honored "kid'' doesn't actually apply — nor did it with Alyea, when he exploded across our sports scene as a 29-year-old journeyman in 1970.
Alyea's name started coming up last month, as Colabello was driving in 27 runs in 23 games, and the question was being asked: "Are there any out-of-nowhere comparables in Twins history?''
There are two, Alyea in 1970 and Bobby Darwin in 1972. Alyea's early run was more similar to Colabello's in length.
Alyea had five home runs and 23 RBI in his first 53 at-bats and 17 games. He was on the cover of The Sporting News on May 9, 1970, when that publication still was referred to as "Baseball's Bible."
The attention for Alyea started April 7 — opening day in Comiskey Park. Alyea was playing left field and batting fifth, behind Cesar Tovar, Rod Carew, Harmon Killebrew and Tony Oliva.