They wore synthetic uniforms, carried aluminum bats and checked their cellphones. Everything about this baseball team screamed 21st Century.
Except their mode of transportation.
The Robbinsdale Armstrong-Cooper Raptors traveled back in time this week, taking a train to their game in Big Lake on Monday. During a 45-minute ride from Fridley on a westbound Northstar train, a team of 16-year-olds stepped back into an era that vanished even before the Washington Senators relocated to Minnesota more than a half century ago.
"Big leaguers used to travel like this? No way!" said an animated Carter Burns, a catcher and outfielder who had never before ridden on a train. "They really took trains?"
Of the 11 players who took the Northstar commuter ride out of Fridley at 4:40 p.m., only two had traveled by train before. Many players left their seats to explore the train's two levels. Some read. Others relaxed and played cards, no one keeping score.
"Just chillin' with the boys," said Andrew Basri, a catcher-third baseman who had never ridden one of these magic carpets made of steel. "You can't do this in a car or on a bus."
Team Manager Wally Langfellow came up with the concept of riding the rails. It came to him while he was stuck in traffic en route to a game in Albertville. A 25-minute drive took more than an hour.
Langfellow is executive editor of Minnesota Score Magazine. When he told Eric Nelson, an on-air partner with the Minnesota Score radio show, about simmering in traffic, Nelson responded, "Why don't you take the train?"