The story of the Arizona Diamondbacks' new manager can be told by the way others addressed him during his baseball career.
He was Chip, then Walter, then Chip. Now, he's Skipper.
In an era in which many major league baseball teams hire recycled managers or recently retired players, Walter "Chip'' Hale earned the latter honorarium the old-fashioned way: rung by slippery rung.
When the Diamondbacks named Hale their manager this week, it was the culmination of an odyssey that began at Class A Kenosha in the Twins' organization in 1987.
More than 27 years later he called from his lawn in Tucson, Ariz., "laying grass seed, and listening to the ballgame,'' he said.
Hale was close to going into the Navy out of high school when major colleges began recruiting him. He visited the University of Arizona and was impressed with the scope of the Wildcats' program and with coach Jerry Kindall — a St. Paul native who played second base for the Twins.
Hale chose Arizona over the Navy. "I had no idea that I could ever make it to the majors at that point,'' he said.
The Twins liked his lefthanded swing and drafted him in the 17th round. He spent most of three seasons in the minors before the Twins called him to the big leagues in 1989.