The flowers were what surprised him. And the texts. Doug Mientkiewicz hadn't been on the Twins' payroll for years, had played for seven other organizations and worked as a coach in the Dodgers' system, yet every June 19 his phone would buzz and he'd see Terry Ryan's name, and when his wife took ill a bouquet showed up, signed by his first team.
Mientkiewicz's departure from the Twins was abrupt, even rude. After he played first base for the group of young Twins who rescued the franchise, Ryan, then and now the Twins' general manager, traded him from one Metrodome clubhouse to the other during a 2004 series with the Boston Red Sox. Mientkiewicz strolled down the hall, pulled on the cap with the 'B' on it, won a World Series and never again wore Twinstripes as a player.
So it's odd to see him on the back fields at the Twins' spring training complex these days, working as the new manager of Class A Fort Myers, wearing what looks like his old game uniform, looking like he hasn't aged a day. "How about this," he said recently to a visitor, looking down at the Twins' script on his chest.
Mientkiewicz has lived the baseball life in full. He was a key prospect, then a faltering prospect, then a winning big-leaguer eventually made expendable by the arrival of a more talented prospect. He became an Olympic gold medal winner and World Series champion and role player and glove-for-hire and pinch-hitter who became, like so many former athletes, a fledgling employee at 38.
For all his travels, he considers himself a once and future Twin.
"You never forget where you came from," he said. "You don't forget running around on these fields when it's August and September and it's 1,000 degrees and you're sweating to get up there, to the big leagues."
He caught the last out of the Red Sox's first World Series title in 86 years but says even that moment of baseball history can't match his band-of-brothers experience with the Twins.
"Definitely, turning this franchise around was more rewarding," he said. "It's really '1' and '1A'. That group I played with in Boston was extremely special. They deserved that ring more than anybody on the planet. To do that for a city after 90 years of losing meant the world. But I've always said my most prized achievement, through the Gold Glove, the gold medal, the World Series, was what we did with the Twins.