Shortly after 2:30 p.m. Monday, Terry Ryan strode into a meeting of Twins employees. Bill Smith was not present.
Everyone in the room immediately understood what had happened. Some marked the time, as if they had just witnessed an historic event.
Twins management announced Ryan would be replacing Smith, Ryan's close friend, as the team's general manager. Ryan spoke, and what those present remember most was him saying, "We're going to get this thing on track."
"He had," one employee said, "the look."
That look is well-known throughout the Twins organization. It is equal parts fatherly, stern and fierce. "He's got his eyes wide open, and he wants to take this on," said assistant GM Rob Antony. "That's good for all of us."
Ryan could have worked anywhere. Had he tested the open market, he could have named his price, could have attempted to cover himself in glory by resurrecting a storied franchise. He could have moved to warmer climes or managed a larger payroll.
Instead, he replaced his own successor as general manager of the Minnesota Twins because Ryan is an honorable man.
Had he allowed the Pohlads to hire Smith's successor from outside the organization, Ryan's friends and colleagues who helped build the Twins into an admired franchise might have lost their jobs. Ryan's life work, which led to playoff berths and staved-off contraction and the construction of Target Field, could have been ruined.