Stan Kowalski was introduced to the Target Field crowd Friday night and followed by raising the flag. He was there as the latest member of the Greatest Generation to do the Twins the honor of being on hand to add an emotional edge to the national anthem.
Kowalski enlisted in the Navy as a 17-year-old in 1943 and served on three submarines: the Plaice, the Barb and the Bashaw. He was a gunner's mate, charged with the 50-caliber artillery piece on the deck.
"The Barb was famous," Kowalski said. "She did a lot of damage to Japanese ships."
Stan is a week shy of his 91st birthday and in a wheelchair. These aged American heroes always draw an extra-warm ovation from the arriving crowd at the ballpark.
A greeting such as this in a sports venue was novel for Kowalski, since he spent three decades of his life facing venom merely for walking down an aisle in an arena as a pro wrestling villain.
Kowalski was raised in north Minneapolis as Bert Smith. He served in the Navy as Gunnery Mate Smith. He returned to the Twin Cities and enrolled at the University of Minnesota.
"I hadn't played football in high school, but as a big man and getting bigger, I went out for the Gophers," he said. "I got in for one play in football, and I was Verne Gagne's backup as the heavyweight on the wrestling team."
Joe Pazandak was a pro wrestler, and he worked out at the U. Stan wasn't quite sure what he was going to do for a job. He was 6-foot-2 and well-muscled and Pazandak suggested that he give wrestling a try.