Tony Oliva waited 45 years to be elected to the Hall of Fame. Now that he has, it may take him another 45 to acknowledge all the heartfelt adulation that the honor has unleashed.
"I checked my telephone and I had 192 messages," Oliva said Monday as he basked in the applause of an in-person celebration at Target Field. "Today, they keep coming and I haven't had time to answer."
Not even the one from his former teammate and, following Sunday's locally electrifying announcement, present-day classmate in the Hall of Fame class of 2022. "I sent you a text, and I haven't heard back yet," laughed Jim Kaat, who took part online.
The occasion was an ersatz news conference with the new Hall of Famers, but really it was a jubilee for family members and former Twins greats to mark "a tremendous day in the history of our franchise," said team President Dave St. Peter, "a momentous day for our state."
And it recognized a pair of Twins who had nearly opposite profiles on the Hall of Fame ballot: Oliva the shooting star of a hitter whose case was built on eight spectacular seasons but was cut short because of knee injuries, and Kaat the workhorse pitcher who rarely dominated but whose durability allowed him to play for a quarter-century.
"You just try to be the best player you can. Work hard, never stop working hard," Oliva said. "I'm proud of my career. When it ended, maybe I wasn't ready, but I said, 'I couldn't have been any better. I did the very best I could."
Though it took awhile for confirmation, it was good enough.
The election, with exactly the 12 votes necessary for each of them from a special 16-member committee, will increase from four to six the number of plaques in Cooperstown bearing the "TC" logo on the caps. Oliva and Kaat, both 83, will join the late Harmon Killebrew and Kirby Puckett and two living Hall of Famers, Bert Blyleven and Rod Carew, as Twins greats in the gallery of the national museum once they are inducted in July.