Seconds after Jason Kubel sailed Target Field's first major-league home run 388 feet over the right field wall, 39,000 attendees watched the ball land in the glove of 13-year-old A.J. Nitzschke.
But none of them wanted that ball more than Clyde Doepner.
Doepner set out to drive a hard bargain with the stunned seventh-grader from Iowa. The deal between the two would prove that they had a lot more in common than a coveted baseball.
Despite urging from other fans to keep the prized ball, A.J. gave it up to Doepner, the Minnesota Twins' first-ever curator, who collects and displays memorabilia of the utmost importance to the franchise -- past, present and future.
In return, A.J. walked away with a signed Joe Mauer MVP jersey and 20 minutes with the catcher after the game. Most important, though, he realized that he helped keep that moment alive for other fans.
"We're big enough sports buffs that he understood the magnitude of when he caught that ball," said his mother, Holly Nitzschke. "He made a very mature decision and the experience will be something he'll never forget."
Before Clyde the Curator, there was Clyde the Collector. It started with the Twins' first game as a franchise at Met Stadium in 1961. A teenage Doepner walked out of his first major-league game with a new appreciation for the sport and, of course, a few Twins collectibles: a popcorn holder in the shape of a megaphone, a bobblehead and a program.
And, yes, he still has them.