I had a hard time falling asleep after the exceptional night I had at Day 1 but I knew I had to get a decent spot in line so my Day 2 plan would go off ok. I decided to wear my spring jacket rather than my winter coat because it was much lighter.
I decided to try my luck out at the M&M Boys wristband lottery and got a Mauer and Morneau wristband. As the person put the Morneau wristband on, I noticed the two bands were red and green. I commented “Merry Christmas to me, huh?” and the guy said maybe you will be lucky with them. I got them and then got in line. I was outside in my spring jacket for about 45 minutes or so but I kept telling myself it would be worth it because the bag would be lighter. Once the doors opened I headed down to the field to see how things were looking. I found out my color was not chosen for Mauer so I got in line at Corner #2. I got the following:
Jeff Manship on Cami’s Twinsfest baseball
Chris Parmelee on my second debut ticket
Liam Hendriks on the same second debut ticket
Jamey Carroll on a sweetspot baseball.
Just like how things started the night before, I went on the other side of the curtain and got in line at Corner #1. I got Tim Laudner on a rookie card, Juan Berenguer on a card, Dick Stigman on a card and Dave Goltz on a couple team cards (1973 and 1978). As I was walking up, I noticed Mike (mudpuddlehuddle) from Pat Neshek’s board in line behind me and decided to introduce myself. I am really not the type of person to do that as I appreciate some of the anonymity of the internet but I have seen Mike around at a couple places and thought I would finally introduce myself to him. Mike made a comment that he thought my Twins signed baseball card collection was awesome which made me feel good. It is really neat to hear a peer comment on something whether at work or in a hobby. I told him I would see him around and talk more later.
I walked around for a little bit to check out what was for sale. The card of tickets the person was looking for from the night before did not yield any tickets but the list looked really familiar to me. It turns out the person there was Tony Swann. I met Tony online a few years ago. Tony collects
tickets for every (yes- *every*) game that Carlton Fisk has ever played in. We have traded tickets in the past for my Puckett HR collection. I decided to swing by and introduce myself. What a great guy! He seemed as though we were long time friends going back to high school. He was just featured in Beckett Monthly as a super collector. Tony gives meaning to “super” both ways; super guy and super collection. As we were talking he asks me if I have a ticket to when Puckett got his last hit and I told him I was not sure. He pulls out the tickets and gives it to me. What a guy. I gotta find him some Fisk tickets!
I move on and find out my wristband for Morneau was the right color. Wow! Lucky me! I get up to the line for Morneau and as I try to get situated, I notice the $5 bill I got in change at Station #2 a few minutes earlier had writing on it. I look and it says “Merry Christmas for you 12/25/11” on it. Someone gave that dollar as a Christmas present a few weeks ago and I got it. I immediately thought about when the person put the wristbands on my wrist and my comment about “Merry Christmas to me”. I thought that was cool so I
took a picture of it on my phone. I got up to Justin and gave him his 2010 Topps Heritage MVP card. Why I chose that card is to finish him up for that set. He looked at it and said “There I am, deep in thought.” and signed it. I then headed to the Carew line to get another card done. I was waiting in line for Carew while the previous line was still signing. That seemed to work out for me as the standard plan to get a jump on the next lines and move on to multiples throughout the day. I got up to Tony Oliva and got him to sign a wire photo from 1972 and got Rod to sign my 1976 Topps batting leaders card. I then got back in the same line for the next group. That provided me with another cool personal moment with a former Twin. I got up to Mudcat Grant and he signed a wirephoto from the 1965 World Series for me. I then went to Roy Smalley. I told him I was sorry to hear about his father passing away a few months ago. He said thank you in a sincere, appreciative voice. I told him I sent his dad a baseball card a couple years ago and he signed it and sent it back and I still have it in my collection. He told me his father loved signing the cards that people sent to him and then said “Thank you for sending it to him.” Get that. Someone thanking ME for sending and getting back a card. Tells you how classy the Smalley family is. That was really special to me. Then I gave Scott Erickson a complete ticket to his no hitter game and asked him to sign it with “No Hitter”. He did and it looks AWESOME. He handed it back to me and asked “How is that?” I told him it looked awesome and thanked him and he shook my hand with a solid firm grip. I then headed down to the field again to check out the items for sale there.
I noticed the line was short in Corner #1 so I got the following tickets signed:
Kyle Waldrop ML debut ticket with ML Debut
Rene Tosoni ML debut ticket (would not sign ML Debut)
Scott Diamond ML debut ticket (did not even ask after Tosoni)
The line for Corner #4 was non-existent so I got in line and got the following:
Alexi Casilla on Cami’s Twinsfest ball
Brian Duensing ML debut ticket with “Major League Debut!”
I then walked over and had a cool chat with Joel Bradley who I met on SportsCollectors.net. Great local guy. I headed over to say hi to my buddy and former ticket rep Rob Malec. On my way there, I saw Jerry Bell walking around checking things out. I have a baseball card of Target Field that I wanted to get him to sign at some point and thought about mailing it to him via the team address. I asked him if he had a moment to sign a baseball card for me. He was really nice and said no problem so I pulled out my Target Field card and he signed it. I thanked him for all his efforts in getting the new ballpark built and how my kids have so much fun going to a game there. I then headed on my way to see Rob and got to meet a former coworker of his who still works at the Ft Myers Miracle and had a nice chat with both of them.
I headed home after that thinking ‘Man, could Twinsfest get any better?’ Once home, I gave a schedule to each of the kids for Sunday and let them circle who they wanted to get in lines for and we would have to figure it out as each Sunday of Twinsfest is my day with Caden and Cami.