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  • Twins Bite-Sized History: Gene Mauch, Rod Carew and the Lumber Company


    John  Bonnes

    In 1970, for the second straight year, the Twins won their division but were swept out of the playoffs by the Baltimore Orioles. It wasn't obvious at the time, but the team would not make another postseason appearance for 17 years. That doesn't mean they were bad.

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    The Twins remained marginally competitive over the next decade or so, but injuries and age chipped away enough to lower them from elite to mediocre. Killebrew turned 35 in 1971 and would never again hit even 30 home runs in a season. Oliva hurt his knee on a shoestring catch in June 1971 and would never again garner MVP votes, which he had done for eight straight years. Killebrew departed the Twins after the 1974 season and retired a year later. A year after that, Oliva played his last major league game.


    Part 5 of a 12-part series that breaks Twins history into fun-sized chunks.You can find more here:

    Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 |Part 4


    Rod Carew, however, bounced back from his 1970 injury and resumed his Hall of Fame career. He won batting titles every season from 1972 through 1978, except for 1976, when he missed it by two hits. He was an All-Star every year from his rookie year in 1967 through 1984.

    The clubhouse was handed to manager Frank Quilici who guided the team to nearly a .500 record from 1972 through 1975, but they never finished higher than third in the division, and never fewer than eight games back. The results took their toll on attendance. The Twins did not break the 1,000,000 attendance mark for the first time in 1971, but it wouldn’t be the last. The Twins didn’t reach that mark again until 1977, thanks to Carew’s stellar season, a new manager, and a “Lumber Company.”

    The manager was Gene Mauch, a veteran manager from the National League who also happened to be a former member of the St. Paul Saints and Minneapolis Millers. He took over the Twins in 1976, and, despite the midseason trade of Bert Blyleven, the Twins posted a winning record for the first time since 1970.

    The next year was even more exciting, and over 1,100,000 Twins fans watched it live. The Twins offense, known as the “Lumber Company,” scored 867 runs and featured career years from Larry Hisle (119 RBI) and Lyman Bostock (.336 batting average). That level of run support helped make a 20-game winner out of Dave Goltz, who posted a 3.36 ERA. On August 23, the Twins were 18 games above .500 and a game back of the Royals. A late season fade to fourth place and 84 wins didn’t diminish the return of interest to the franchise.

    That interest was further fueled by Carew’s remarkable 1977 season. He entered June hitting .365 but proceeded to gather hits in every June game save the one on the 18th. On July 1st he was hitting .411 and would keep his average above that level through July 10th, about the same time he was on the cover of Time magazine.

    He would not reach .400 again, but finished the year with a .388 average, eight hits shy of the magical mark. It would be the zenith of Carew’s career with the Twins. But things turned sharply downhill that offseason.

    Next up: Bottoming Out

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    I always wondered how the Twins would have done if we hadn't traded Greg Nettles to the &%$#^ Yankees. Greg batting third with Carew leading off would score alot of runs. A staff lead by Bert B and D Goltz and Mike Marshall in charge of the pen. I think they could have made some noise.

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    This was the period when I started convincing my Dad to take me to a couple of games a year. We favored the box seats on the first base side - the cost kept going up though - I think they started at $6.50 a seat and went up to $8.50 over a couple of years. Kind of steep to be shelling out $30 for two tickets, a couple of dogs, and beverages...

     

    While this installment didn't comment on free agency, it should feature prominently in the next episode as the financial landscape began to substantially change during the upcoming period. Was not a good development for a team and owner who had no other means of financial livelihood.

     

     

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    That 1977 team was one of the greater disappointments.  There were so many good/great player on that team [Carew, Bostock, Hisle, Goltz, who threw 303 innings that year].  The rest of the team was, politely, not good.  No other hitter with an average over .265.  No other starting pitcher with more wins than loses and their closer was as close to a bullpen starter as you can get:  146 inning, 3.13 era, 16-7 record and 15 saves.  Oh, what could have been.....

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    Thanks for the memories.

     

    I hated those 5-game series after a 162-game slog-fest. The Orioles were pretty good though.

     

    I had the Strat-o-Matic game from that year so I became quite familiar with all the playoff teams.

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    FYI-- The Twins traded Greg Nettles to the Indians following the 1969 season as part of the Luis Tiant transaction.  It would have be nice to have kept him, but in those years we had Killebrew at third.  Rich Reese had hit .322 in 1969 was at first-- so they must have thought Reese was a better option than Nettles otherwise they would have moved Harmon to first.

     

    I always wondered how the Twins would have done if we hadn't traded Greg Nettles to the &%$#^ Yankees. Greg batting third with Carew leading off would score alot of runs. A staff lead by Bert B and D Goltz and Mike Marshall in charge of the pen. I think they could have made some noise.

     

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