Mauer Taking Family to All-Star Game
Joe
Mauer is both a baseball and family all-star. The Twins’ catcher plays in
his second major league all-star game next Tuesday night and thanks to
his generosity 10 family members, including 78-year-old grandfather
Jake Mauer, will be watching the game at New York’s Yankee Stadium.
“Am I thrilled!” Jake told Sports
Headliners. “I really am. …”
Jake loves baseball and started tutoring
Joe when he was a little boy growing up in St. Paul. “I have never seen a
game at Yankee Stadium,” Jake said. “I told Joe before he signed (a
contract with the Twins, out of high school), I said, ‘Joe, there’s
really only one thing that I would really like in my whole life before I
pass away, and that’s to sit in Yankee Stadium and watch you play ball
because I have never been there. …’ ”
The timing of the trip couldn’t be better
because Yankee Stadium will be replaced with a new stadium after this
season. Jake said he “can’t wait” to see the monument area at Yankee
Stadium where plaques of Yankee greats like Babe Ruth, Lou
Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle are
displayed. He also hopes to walk the famed tunnel leading from the
clubhouse out to the field.
Jake said the trip for 10 will cost his
grandson “every bit” of $20,000 or so. Just the game tickets will be
$5,000. The group leaves Monday, will stay in a hotel across from
Central Park, take a three-hour sight-seeing tour of New York, plus
enjoy the all-star home run derby and game before returning on
Wednesday. Limo service to and from Yankee Stadium will be part of the
package, too.
Two years ago Jake was Joe’s guest at the
all-star game in Pittsburgh. New York, though, will be even a better
experience, he said. He described Pittsburgh as a “terrible town” with
no excitement. “No nothing,” Jake said. “Outskirts (of Pittsburgh) are
nice but we didn’t get to the outskirts.”
Joe, who will be joined at the all-star
game by teammates Justin Morneau and Joe Nathan, is
second in the American League in hitting with a .328 average. Unlike
two years ago when he won the league batting championship with a .347
average, he isn’t stringing together three or four hit games. Joe told
Jake that pitchers are pitching around him and he’s not seeing good balls to
hit, but he thinks more multiple hit games are coming in July and August
when he expects his performance to improve.
Another batting title? “Definitely,” Jake
said. “Definitely. …Nobody will beat him. No.”
The Twins had won 16 of 18 through Sunday
before losing three of their last four. Jake said the attitude in the
clubhouse is extraordinary this season, according to Joe.
“Everybody is happy,” Jake said. “There
are no harsh words. I mean if they sit on the bench and they have a
replacement, nobody disagrees with anything. They give the cheers to
them, and it’s just like a family.
“And he says it’s unbelievable when you
walk into the clubhouse. Nobody is down. Everybody’s up and everybody
thinks they’re going to win it. And that’s the spirit. He’s never seen
it like this.”
Win what? If the pitching is good, a
world championship, Jake said.