Off Base
MLB
  Scores
  Schedules
  Standings
  Statistics
  Transactions
  Injuries: AL | NL
  Players
  Offseason moves
  Free Agents
  Message Board
  Minor Leagues
  MLB Stat Search
  MLB en espaņol

Clubhouses

SportsMall
  Shop@ESPN.com
  NikeTown
  TeamStore


Sport Sections
Friday, February 9
With Puckett, Hall of Fame is now a better place



I just hope the Hall of Fame plaque is wide enough to hold Kirby Puckett's smile.

Dave Winfield might have had the grander career, but I suspect that most fans cheered loudest for Puckett on Tuesday when the Hall of Fame announced its two newest members. With that almost constant smile and that funny little body, Puckett always was the fan favorite. Outside of the hometown players, he always received the loudest ovations at the All-Star Game. Opposing fans booed him so rarely that when they did, players looked as stunned as if Mother Teresa had just been told to take a hike.

Perhaps more than any other player of his time, Puckett made everyone at the ballpark feel better -- teammates, opponents and fans alike - and there wasn't a single controlled substance involved. There was just something about that powerful little body, that relentlessly upbeat personality, that smile so broad it stretched from Minneapolis to St. Paul.

Congratulations, Puck. The Hall of Fame now rivals Disneyland as the happiest place on earth.

If Jim Rice had smiled half as much as Puckett, he would be in Cooperstown already. While the Hall of Fame should not be a popularity contest, there is something to be said for making other people feel good.

Personality was an integral part of Puckett's game, as much as the hitting stroke that brought him a .318 career average and more hits than Joe DiMaggio. While he was as good as any player in baseball during his career, he also was one of the game's great ambassadors, which is partly why voters elected him into Cooperstown in his first year of eligibility.

Puckett was so overwhelmed by the honor that he did something a tad out of character during his news conference. He boasted a little. Rather than give his usual remark from his playing days -- "You know me, I just go up and take my hacks" -- he talked about how hard he worked, how much he loved baseball and how much he accomplished in his 12 seasons.

Well, heck. A guy gets voted into the Hall of Fame, he's permitted to finally acknowledge that he was a pretty good player and that, maybe, just maybe, that it wasn't an accident.

"I played every game like it was my last," Puckett said. "I left my blood and sweat and tears on the field."

Many players say things like that and they're usually overstating the case. Not Puckett. He always played with heart, and in what turned out to be his last game, he literally left his blood, sweat and tears on the field.

That was the final week of the 1995 season when Dennis Martinez hit him in the head with a pitch, breaking bones around his eye and knocking him to the ground. When he was helped from the field, the dirt around home plate was stained with his blood.

He never batted in a major-league game again. He developed glaucoma in the spring of 1996, went blind in his right eye and retired that summer.

Puckett is only 40, still young enough to be playing, still kicking his front leg high and adding to his career hit total. That he can't is a shame. But at least now we have him in the Hall, where he will be forever young, forever reaching over the fence to rob some disbelieving batter of a home run, forever scooting around the basepaths and wearing a smile so electric it could power an entire Guns and Roses tour.

Congratulations, Puck. The Hall of Fame now rivals Disneyland as the happiest place on earth.

Jim Caple, whose "Off Base" column appears each Wednesday on ESPN.com, is the national baseball writer for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which has a Web site at www.seattlep-i.com.

Send this story to a friend
 


ALSO SEE
Puckett, Winfield receive Hall passes to Cooperstown

Puckett, Winfield savor honor with each other

Stark: A cap-tivating question to ponder

Kurkjian: Puckett, Winfield deserve the Hall