What a sad story.

Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett Dies at 45

By DAVE CAMPBELL, AP Sports Writer Tue Mar 7, 7:24 AM ET

MINNEAPOLIS - Kirby Puckett didn't need much time to make a big impact. 
Those who felt it, near and far, can only wish he had stayed around longer.
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The bubbly Hall of Famer with the boyish enthusiasm for baseball, who 
led the
Minnesota Twins to two
World Series titles before his career was cut short by glaucoma, died 
Monday after a stroke. He was 45.

"He was revered throughout the country and will be remembered wherever 
the game is played," commissioner Bud Selig said. "Kirby was taken from 
us much too soon — and too quickly."

Indeed, Puckett was the second-youngest person to die having already 
been enshrined at Cooperstown, Hall of Fame spokesman Jeff Idelson said. 
Only Lou Gehrig, at 37, was younger.

Stricken early Sunday at his Arizona home, Puckett died at St. Joseph's 
Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, where friends and family had 
gathered. Puckett, who was divorced, is survived by his children, 
Catherine and Kirby Jr. He was engaged to be married to Jodi Olson this 
summer.

Funeral arrangements were pending.

Puckett's post-retirement weight gain over the past decade concerned 
friends and family, who were saddened but not shocked by his stroke.

"It's a tough thing to see a guy go through something like that and come 
to this extent," former teammate Kent Hrbek said.

Puckett led the Twins to championships in 1987 and 1991 after breaking 
into the majors in 1984. With a career batting average of .318, six Gold 
Gloves and 10 All-Star game appearances, Puckett woke up one morning 
during spring training in 1996 and never played again because of 
blindness in his right eye.

"That's what really hurt him bad, when he was forced out of the game," 
Hrbek said. "I don't know if he ever recovered from it."

A makeshift memorial began to form Monday night outside the Metrodome, 
with a handful of bouquets, caps and candles laid on the sidewalk. "I 
grew up in centerfield yelling down on him. It's just not right," said 
fan Daniel Boche, who knelt down to pay his respects. "He was my idol 
growing up."

"It's tough to take," Twins general manager Terry Ryan said from the 
team's spring training camp in Fort Myers, Fla. "He had some faults, we 
knew that, but when all was said and done he would treat you as well as 
he would anyone else, no matter who you were."

Though he steadfastly refused to speak pessimistically about the 
premature end to his career, Puckett's personal life began to 
deteriorate after that.

Shortly after his induction to Cooperstown, then-wife Tonya accused him 
of threatening to kill her during an argument — he denied it — and 
described to police a history of violence and infidelity. In 2003, he 
was cleared of all charges from an alleged sexual assault of a woman at 
a suburban Twin Cities restaurant and kept a low profile after the 
trial, eventually moving to Arizona. He stopped coming to spring 
training as a special instructor in 2002.

Puckett was elected to the Hall of Fame on his first try in 2001, and 
his plaque praised his "ever-present smile and infectious exuberance."

He spent his entire career with Minnesota.

"I wore one uniform in my career and I'm proud to say that," Puckett 
once said. "As a kid growing up in Chicago, people thought I'd never do 
anything. I've always tried to play the game the right way. I thought I 
did pretty good with the talent that I have."

Puckett's signature performance came in Game 6 of the 1991 World Series 
against Atlanta. After claiming he would lead the Twins to victory that 
night at the Metrodome, he made a leaping catch against the fence and 
then hit a game-ending homer in the 11th inning to force a seventh game.

The next night, Minnesota's Jack Morris went all 10 innings to outlast 
John Smoltz for a 1-0 win, Minnesota's second championship in five years.

"If we had to lose and if one person basically was the reason — you 
never want to lose — but you didn't mind it being Kirby Puckett. When he 
made the catch and when he hit the home run you could tell the whole 
thing had turned," Smoltz said.

"His name just seemed to be synonymous with being a superstar," the 
Braves pitcher added. "It's not supposed to happen like this."

Hall of Fame catcher Carlton Fisk echoed Smoltz's sentiment.

"There was no player I enjoyed playing against more than Kirby. He 
brought such joy to the game. He elevated the play of everyone around 
him," Fisk said in a statement to the Hall.

Puckett's birth date was frequently listed as March 14, 1961, but recent 
research by the Hall of Fame indicated he was born a year earlier.

The youngest of nine children born into poverty in a Chicago housing 
project, Puckett was drafted by the Twins in 1982 and became a regular 
just two years later. He got four hits in his first major league start 
and finished with 2,304 in only 12 seasons.

Though his power numbers, 207 home runs and 1,085 RBIs, weren't 
exceptional, Puckett won an AL batting title in 1989 and was considered 
one of the best all-around players of his era. His esteem and enthusiasm 
for the game factored into his Hall of Fame election as much as his 
statistics and championship rings.

He made his mark on baseball's biggest stage, leading heavy underdog 
Minnesota to a seven-game victory over St. Louis in 1987 and then doing 
the same against Atlanta in one of the most thrilling Series in history.

"There are a lot of great players in this game, but only one Kirby," 
pitcher Rick Aguilera said when Puckett announced his retirement. "It 
was his character that meant more to his teammates. He brought a great 
feeling to the clubhouse, the plane, everywhere."

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