Kirby Puckett closed the 80s with four-straight All Star selections to go along with four Gold Gloves and four Silver Sluggers. For good measure he won the batting championship in the final year of the decade.
Though the Twins finished last in 1990, Puckett made the fifth of his ten-straight All Star appearances. The following year Minnesota turned it around with a 95-win campaign.
Puckett made the most in his postseason return in the 1986 ALCS. His two homers and six RBI led both teams and helped the Twins made quick work of the Eastern Division Toronto Blue Jays. As ALCS MVP, Puckett hit .429 with a .762 slugging percentage.
The 1991 Fall Classic featured baseball’s first pair of worst-to-first clubs. Only the pitching-rich Braves behind Tom Glavine, John Smoltz, and Steve Avery stood between the Twins and their second title in five years.
After the home team won each of the first four games the Series, the Braves continued the trend with a 15-4 drubbing of the Twins in Game 5 at Fulton County Stadium. One win away from their first title since 1957, the Braves flew to Minnesota.
Game 6 provided Puckett’s signature moment. With the game tied at 2-apiece, Puckett led off the bottom of the 11th. On a 2-1 pitch, Puckett slammed Charlie Leibrant’s fastball toward the wall in left-center. As the ball cleared the fence to force a Game 7, announcer Jack Buck made his famous walk-off call, “And we’ll see you tomorrow night!”
Game 7 provided a Hall of Fame matchup between Smoltz and Jack Morris. The Braves right-hander pitched valiantly, scattering six hits in 7 1/3 scoreless innings. Twins starter Jack Morris was even better, holding Atlanta scoreless though through ten innings. In the Minnesota half of the 10th Columbia University alum Gene Larkin walked off the Braves with a bases-loaded single. Puckett and the Twins were champions of baseball.
Shown here is a ticket signed by the man who went up against Morris that night, Braves John Smoltz. The ticket is to the April 27, 2008 contest when Smoltz recorded his 3,000th strikeout.