[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 115 (Thursday, July 28, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4990-S4991]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO BERT BLYLEVEN
Mr. FRANKEN. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to former
Minnesota Twins pitcher Bert Blyleven, who this week received his
sport's highest honor when he was inducted into the Major League
Baseball Hall of Fame.
To Bert, I offer hearty and well-deserved congratulations.
To the rest of the baseball world, I ask the question: What took so
long? In the 14 years since he first became eligible for the Hall of
Fame, we in Minnesota all assumed that, with his rare talent and Hall
of Fame numbers, Bert was a shoo-in, and for many of those 14 years he
was considered the best player never to have been inducted. I am proud
to say as a Minnesotan and a lifelong Twins fan that this year Bert
Blyleven was officially voted into the Hall of Fame.
People in Minnesota all know Bert belongs on the distinguished list
of Minnesota Twins already in the Hall of Fame, including Harmon
Killebrew, Rod Carew, and Kirby Puckett, as well as two other baseball
greats who grew up in St. Paul, MN, and later played for the Twins and
were inducted into the Hall of Fame: Paul Molitor and Dave Winfield.
Each of them had Hall of Fame careers, and now Bert has finally joined
them.
Bert pitched 22 seasons in the Major Leagues, 11 of them for the
Twins, but he also took his talents to Texas, Pittsburgh, Cleveland,
and California. During his career, he won 287 games, he struck out an
amazing 3,701 batters, and is fifth on the alltime career strikeout
list, with more career strikeouts than pitching greats Tom Seaver,
Walter Johnson, Bob Gibson, Greg Maddux, Cy Young, or even his boyhood
idol, Sandy Koufax. He pitched 60 shutouts and led the league in
shutouts three times. He had a career earned run average of just 3.31.
He pitched 242 complete games, something that would be unheard of
today. He played on two world championship teams: in Minnesota, with
the 1987 Twins and in Pittsburgh. For Twins fans, we all know Bert was
a major part of that
[[Page S4991]]
1987 Twins world championship team which we all revere for finally
bringing a world championship to our State. And we won again in 1991.
Bert mentioned in his acceptance speech on Sunday that he is the
first Hall of Famer born in Holland. He moved to California as a child
and became interested in baseball by watching Sandy Koufax pitch for
the Dodgers. His father Joe, also a baseball fan, built him a pitcher's
mound in the backyard, where he developed one of the best curveballs in
baseball history. I would like to think if my dad had built me--no, I
don't think so.
Bert finished his playing career in 1992. In 1996, he rejoined the
Twins in the broadcast booth, where for many years he and Dick Bremer
have become familiar voices to Twins fans all over the upper Midwest. I
personally love nothing more than watching a Twins game on TV and
listening to Dick and Bert, who, in my humble opinion, are an
authoritative and amazingly entertaining broadcast team.
During broadcasts, Bert has created a phenomenon using his
telestrator to circle Twins fans who, whether they are in the Target
Field or on the road, are holding up signs that catch Bert's interest,
and then he will circle them. There is no higher honor for a Twins fan
than to be circled by Bert, and every game is packed with fans holding
signs that simply say ``Circle Me, Bert.''
It was great to see that Bert was joined at Sunday's induction
ceremony by his wife Gayle, their children, Bert's siblings, and his
mother Jenny. During his speech, Bert spoke about his father Joe, who
died in 2004 of Parkinson's disease, saying, ``I know he is up there
right now looking down.''
In memory of his father, Bert and his wife Gayle started the ``Circle
Me, Bert'' Web site to raise research money for the National Parkinson
Foundation Minnesota. That says volumes about Bert Blyleven. Bert is
known in Minnesota for his dedication to other charities and to the
community there.
So, once again, Bert, as a lifelong Twins fan, thank you and
congratulations. After 14 years of waiting, you are hereby ``circled''
by the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame, where generations of fans
from Minnesota and around the country and around the world will know of
your career and of your amazing contributions to the game of baseball
and to the community of Minnesota.
Thank you very much. I yield the floor and maybe also put in a word
for Tony Oliva and also suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for
15 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The
Senator may speak for up to 15 minutes.
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