When Twins fans think of Kirby Puckett and Game 6, one image usually comes to mind. It is the unforgettable leap against the Metrodome plexiglass and the iconic swing that sent the baseball soaring into the left-center field seats, followed by the famous call, “And we’ll see you tomorrow night.” That moment immortalized Puckett as a franchise legend, the face of Minnesota’s greatest baseball memories.
But four years earlier, before the national spotlight fully embraced him, Puckett had already authored a Game 6 performance that changed the course of franchise history. It did not end with fireworks or walk-off jubilation, but without it, there might not have been a 1991 moment to remember at all.
A Game the Twins Could Not Afford to Lose
The 1987 World Series was hanging in the balance. Minnesota trailed St. Louis three games to two and returned home to the Metrodome needing back-to-back wins to capture its first championship. The atmosphere was tense, the crowd hungry, and the Twins’ offense searching for a spark. That spark turned out to be Puckett.
From the start, Puckett’s energy set the tone. He reached base in all five of his plate appearances, going 4-for-4 with a walk and a stolen base. His trademark blend of hustle and instinct was on full display. Every time he got on, something good happened for the Twins. He scored four times, tying a World Series record for runs in a single game. In a contest where Minnesota needed every ounce of offense, Puckett seemed to embody the will to win that defined the 1987 team.
Turning the Tide in the Fifth
Perhaps Puckett’s most crucial moment came in the bottom of the fifth inning. The Twins were down 5-2 and in danger of letting the series slip away. Puckett led off with a single, setting in motion a four-run rally that electrified the Metrodome. Gary Gaetti drove in Puckett with a double and Don Baylor followed with a two-run homer. Puckett’s speed, timing, and baserunning aggression helped Minnesota claw its way back, flipping the momentum and silencing a St. Louis team that had appeared poised to celebrate soon.
The Twins never looked back after that inning. They took the lead and held it, powered by the heartbeat of their lineup. It was not the dramatic finish of 1991, but it was every bit as essential. Puckett’s relentless effort and perfect night at the plate ensured there would be a Game 7, and history would remember what came next: Frank Viola’s masterful performance, a parade through downtown Minneapolis, and a World Series pennant that waves proudly above Target Field.
The Birth of a Legend
Game 6 of 1987 marked the moment Puckett became more than an All-Star. It was his arrival as a postseason force, a player who thrived when the lights burned brightest. He was still only 27 years old, but his leadership and spark already defined the Twins’ identity.
Four years later, he would top himself in legendary fashion, cementing his place in baseball lore with another Game 6 masterpiece. But before that moment ever happened, Puckett’s first great Game 6 helped write the first chapter of Minnesota’s championship story. It was a performance that kept a dream alive and proved that when the Twins needed him most, Puckett was always ready to deliver.
What do you remember about Game 6 in 1987? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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