USA TODAY US Edition

For Twins, emotions raw after a senseless death

- Bob Nightengal­e

My God, not again.

Not another senseless and tragic death.

Not another police officer killing an unarmed Black man in the Minneapoli­s area.

Last summer, it was a Minneapoli­s officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, 46, for 9 minutes and 29 seconds, before he died.

This time, it was an officer from Brooklyn Center, a suburb of Minneapoli­s, who fatally shot a 20-year-old man, Daunte Wright, at a traffic stop.

“All of us, all of us, especially us in Minnesota right now,” said Minnesota Twins manager Rocco Baldelli, “are tired in a lot of ways of having these types of conversati­ons. There’s a huge disappoint­ment and sadness when you have to wake up to these things. …

“I shouldn’t say there’s a disbelief, because I think we’ve seen these things happening around the country way too much, but it is very disappoint­ing and very sad every time we see this.”

The Twins, after admitting fans Monday afternoon into their ballpark at downtown Target Field, realized it was senseless and inappropri­ate to play, later postponing their game against the Red Sox.

“Our community has been through a lot,” Twins President Dave St. Peter said. “We have a trial taking place just blocks away from Target Field. Emotions across our community, emotions across our organizati­on are raw. So based on the events of the last 24 hours, and as informatio­n has started to come to light, playing a baseball game today felt a little less important.

“When you add a level of public safety to that, particular­ly for fans, our players, our staff, we thought the decision we made today was the right call.

“History will maybe tell us otherwise, but today, this moment, we’re pretty confident we’re doing the right thing.”

Really, it was the only thing. The Minnesota Timberwolv­es postponed their NBA game against the

Brooklyn Nets in downtown Minneapoli­s as well as the Minnesota Wild with their NHL game against the St. Louis Blues in St. Paul.

Who cares about sports when a 20-year-old, driving with his girlfriend in a family car given to him two weeks ago, was pulled over for an expired registrati­on and is shot dead minutes later?

“My heart is breaking for Daunte Wright’s family and loved ones,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar tweeted. “There must be an immediate and transparen­t investigat­ion into what happened and why a Black man’s life was lost at the hands of law enforcemen­t.”

Brooklyn Center police are calling it an accidental shooting, saying the officer may have intended to fire a Taser at Wright, not a gun.

“This appears to be, from what I viewed, and the officer’s reaction and distress immediatel­y after,” Brooklyn Center Chief Tim Gannon said, “that this was an accidental discharge that resulted in a tragic death of Mr. Wright.”

Whether it was accidental or not, a young man with his whole life ahead of him is now dead.

“It’s a tough time right now,” Twins outfielder Jake Cave, “especially in Minnesota.’’

This hits everyone hard, no matter where you live.

It’s why New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Hicks pulled himself out of the starting lineup Monday, needing time for reflection.

“With all that is going on in Minneapoli­s,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone says, “he’s having a tough time right now. And I certainly support that.

The situation is heartbreak­ing right now in Minneapoli­s, and it has hit Aaron particular­ly hard.”

The Twins say there are no current plans to postpone the remaining three games of the series but concede it will depend on potential unrest in the Twin Cities.

A state of emergency has been declared in Minneapoli­s and St. Paul with a 7 p.m. curfew.

“There’s a big part of this decision,” St. Peter said, “that’s also rooted in safety and consultati­on with law enforcemen­t about unknowns, about what will or could transpire within the broader community over the next several hours.”

Really, Monday’s postponeme­nt should be strictly out of respect for Wright’s family, not about potential unrest.

How can you sit in the stands and actually cheer, boo, or even care who wins a baseball, basketball or hockey game at this point?

Daunte Wright lost his life. That’s the only loss that matters.

You keep praying these senseless deaths end, but for every parent with a Black son or daughter, you’re painfully aware that no police stop is ever routine.

Wright was pulled over for simply having expired registrati­on tags. The police discovered he had a warrant for his arrest. He stepped outside the car, and when he stepped back in, there was a brief struggle, and he was shot.

So the idea that anyone is actually worried about the consequenc­es of a baseball game, a basketball game and a hockey game being postponed in the Twin Cities is absurd and grossly insensitiv­e.

This is a heartbreak­ing day throughout the entire country.

Another name, another victim, another senseless death.

Once again.

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 ?? JESSE JOHNSON/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Signage on the Target Field video board shows that Monday’s game between the Red Sox and Twins is postponed.
JESSE JOHNSON/USA TODAY SPORTS Signage on the Target Field video board shows that Monday’s game between the Red Sox and Twins is postponed.

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