Originally Published: August 2, 2007
Bridge collapse stops Twin Cities sports in their tracks
MINNEAPOLIS -- Mike Sherels' cell phone rang. The University of Minnesota linebacker's girlfriend needed to know something.
Was he on the bridge?
Scott Olson/Getty ImagesVehicles rest on a collapsed section of the I-35 bridge, less than a mile from the Metrodome where the Twins were playing the Royals.

AP Photo/Paul BattagliaThe Kansas City-Minnesota game was played Wednesday night, and the Twins observed a moment of silence.
All in all, it's been a brutal, lose-all-perspective, sports-is-out-of-control week in the Twin Cities. This is perhaps the most cluttered of all American sports markets. It's a midsized metropolis, but it's home to four major professional teams; a multifaceted Division I athletics program with high-profile football, basketball and hockey teams; two struggling newspapers with competing sports sections; an active all sports-talk radio station; and a megareserve of cynicism. Championships, shall we say, are not common among Minnesota teams. The Twins, struggling to stay in the American League's wild-card race, traded second baseman Luis Castillo to the Mets on Monday, and a sort of civic sports depression set in. Fans said that general manager Terry Ryan was giving up too soon, that owner Carl Pohlad is too cheap, and that, even though the Twins are finally going to get a new stadium in three years, the franchise won't commit to excellence. In the days that followed, ace pitcher Johan Santana popped off, accusing team executives of not caring. Santana had backing from his teammates.

Bruce Kluckhohn/US PresswireCatcher Mike Redmond frantically tried to reach his wife during the Twins' game against Kansas City.

Scott Olson/Getty ImagesTelevision pictures, said the University of Minnesota's Mike Sherels, couldn't do justice to the destruction he saw from the banks of the Mississippi River.
Sherels, a senior business and marketing education major, saw the real life-and-death situation up close. Winding his way through traffic on his way home from the Twin Cities airport, he finally arrived at his off-campus house, which is about six blocks from I-35W and the site of the bridge failure. The linebacker couldn't believe his eyes. "It's something that the TV can't do justice to," he said Thursday, recalling what he saw on Wednesday night as he stood on the banks of the Mississippi while cars dangled, bent steel wrapped around broken cement and helicopters whirred overhead. "On TV, it seems so small-scale."

Mark J. Rebilas/US PresswireGophers' linebacker Mike Sherels was on his way home when he saw the devastation.
It's always this way. Sept. 11 happens, and games are called off. Things are put in perspective -- for a day or two -- and then sports push back to the forefront for so many of us. Hurricane Katrina happens, and stadiums are demolished. Residents evacuate, teams leave, sports are pushed into their rightful corner and then they always pop back out.

Bruce Kluckhohn/MLB Photos/Getty ImagesJerry Bell, president of Twins Sports Inc., was supposed to break ground on the new baseball stadium Thursday night. He can wait.


