
Going through your dad’s stuff after he passes away can be a tough experience. As you go through different things, memories from the past can quickly overwhelm you. But you also might find things you didn’t know about, which was the experience for one son who found out his recently passed dad, Don Costello, had a collection of letters from baseball executives.
The letters were in response to Don’s mounting frustration with his beloved Chicago Cubs, and he was declaring his free agency as a fan and pitching his rooting efforts to different clubs. 1981 was a very different time.
I found the original letter my dad wrote to teams offering himself as a free agent. I also found a reply from the @royals pic.twitter.com/8MUt75wSAz
— Don Kostelec (@KostelecPlan) May 6, 2020
The letters were shared on Twitter by his son, Don Kostelec, and the hilarious responses quickly went viral.
When my dad became upset at the Cubs’ performance he would write other teams, offering to sign a contract as a free agent fan. Some teams wrote back to him. Here are some of their replies. pic.twitter.com/vNDbbBzMS9
— Don Kostelec (@KostelecPlan) April 30, 2020
The PR director for the Seattle Mariners turned his offer down, saying they were trying to develop fans through their farm system.
“In trying to remain consistent with the Mariner philosophy, we are not in the market for free agent fans at this stage of our development. We are trying to develop fans through our system, which we feel is the proper direction for a club just four years old,” he wrote. “When we reach the point that we are on the verge of going all the way, a fan with your experience may be what we need to put us over the top. At that time, you can be sure that we would be interested in acquiring your services.”
An executive for the Milwaukee Brewers was open to the deal. However, he smartly included the caveat that if the Cubs misfortunes were due to Don’s fandom, then he was strongly encouraged to root for the hated Yankees.
An executive with the Montreal Expos expressed sympathy to Don’s frustration as a Cubs fan, and even took some ownership for that disappointment, as the executive had played for the Cubs in the 1950s. Ultimately, he said the team couldn’t accept his offer and implored Don to stick it out with Chicago.
“The trauma you would suffer trying to pull — which you really could not do — for another club would imperil your sporting health seriously,” he wrote.
Don did stick it out with the Cubs, and his loyalty was rewarded as he ended up working for the organization after he retired from his career in a warehouse. Working in the Cubs stadium operations department, he was often responsible for escorting VIP fans to suites.
And everyone knows how the story ends for the cursed Chicago Cubs, as they did finally break through and win the World Series in 2016. And Don didn’t experience that as a free agent fan of the Brewers, Yankees, Mariners, or even the Nationals (who used to be the Expos). He got to see that legendary World Series win as a member of the organization, and he even received the World Series ring to prove it, according to Block Club Chicago.
He stuck with the Cubs, working in stadium operations at Wrigley for 7 years after he retired. pic.twitter.com/UyumbL8wWT
— Don Kostelec (@KostelecPlan) April 30, 2020
Perhaps it was his persistent fandom that put the Cubs over the top, a level of fandom that never could’ve been realized if he hadn’t flirted with sports fan free agency decades before.
My dad passed this weekend. He was a dedicated @Cubs fan among dedicated Cubs fans, no doubt. He worked at Wrigley the past 6 years. He cherished working the 2016 World Series & being asked by the Cubs to support Ernie Banks’ funeral. We always had good times together. RIP, Dad. pic.twitter.com/MHTT6udkFG
— Don Kostelec (@KostelecPlan) April 22, 2020