First team in MLB history to go to playoffs after 100-loss season
CLEVELAND — From worst to wild card, the Minnesota Twins have completed a most remarkable reversal.
Their unexpected turnaround season has a new destination — the playoffs.
THEY’RE IN! Go crazy, @Twins. Go crazy.
via @fsnorth pic.twitter.com/q7N7uYOWG2
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) September 28, 2017
Unable to clinch on their own after losing 4-2 to the Indians, the Twins earned an AL wild-card berth and meeting with either New York or Boston when the Los Angeles Angels lost 6-4 in 10 innings to the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday night.
A season after winning just 59 games, the Twins became the first team to lose at least 100 and then make the postseason the following year.
October, here they come.
Moments after the Angels lost — and almost two hours after they were beaten — Minnesota’s players, coaches and manager Paul Molitor celebrated in their clubhouse with champagne and beer, dousing each other during a party that didn’t seem possible just a few months ago.
They threw on dark blue T-shirts, two-tone caps along with the obligatory goggles before spraying each other down.
“It’s been awesome watching this team come together all season,” veteran first baseman Joe Mauer said amid the clubhouse chaos. “This is the best sound in the world. It’s been one of the most fun years that I’ve ever had.
“I like our guys. This is the culmination of a lot of hard work over the last few years.”
The Twins defied the odds, and they’ll now enter a tournament where are all bets are off and where one bad bounce or big inning can propel an underdog to the top.
On Tuesday night, they’ll play at either Yankee Stadium or Fenway Park in the wild-card game. Boston holds a three-game lead over New York in the AL East race.
The Yankees have been the Twins’ long-time playoff nemesis, eliminating Minnesota four times in the postseason since 2003.
Mauer and these Twins don’t seem to fear anything.
“This is gonna be a fun couple of days getting ready for what’s next,” said Molitor, a Hall of Fame player now in his third season with the Twins. “I like our chances. It means a lot to all of us.”
The Twins reached the postseason for the first time since 2010 despite a lack of support from their own front office, which essentially wrote off the year at the trading deadline. Minnesota dealt closer Brandon Kintzler to Washington and shipped pitcher Jaime Garcia to the Yankees just days after he arrived.
Minnesota’s clubhouse was shocked by the moves, but instead of grumbling the Twins started grinding. They ripped off six straight wins in early August to trigger a 31-18 stretch that put them back in the wild-card conversation. Their bats came alive, their pitching held up and Molitor squeezed everything he could out of a young lineup that lacks star power but is deep and dangerous.
The Twins also stuck together despite being without All-Star third baseman Miguel Sano, who hasn’t played since Aug. 19 after fouling a ball off his left shin, but could be back at some point in the postseason.
While the Indians, Astros, Dodgers and Nationals — to name a few — may have more talent and certainly get much more publicity, the Twins have quietly become one those feel-good baseball stories.
“In an era when it’s either home run or bust, they’re a lineup that makes a lot of adjustments,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “You don’t look at every hitter and go ‘If we throw here we’re good to go.’ They can cover both sides of the plate. They use the whole field. They’re impressive.”
BUX STOPS HERE
Molitor believes center fielder Byron Buxton should be rewarded for his fabulous defense.
The speedy Buxton added to his resume of great catches Tuesday night with a diving grab, and Molitor feels he should be in line for a Gold Glove.
“I don’t know what else you can do to earn your first postseason award than Bux has done,” Molitor said.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Twins: Sano (left shin stress reaction) took 60 swings at Target Field, raising the possibility he could be on the playoff roster. The first-time All-Star has been on the disabled list since Aug. 20.
Indians: OF Michael Brantley’s postseason hopes took a positive turn. The All-Star did some running Wednesday in a simulated game and could be playing by the end of the week. Brantley’s chances to help the Indians in October were fading with every passing day, but the 30-year-old is going to make one last push. Brantley was having a strong comeback season after missing Cleveland’s World Series run in 2016 following two shoulder surgeries.
UP NEXT
Carlos Carrasco goes for his 18th win in his final start of the regular season against Twins right-hander Ervin Santana, who is 2-0 with 16 strikeouts in three starts against the Central champions this season.