New York Post

Yanks get possible wild-card preview

- By FRED KERBER fred.kerber@nypost.com

This was real “Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it” stuff. When the Minnesota Twins got together in spring training, the brass and coaches wanted them to remember the bad times.

Specifical­ly, the 103-loss bad times of 2016.

“Last year, we had quite a bit of errors. They told us in spring training not to focus on last year but always remember what it felt like,” center fielder Byron Buxton said. “Rememberin­g the feeling of losing 103 games, that pushed us to want to be fundamenta­lly sound.”

And so 2017 has held far more ups than downs, so much so the Twins, who started a three-game series at Yankee Stadium with a 2-1 loss on Monday, were aligned as the potential wild-card opponent for the Yankees.

Yeah, that’s a change from 2016, but change has been part of the Twins landscape, and with nearly two weeks remaining, much can happen.

“There’s a lot of games left to be played, ” said backup catcher Chris Gimenez, who was with AL champ Cleveland last year. “If you’ve watched our season, you know a lot of things can change in 10 games. We can go from buyers at the trading deadline to sellers in a week. But to be in this position is exciting.”

And one good thing? The Twins might be too young to realize what the heck is happening.

“A lot of guys are young enough that they don’t know what it’s about yet,” Gimenez said.

The Twins won 83 games in 2015 and seemed like a team on the rise — then, disaster. They started 2016 at 0-9 and never recovered.

Defensivel­y, they weren’t just bad. They were the worst in the American League.

“We got away from the fundamenta­l aspects of the game,” second baseman Brian Dozier said. “We lost a ton of one-run games that were the result of miscues on the defensive end … the little things within a game that are supposed to happen every single time. Keeping double plays in order, hitting relay cutoff men, throwing to the right base, and that’s not the fault of not knowing what to do, but we were very young.”

If there were a silver lining in that misery, young guys got to play — and blossom. So the Twins, who rampaged through August with a 20-10 record, sniff the postseason with those young guys like the defensive whiz Buxton, who struggled horribly on offense early but has hit .339 since July 4 coming into Monday’s game.

And leading the defense is Buxton.

“Buxton’s come around with the strides he’s made offensivel­y. Defensivel­y, he’s the best I’ve seen in my career. Not even close to anybody else,” Dozier, a 31-home run guy, raved.

So that was the team that rolled in against the Yankees, holding the second wild-card spot, set to play the team it may see shortly with far more at stake.

“It possibly could help. I want to see how some of these guys respond. It’s always a little different here,” manager Paul Molitor said before the game. “You try to keep it as normal as you can, but it’s different. I’ve played here in October. It’s just got a different feel.”

 ?? AP ?? MOUND MEETING: The Twins huddle around starter Ervin Santana as he is removed from their 2-1 loss to the Yankees on Monday night in The Bronx.
AP MOUND MEETING: The Twins huddle around starter Ervin Santana as he is removed from their 2-1 loss to the Yankees on Monday night in The Bronx.

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