The Morning Call

Even-keeled Twins keep focus

-

MINNEAPOLI­S — The home clubhouse in Minneapoli­s was silent after the final game of the series was lost in distressin­g fashion, a fifth defeat in the last seven contests for the Twins that let the surging Indians create another tie for the division lead.

As players packed for a road trip, minus the usual upbeat music blaring in the background, the mood in the room was hardly somber or tense. Even having the would-be winning run get thrown out at the plate in the ninth inning and the team’s top relief pitcher give up a grand slam in the 10th didn’t qualify as a devastatin­g developmen­t amid the 162game grind of baseball.

Particular­ly not under the supervisio­n of rookie manager Rocco Baldelli, whose perpetuall­y relaxed and upbeat demeanor has had more of an influence on these Twins in his first year than any strategic decision or lineup change.

“We’re in a pretty good frame of mind,” Baldelli said following Sunday’s 7-3 loss to the Indians. “You’re going to go through runs where you’re playing good teams. You’re going to go through runs where you’re playing well, winning some games but losing some games that you think you should win. ... We have a very stable clubhouse.”

The Twins surprised even a significan­t faction of their own organizati­on by taking a lead that reached 111⁄ games on June 3.

“If it was a sprint, Cleveland would have had a bad year when they didn’t start so hot. It’s a marathon,” Rogers said, “and this group will keep doing what it has been doing, and we will see what happens.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? First-year manager Rocco Baldelli has the Twins in “a pretty good frame of mind.”
LYNNE SLADKY/AP First-year manager Rocco Baldelli has the Twins in “a pretty good frame of mind.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States