The Twins started the season 1-6, getting outscored 45-16 and looking like there was no real hope in the season.
It would have been easy for any fan to think it was going to be a fifth consecutive disastrous year where the Twins lost 90 games or more and were dominated in the American League Central by Detroit, Kansas City and Cleveland.
They also had to deal with losing Ervin Santana, their free-agent acquisition who was suspended before the season began, and have had a number of nagging injuries.
But since a 12-3 loss to the Royals on April 13, the Twins have gone 15-7. After defeating Oakland 6-5 on Thursday, they have won 10 of 13 and stand three games above .500, at 16-13, for the first time since 2010.
The Twins hitters combined to go 46-for-229 in that early 1-6 stretch, a .201 average, along with a .255 on-base percentage and a .275 slugging percentage. The pitching staff was just as rough, with a combined 6.36 ERA, and 22 walks to 35 strikeouts in 58 innings.
But during this 22-game turnaround, the Twins have hit .275 with 61 walks, 117 runs scored, 18 home runs and 111 RBI. They have averaged 5.32 runs per game. The Blue Jays lead the major leagues in runs per game, at 5.34. The pitching staff has posted a 3.17 ERA over 199 innings during that same stretch with 189 hits allowed, 72 earned runs, 52 walks and 118 strikeouts. And the Twins now have the best home record in the AL.
Molitor praises leaders
New Twins manager Paul Molitor was asked how the team was able to keep it together when they very easily could have given up early.
"A big part of it is I think we have good leadership in the clubhouse where guys like Torii [Hunter] and Joe [Mauer], obviously, and then you have guys like [Trevor] Plouffe and [Brian] Dozier and Phil Hughes, these guys have been around," he said. "They understand that you have to keep pushing even when things appear to not to be so good on the surface. I give the player leadership a lot of credit for that."