A year ago, the Indians mowed down the Twins in September, en route to a wild-card berth. This year, the Twins have seriously damaged Cleveland's chances. A trio of leftovers from their 10-inning win:

HE OWNS HIM: Oswaldo Arcia's eyes lit up when I asked him about Trevor Bauer. "I don't know. I don't know," he said, anticipating the question. It's crazy, though -- four of his 19 home runs this season, better than one in five, have been hit off the Indians' righthander. And four of the 16 that Bauer has given up this year have been hit by Arcia. He said he remembered Bauer from Triple-A, because yes, he hit another homer off him in May, when Bauer was pitching for Columbus and Arcia was on the Rochester Red Wings. But "I've never seen him before this year," Arcia said. When he saw the pitch he recognized, "I saw it was changeup, and I got it," he said. Arcia has driven in eight runs that have been charged to Bauer. This stat amazes me: Bauer's ERA is 4.06 after Friday, but had he never faced Arcia this year, it would be 3.69.

A VALUABLE MILESTONE: What will Phil Hughes do with the extra $250,000 bonus he earned Friday, when he became the first Twins pitcher since Carl Pavano in 2011 to reach 200 innings? "Probably just put it in the bank," Hughes shrugged. "I won't play this game forever." Hughes says he's not even sure which side put the innings bonus in his contract, because he wasn't really sure he could reach it, not coming off a 4-14 season and 5.19 ERA last year, when he managed only 145 innings. "My thinking was more, 'Just pitch better,' " Hughes said. "And I pitched a lot better, and those things become achievable." In fact, he said, "it's a big deal to me. I grew up in a culture where, there's a lot of workhorses on that [Yankees] staff in New York, and being the guy who was never able to get to 200 innings before, it's a milestone. It's something you take pride in -- taking the ball every five days, getting your 30 starts, and approaching that number." Hughes does set a good example, it seems; he didn't walk a batter on Friday, which is normal. But neither did Bauer, for the first time all season.

DIDN'T FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS: Ron Gardenhire answered the question before anyone could ask it: Why was Danny Santana bunting with nobody out and Jordan Schafer on first base in the eighth inning? Santana's bunt was a poor one, Schafer was forced out at second, and the inning fizzled. "No, I didn't put the bunt on with Santana," Gardenhire announced after the game, unprompted. "I wanted him to hit a home run." Santana did the next best thing in the 10th inning, triggering the game-winning rally with a leadoff single, and eventually scoring the winning run.