Obviously the Twins felt things were going a little too easy for them Tuesday night at Target Field. So they increased the degree of difficulty.
First they gave back a 5-0 lead. Then they created a two-on, no-out jam in the ninth. Then they created a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the 10th. Don't forget, that comes with all the accompanying mound trips, pinch hitters and calls to the bullpen.
Then they let the White Sox take a one-run lead in the 11th. Then a two-run lead in the 12th.
OK, 12 was enough.
After Ryan Cordell blasted a two-run homer off Ryne Harper in the 12th to give Chicago a 8-6 lead, the Twins scored three times in the bottom of the inning to win it 9-8, with the winning run scoring when Ronald Torreyes was hit by a Jose Ruiz pitch with the bases loaded.
The Twins, who maintained their five-game lead over Cleveland in the AL Central Division, are a season-high 35 games over .500 and have lowered their magic number for clinching to seven. On Tuesday, they did it the hard way — but they have not been scared of hard all season.
"I think every guy in that clubhouse has proven it to the next guy what we are and what we have done," Twins manger Rocco Baldelli said. "We have had games kind of like this. We went through a long stretch of time where we played a bunch of games like this. At no point did our team roll over, ever. So we wouldn't expect to do that now in any way. I think we are playing some of our best baseball of the year right now."
Chicago's Tim Anderson homered off Zack Littell in the 11th for a 6-5 White Sox lead. The Twins answered, getting a sacrifice fly from Mitch Garver to score LaMonte Wade Jr. with the tying run.