CHICAGO – Twins lefthander Scott Diamond fielded a grounder in the sixth inning Sunday, whirled and threw to first as if the 6-foot-4 inch Justin Morneau was there. He wasn't. It was the 5-foot-11 Jamey Carroll.
The throw sailed into foul territory. That runner, Alejandro De Aza, went to third and scored the go-ahead run on a sacrifice fly.
"I really thought I blew that one," Diamond said. "I thought it would come down to one play, and I thought that was it in the sixth inning."
But those mistakes have not been fatal for these Twins. They are getting enough hitting. The bullpen has been exemplary. They haven't been blown out of games.
Sure enough, Josh Willingham cleared the bases with a double in the next inning, and Twins relievers put their foot on Chicago's throats for nine outs while locking up a 5-3 victory and a sweep of this rain-shortened two-game series with the White Sox. The Twins come home with a four-game winning streak that has taken them over .500 at 8-7. Diamond, who led the Twins with 13 victories last season, is 1-1.
The Twins were forced to take three days off last week because of two postponed games but returned to action this weekend by taking two games from the White Sox, their once-fierce rival.
Vance Worley gave up one earned run Saturday on seven days' rest. Sunday, Diamond gave up two runs (one earned) while coming off eight days off.
Aaron Hicks ended a 0-for-23 skid on Sunday with an RBI single and also drew a walk.
The bullpen took a blow when Adam Dunn homered off Josh Roenicke. Still, Twins relievers have a sparking 2.15 ERA. They should get three days off every couple of weeks.