The best part of the game on Sunday — perhaps the series and the entire homestand — might have been the movie.
The Twins planned to play the movie "The Sandlot" after Sunday's game against the Boston Red Sox, but it came in handy when rain began to fall in the seventh inning and the game was halted by a three-hour delay.
Once play resumed, the Twins fell to the Red Sox 5-1, were swept in the three-game series and left town following a 2-7 homestand that included series losses to the Orioles and both Sox teams.
"It's not the way we wanted it to go, but you can't take it back now," right fielder Chris Parmelee said. "You have to move forward and the mistakes we made, don't make them."
The Twins hung with the Orioles last weekend but lost two of three. Then the homestand shifted on the power of Adam Dunn's bat, as they dropped two of three to the White Sox. Then that power transferred to David Ortiz's bat, with the former Twin going 8-for-13 with two homers and seven RBI.
The three losses to the Red Sox were long and drawn out. The Twins lost in extra innings on Friday, were clubbed 12-5 on Saturday in a game that took 3 hours, 53 minutes; then the tarp was on the field for three hours Sunday as storms hit downtown Minneapolis.
The Twins trailed 3-1 in the seventh when play resumed. They loaded the bases with two outs in the eighth against Koji Uehara, but he struck Joe Mauer to end the inning. Mauer struck out three times Sunday and is second on the team with 39 strikeouts.
Boston then pulled away in the ninth against Jared Burton, who uncharacteristically lost his command. But the runs weren't his fault, they were Josh Willingham's. Dustin Pedroia sent a deep drive to left, Willingham raced back and jumped at the wall to try to make the catch. But the ball hit off the heel of his glove and popped over the wall for a two-run homer.