Garvin Alston stood behind Kyle Gibson, who was seated at the large table in the Twins' clubhouse, eyeing his remaining tiles. Alston is the Twins' pitching coach, but coaching is prohibited here, and it was making him anxious.
"I really need these guys to win this," Alston said, gesturing toward Gibson and his partner, Zach Duke.
Alas, Miguel Sano laid his final tile, a four-one, moments later, and began shouting in triumph. Sano and Jake Odorizzi remained undefeated, a surprise to everyone but Sano and Odorizzi, in the Great Minnesota Twins dominos tournament.
Card games have long been the accepted time-killer in major league clubhouses, and Joe Nathan used to captain a daily obsession with cribbage in the Twins' Metrodome quarters. Lew Ford and Jeff Cirillo passed the time playing chess, and many clubhouses have arcade games for players' use.
But dominoes, a deceptively simple game that dates to ancient China, has become the passion of the Twins' clubhouse this season, one that frequently draws crowds of teammates to watch the action and critique the play.
"It's really good. Some guys don't like cards, but everybody can play dominoes," said Eduardo Escobar, whose occasional games with assistant hitting coach Rudy Hernandez caught his teammates' attention, and whose boasts about his ability triggered several challenges. "Sometimes you have time before games, between games, and it makes you relax."
It doesn't seem relaxing when the gamesmanship starts, and the volume rises. The Twins' clubhouse, particularly on road trips, is filled with boisterous laughter and friendly taunts.
"Everything with Sano is louder," needles Escobar. Replies Sano, "Esky likes to talk."