The Twins own the best record in baseball, and it's no longer possible to argue that an easy schedule is the reason.
Jason Castro homered, doubled and drove in four runs, Byron Buxton tripled home a run and made another spectacular running catch, and Jose Berrios seemed to work his way into and out of trouble on a whim. It all added up to an 8-2 victory over the AL West-leading Houston Astros in Target Field on Thursday, and an impressive victory in the season series against a true pennant contender.
"It's huge for us. … We got a feeling of what we can do through the season," said Twins infielder Marwin Gonzalez, a former Astros player who has some experience at winning championships. "In the past few weeks, we played good ball against Philadelphia and we lost two games by one run. We played good ball against New York, one of the better teams in the National League, too. We have been showing we can compete."
Houston's stated goal for 2019, two seasons after its first World Series championship, is to "Take It Back," as posters plastered around its home park exhort, and if that's the level the Astros aspire to, the Twins have to be wondering whether they can challenge for one, too. The Twins, their record fattened by sweeping eight games against the lowly Royals and Orioles, took three out of four games from the Astros this week, and perhaps most heartening is how they did it.
The Twins and Astros scored 15 runs apiece in the series, but only because Houston's lone victory, against Michael Pineda, the Twins' shakiest starting pitcher thus far, was an 11-0 blowout. Jake Odorizzi, Martin Perez and Berrios, on the other hand, held the team with the league's highest batting average to two runs and 15 hits over 22 innings, a 0.82 ERA.
"It was amazing. We have the talent on the mound, too," Gonzalez said. "We don't have the big names, but they're going to do good during the season."
The Twins offense has been billed as a powerhouse since spring training, and sure enough, Minnesota reeled off seven extra-base hits Thursday, including Castro's third home run of the season. But if the pitching can hold up this well against the AL's elite, the Twins' chances of winning their first division title in nine years greatly increase.
"If you want to be the best, you've got to beat the best. For a couple of years, [the Astros] have been the best, but we believe we're the best now," said second baseman Jonathan Schoop, who added two hits and an RBI Thursday. "We believe we're the best team in the league."