Ever since he was traded by the Twins before the 2010 season, Carlos Gomez has played with a chip on his shoulder against his former teams.
But there would be no postgame hubris for Gomez on Monday night at Target Field after his adventures in center field helped the Twins beat Houston 3-1.
The Twins have won nine of their past 12 games and are 21-12 since July 1. And Monday victory, which took a season-quickest 2 hours, 18 minutes to play, enabled the Twins to pass Tampa Bay and no longer have the worst record in the American League.
A tidy pitchers' duel between Twins righthander Tyler Duffey (8-7) and Houston righthander Collin McHugh (7-9) was interrupted by an outbreak of Gomez-ness in the bottom of the fifth inning.
Here's how his adventures happened:
Eddie Rosario, who was 3-for-4 and hit the ball hard all night, singled to open the inning for the Twins. Jorge Polanco then executed a hit-and-run by lining a ball toward center that, somehow, skipped by Gomez and rolled to the fence. Rosario scored the first run of the game.
Juan Centeno followed with a fly ball that Gomez lost in the … evening sky? He held out his arms for help, but the ball landed about 25 feet behind him on the warning track.
"Gomez lost one in the twilight," Twins manager Paul Molitor said, "which didn't hurt our cause."