Jose Berrios was working with a three-run lead Tuesday when his concentration — and the game — was interrupted. A small drone appeared above center field, and the umpires quickly waved the Twins off the field.
"That was really crazy. I've never seen that before," Berrios said after the Twins' 7-3 victory over Pittsburgh.
"In my mind, I said, 'Really? That has to happen right now when I'm pitching?' I just tried to keep focused."
After about five minutes — time that a few bullpen pitchers spent trying to hit the drone with a baseball, while the umpires conferred with both managers and MLB security in Target Field and in New York — the flying object disappeared behind the right field scoreboard.
The game resumed after eight minutes without incident, but the Twins, whose in-house security system first detected the drone, are taking the incursion seriously.
"Under FAA rules, Target Field is restricted airspace during a game," said Matt Hoy, Twins senior vice president of operations. "It was just a small drone, and hopefully just a fan wanting to take pictures, but for security reasons, MLB doesn't allow any drones around the park."
MLB and Minneapolis police are investigating the incident, and the pilot is at risk of losing his license or even facing criminal charges.
When the Twins played host to the 2014 All-Star Game, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security used the event to test new drone-detection equipment, and actually tracked a drone that accidentally violated the ballpark's airspace.