It would have been out of Miller Park, for sure. It would have cleared the short porch in Yankee Stadium by a mile, and it might have threatened to splash into the bay in San Francisco.
But Logan Morrison's high-and-deep smash in the eighth inning on Sunday? At Target Field, that's just a long, loud single off the 23-foot-high wall. And Morrison didn't mind a bit.
"It was just good to come through there and get us the W," Morrison said after his tiebreaking bases-loaded blast delivered a 3-1 victory over the Brewers and ended the Twins' three-game losing streak. "It's a homer anywhere else, but oh well. Let's just draw a line 5 feet up and we'll be good."
If the Twins did that, Morrison would have his first grand slam against a lefthander, Milwaukee reliever Boone Logan. But for a team that's fighting to stay afloat without several of its key members in uniform, a single was enough, especially since RBI against lefties have also been a little scarce for Morrison thus far; the runs that Brian Dozier and Max Kepler scored doubled his total to four.
"Once he's started to get on track, he's become the player we thought he'd be. He'll strike out some, but he's taking his walks, and he's been getting some hits. The production has started to come," Twins manager Paul Molitor said. "When he's swinging well, I don't think it bothers him either way, who he's going to face."
Facing Jake Odorizzi seemed to bother the Brewers plenty, but that's pretty standard for the Twins righthander these days. Odorizzi ran his streak of scoreless innings to 15 before Brewers first baseman Jesus Aguilar slugged a high fastball into the second deck in the sixth inning. But that was the lone run he allowed, the fourth time in his past five starts that he has given up no more than one run.
The scoreless-inning streak might be gone, but Odorizzi's streak of holding batters hitless with runners in scoring position went to 0-for-15, dating to May 3.
"Your biggest pitches are always out of the stretch, so I try to work out of the stretch in my bullpens, just because that's when it really matters," Odorizzi said. "[I'm] just making good pitches at the right time, maybe getting some luck, some mis-hits, whatever it may be. As long as they don't score, I really don't care how it gets done."