DETROIT -- After 10 hours at Comerica Park and 19 innings of piano-wire-taut baseball on Tuesday, the Twins could look back at their doubleheader with the Tigers and realize that what seemed like the most innocuous move of the day kept them alive another day.
The Tigers won the nightcap behind ace Justin Verlander 6-5. As the Twins grinded through the first game, they knew Verlander awaited; they knew losing the opener would leave them on the brink of elimination.
Wednesday offers another day of baseball drama because manager Ron Gardenhire made a move that didn't work as planned in Game 1, leaving the Twins grateful for unintended consequences.
"We were able to screech out a win," Gardenhire said. "That's playoff baseball. It was everything it was built up to be."
In the eighth inning of the first game, with the score at 1-1, Kubel singled with one out, and Gardenhire replaced one of his slowest players with Gomez, the fastest player on the team.
Gomez didn't score, and Gardenhire admitted he regretted his move when Kubel's turn came around in the 10th and he had Gomez at the plate instead.
In the ninth, Gardenhire made a decision he said he didn't regret -- but should have. He called for Nick Punto to squeeze-bunt with a runner on third and one out. Tigers reliever Brandon Lyon appeared to discern the strategy and threw a high pitch that Punto popped up for a double play, sending the game, ominously, to the bottom of the ninth.
"Going out to play defense the next inning, the crowd was getting into it and I was like, 'Uh-oh, here we go,'" Twins outfielder Denard Span said. "It was one of those feelings like, 'Something bad is about to happen.'"