Luis Arraez stood watching the ball he just barreled as it soared toward the Target Field plaza. After it bounced on the concrete and fans swarmed to scoop it up, Arraez started his skip to first base.
But not before he stared straight into the Twins dugout while flipping his bat a good 10-plus feet into the air. And once he had finished rounding the bases and high-fiving all his teammates, he blew a kiss to the camera.
"When I hit the ball, I knew it was a homer," Arraez said, adding of the bat flip, "I wanted to do it there for my teammates."
The 25-year-old's first career grand slam couldn't have come at a more appropriate time, since Arraez is literally the best hitter in baseball at the moment, leading the major leagues with his .367 batting average and .449 on-base percentage.
Saturday's game was more of the same for the Venezuelan, who went 3-for-5 with those four RBI and a run scored. He led the Twins to a 6-5 victory in front of 22,741 announced fans, taking the American League Central leaders to 35-26 overall. The AL East Rays dropped to 34-25.
Many players who approach the plate in the situation Arraez did — bases loaded, no outs, down 3-0 in the third inning — would be heaping pressure on themselves and fixating on hitting the ball as hard as they could.
But not Arraez. He maintained after the game that his focus and approach never wavered. He was just looking to put the ball in play. That discipline has earned copious praise from manager Rocco Baldelli and is a big reason why his numbers are what they are, considering this was only his third home run of the season.
"It's really impressive the way he can go back and forth between letting the ball travel and spraying the ball all over the field," Baldelli said. "… He makes it look pretty easy. It's not easy. And most people can't do both of those two things. They're just not capable."