Joe Mauer has not been the most fortunate Twins player when it comes to injuries, but the neck problem that kept him out of Tuesday's 9-6, 12-inning loss to the Yankees proved to be nothing serious.
The catcher did play Wednesday and played a major role in the 4-2 victory over New York, going 2-for-3 with a walk and scoring two runs. He also stole his first base of the season and threw out Bobby Abreu trying to steal.
If the Twins are going to win the division, they are going to need Mauer to remain in the lineup. Mauer was hurt most of his 2004 rookie season, and last year he played in only 109 of 162 games, missing a month because of a strained quadriceps. In comparison, Wednesday's game was the 105th he has played in this year for manager Ron Gardenhire.
"It was pretty sore the last couple of days but I should be fine," Mauer said Wednesday of his neck. "It's pretty sore today, but we've got a day off and I'm going to get some treatment and it should be ready to go.
"When I woke up [Tuesday] I couldn't move my head. It was pretty bad last night."
Mauer said Gardenhire told him he would probably get a day off either Tuesday or Wednesday, so he sat out Tuesday night, not even taking batting practice.
Mauer's return helped the Twins finish the season series 4-6 against the Yankees. They improved to 9-16 against American League East teams and have 10 more games to play against the division, all on the road in September: three at Toronto, three at Baltimore and four at first-place Tampa Bay. The Twins are 0-6 against the East on the road, but those games were at Boston and at New York.
Closer Joe Nathan, who earned his 32nd save Wednesday and pitched all three games in this series against the Yankees, said he isn't concerned about the Twins' poor record against the East.