Max Kepler's play was up for debate Wednesday night.
Which was more important in the Twins' 4-1 victory over Boston — the home run he hit to put the Twins ahead for good, or his diving catch in the eighth that kept Boston's offense from igniting?
"Man," manager Paul Molitor said. "I'll take defense. I hate to say it."
For Kepler, it was his sweet swing that lifted a David Price pitch into the right field stands for a two-homer and a 3-1 lead the Twins never relinquished.
"Whatever wins the ballgame," Kepler said. "So I guess, yeah ... runs."
At least Kepler provided options on Wednesday. His work at the plate and in the field gives the Twins a chance to sweep the three-game series with one more win on Thursday. The Twins have held the Red Sox to three runs over the two games. And Boston is 2-for-22 with runners in scoring position in the series.
In the last week, the Twins have won games started by Cy Young winners in Price and Corey Kluber and another against front-line starter Chris Sale. That seems to belie their 33-37 record. But they have won four of their past five games.
The strides Kepler made at the plate earlier in the season have been hard to see lately. The hits to the opposite field dried up. The plucky at-bats against lefthanded pitchers had dwindled.