NEW YORK – Rocco Baldelli, Nelson Cruz, Jonathan Schoop, C.J. Cron and Marwin Gonzalez have not been around for all the Twins' torturous losses to the Yankees through the years. They have been busy being successful and productive elsewhere, and their expertise has been on display on game-by-game basis.
The Twins have fired out to a 20-11 start, the best record in baseball. So it's natural to consider the possibility that this thing is real. You look for seminal moments, pick apart quotes, interpret body language, ask your neighbors.
On Saturday, you didn't have to look too hard for signs. As this group of newcomers, in various ways, helped the Twins end a run of futility at Yankee Stadium with a 7-3 victory.
Cron and Cruz hit home runs. Schoop, who was robbed of a three-run homer in the fourth inning, added a run-scoring single in the eighth to respond to a New York rally the inning before. Gonzalez, off to a slow start at the plate, had his third hit of the series as his average inches toward .200.
The Twins built a 5-0 lead Saturday and kept adding runs, shaking off the Yankees' two-run seventh inning, until the bullpen locked down the victory. The Twins have now won seven of their past nine games.
And it validated everything Baldelli said before and after the game — that his team knows how to shake off losses, even in Yankee Stadium. That's a trait recent Twins teams haven't had.
"When you have experienced, veteran players, I think you can feel good about how they're going to react when they step in in a place like this or play against a good team or react to any situation," said Baldelli, the first-year Twins manager. "They definitely have been through it before and they've performed in these situations before."
The Twins were just as composed Saturday while discussing their victory as they were Friday after they committed two errors and failed to cash in on big scoring opportunities during a 6-3 loss.