The Twins defeated the Yankees on Friday to improve to 9-4 against AL East opponents this season. It wasn't too long ago that the Twins were being manhandled by the division.
Entering Sunday's game against the Yankees, the Twins have not lost a series to an AL East team this season, taking two of three from the Blue Jays, Rays, Orioles and Red Sox. The Twins are taking advantage of a wacky division.
The Rays were expected to compete for the division title but are battling the Astros for the worst record in the AL.
The Red Sox, the defending World Series champions, lost 10 consecutive games in May.
The Orioles consider themselves to be challengers, but catcher Matt Wieters' elbow injury hasn't helped. And where would they be without Nelson Cruz?
The Yankees just aren't as deep as they were a few years ago, and have earned their mediocre record in Derek Jeter's final season.
That leaves the Blue Jays, a team many thought was the worst in this division, in first place and looking like a force. Toronto entered Saturday second in the league in runs scored while the other four teams are in the bottom half.
Toronto is a sizzling 20-9 in May, entering Saturday's game. Edwin Encarnacion has smashed 16 homers this month, tying Mickey Mantle for the AL record and getting within one of Barry Bonds' record for home runs in May. Mark Buehrle, a former Twins nemesis, is 9-1 with a 2.33 ERA. Knuckleballer R.A. Dickey looks more like the pitcher Toronto wanted when it traded with the Mets for him.