The Twins collectively woke up Tuesday morning with a five-game lead in the American League Wild Card race with six games to play.
Regardless of what source you choose, the Twins' chances of reaching the playoffs are tantalizingly close to 100 percent. Baseball Prospectus has them at 99.6 percent. FanGraphs is a little more couched at 97.7 percent.
Either way, it's an amazing climb from Aug. 1. On the day after the nonwaiver trade deadline, the Twins were given about a 5 percent chance of reaching the postseason. Now their magic number is two. They're so close.
But as close as they are, they're not in yet. And if anyone is going to remind the Twins of that, it's manager Paul Molitor. Now, he'd probably be doing it regardless of his past experience because it's a manager's job to keep his team focused on the tasks at hand.
Molitor, though, can add a personal cautionary tale to his message to players.
Molitor was a standout on a loaded 1982 Brewers team that also featured AL MVP Robin Yount and several thumping power hitters. Starting on Aug. 1, Milwaukee was either tied for the AL East lead (back when the Brewers were in that division) or leading it outright. By the final week of the season, they had pulled ahead of Baltimore by four games — with five left to play.
I'm not sure they calculated playoff odds in 1982, but you would imagine the Brewers' odds were pretty good — maybe not quite as good as the Twins' odds because of circumstances I'll get to in a moment, but certainly 90 percent or better. Remember, this was back when only the two division winners in each league made the playoffs.
And then things got dicey. The Brewers lost at Boston on a Thursday (attendance in that great baseball city for what was the Red Sox home finale at Fenway Park: 21,268). Baltimore won, cutting the lead to three games.