Twins newcomer Ryan Doumit was searching for the right word Monday after the team fell to 0-4 while scoring a whopping six runs in the process.
"Don't wake up the sleeping ... dragon," Doumit said. "Because once that happens, hitting's contagious."
By Thursday afternoon, the mythical reptile in Doumit's imagination had sprung to life, breathing fire, as the Twins erased a six-run deficit with home runs by Joe Mauer, Josh Willingham and Justin Morneau and held on for a 10-9 victory at Target Field.
After looking flat as can be last weekend in Baltimore and in Monday's home opener, the Twins wound up taking two of three from an Angels team that was a trendy pick to reach the World Series this spring.
Francisco Liriano had another troubling start and closer Matt Capps turned a three-run, ninth-inning lead into a high-wire act, but the Twins had enough offense to overcome all of it. They had 20 hits; last year, their season high was 16.
"We were having fun in the dugout," manager Ron Gardenhire said. "A lot of laughing, a lot of smiling, a lot of nervousness. But that's what makes baseball fun right there."
The Angels scored five runs off Liriano in the second inning and added another in the fifth to make it 6-0, and by then the announced crowd of 31,782 was downright surly. Mauer and Morneau both heard boos in the third inning after fruitless at-bats with the bases loaded.
Mauer was really hearing it. He was catching as the Angels stole five bases, and even though Liriano's slow delivery made it easy for those baserunners, Mauer had one good chance to throw Howie Kendrick out and bounced his throw into center field in the top of the second.