This is more like the team Brian Dozier envisioned before the first pitch of the regular season was thrown.
"You look in here, the vibe that we have, and you wouldn't even think that we started off 0-9," the Twins second baseman said. "The confidence is back where it needs to be."
The Twins pulled out a 3-2, 12-inning victory over the Angels on Sunday, scrambling to tie the score in the eighth inning before winning it when Oswaldo Arcia singled down the left field line to score Byron Buxton four innings later. It completed a three-game sweep at Target Field, the perfect salve for a team that set a club record for consecutive losses to start the season.
So the Twins spent the weekend having victory dance parties, with reliever Trevor May, the team DJ, spinning music hooked up to a new sound system purchased by Dozier.
It took nine losses, forcing different degrees of frustration, for the Twins to resemble the team many thought they would be. Over the weekend, they cut down on strikeouts, came up with clutch hits and showed their power potential while leaning on a pitching staff that has been fairly reliable over the season's first two weeks.
A few of those traits showed up again Sunday, culminating with Arcia's winning hit.
Miguel Sano led off the eighth with a single and was replaced by pinch runner Byron Buxton. Buxton moved to third on Trevor Plouffe's single, then scored as Arcia hit into a double play. Hey, the Twins will take runs any way they can get them, and that run tied the score at 2-2.
While the measly offense was the primary story during the Twins' losing streak, the pitching staff's effectiveness was somewhat overlooked. Nine of the Twins' 12 games have been decided by two or fewer runs as pitchers have kept games close. Sunday's was no different.