CLEVELAND - Life was a lot simpler for Justin Morneau when he hit his 100th career home run back in 2007.
He was hitting them in droves back then at age 26, coming off an MVP season, playing for a perennial playoff contender with no thought of the concussions that would end his 2010 and 2011 seasons.
His comeback from those and other injuries only made it sweeter Monday night, when Morneau connected for his 199th and 200th career homers in the Twins' 14-3 victory over Cleveland at Progressive Field.
"I think sometimes when you're younger, you kind of take it for granted that you're going to play until you're 40, and everything's going to go great," Morneau said. "But you go through some tough times, and everybody does, but this is something you can be proud of to be sure."
The Twins threw Morneau a little postgame party in the clubhouse, presenting him with the ball he launched into the right-field seats for No. 200.
Morneau, 31, became the seventh player to reach that mark for the Twins, joining Harmon Killebrew (475), Kent Hrbek (293), Tony Oliva (220), Bob Allison (211), Kirby Puckett (207) and Gary Gaetti (201).
The Twins celebrated that milestone after improving to 8-3 in their past 11 games and pulling within two games of the sinking Indians for third place in the AL Central.
Cleveland, which has a 10-game losing streak, actually had the Twins worried in the first inning when second baseman Tsuyoshi Nishioka turned a routine grounder into a circus play, helping load the bases with no outs against Scott Diamond.