CLEVELAND – If you're heading to Target Field for Opening Day on Monday, it's probably not necessary to buy a program. You know most of these guys already.
But that doesn't mean you'll see the Twins team that everyone was expecting.
Minnesota completed its first week of the 2014 season Sunday with a 10-7 victory over the Indians, a game that illustrated the upside-down persona that this team owns so far.
The batting order, widely projected as meek and unimposing, is relentless and opportunistic, as Cleveland ace Justin Masterson learned by giving up six runs in just 3 ⅔ innings. And who didn't expect Chris Colabello to lead the American League in RBI, right? The starting pitching shows only faint signs of the Twins' $84 million investment, with Ricky Nolasco's ERA standing at 9.00 after "just a terrible day in general" at Progressive Field. And the reliable, shutdown bullpen has only shown up part of the time; Anthony Swarzak was torched for five hits among the nine hitters he face (though he was awarded the victory anyway), while four other relievers kept the Indians in check.
Best of all, the Twins stand at 3-3 before they ever play a home game.
"It's good. We definitely played in bad [weather] conditions, but the guys did a good job of battling," Nolasco said. "If we clean some things up, we'll get on a roll."
Maybe so. They'll come home having scored 38 runs this season, more than any other AL team. Colabello drove in four of them Sunday, one on a fourth-inning single, and three more when he doubled deep to left-center with the bases loaded in the sixth.
"He's settling in just fine," manager Ron Gardenhire of his unexpected cleanup hitter. "He's been doing it for us all week."