The Twins were one strike away from closing the door on the Cleveland Guardians. Not just a chance to win Wednesday's game and take a three-game series, but perhaps unofficially wrap up the division.
The tying run scored against Twins closer Jhoan Duran on a wild pitch with two outs in the top of the ninth inning. Kole Calhoun hammered a three-run homer in the 10th inning and the Guardians sent the message that the American League Central Division race isn't quite over as the Twins were handed a 5-2 loss at Target Field.
It was the first time the Twins lost a game this season when they led after eight innings.
The Twins remain in a comfortable position, a five-game lead over Cleveland with 28 games remaining, but the fallout from the wild pitch amounted to a two-game swing in the standings. The Twins and Guardians will meet for a three-game series in Cleveland next week, their final games against each other.
"We had very high expectations coming into these last two or three days," Twins pitcher Sonny Gray said. "Started off well for us, and then it just kind of slipped away from us at the end. I think we still are in a good spot as a team. We just let one get away from us."
In a game that started in a pitchers' duel between Gray and Tanner Bibee, two of the best starting pitchers in the AL this season, the Guardians won the battle of the bullpens. The Twins didn't record a hit over the final five innings while Cleveland scored five runs.
Duran, who was handed his fifth blown save of the season, had two batters reach base against him with one out. Both runners advanced a base when Duran bobbled a one-hop comebacker to the mound, spoiling a potential game-ending double play.
In a 1-2 count to Bo Naylor, Duran spiked a curveball that bounced behind the lefthanded pinch hitter and allowed the game-tying run to score easily from third. Naylor had his bat cross the plate as he tried to dodge the pitch, but home-plate umpire Jose Navas ruled it wasn't a swing. Duran thought it was a swing — "100%," Duran said — and struck him out on the next pitch.