TORONTO – Whatever the exchange rate is between Canadian and American dollars, it can't compare to the starkly different values of hits in Rogers Centre. As if the titanic home runs, lengthy rallies, noisy crowds and that deafening hockey-goal horn aren't enough, this is a place where a Blue Jays pop-up can be more valuable than a Twins grand slam.
The Twins, down five runs after seven innings, scored six over the final two, most notably on the second grand slam of Max Kepler's career. But what could have been a memorable pennant-race rally, the sort of comeback victory that galvanizes a contender for the stretch run, was foiled when Josh Donaldson, appropriately wearing "Bringer of Rain" on his back, hit … a puny pop fly, 100 feet into the air.
Three Twins converged, none managed to catch it, and Toronto rode Donaldson's "double" to a 10-9 victory that was as wrenching for the visitors as it was gleeful for the 45,591 who packed the place.
"We were on the wrong side of a lot of things that happened," manager Paul Molitor said. "It's a loss, but if there's any solace to be had, it's that we kept playing to give ourselves a chance."
Molitor notably gave John Curtiss a chance, about 16 hours following his big-league debut, by having him pitch the eighth after Kepler's blast pulled the Twins within 8-7. It was a show of confidence in a pitcher the Twins hope might be a critical part of their bullpen, but also a reflection of the scotch tapeand-paper clip approach Molitor has to take with his Brandon Kintzler-free relief corps.
"We're a little bit inexperienced out there," Molitor said. "You're choosing between a guy who's got two days or two months." Catcher Mitch Garver was making his first big-league start behind the plate, adding to the callow battery.
Still, the Twins had high spirits as they took the field in the eighth, having survived Marco Estrada's stingy pitching and a six-run, six-hit fifth inning by Toronto that Donaldson punctuated with a second-deck home run. Kepler's homer, a sign he is fully healthy after some salmon-induced food poisoning in Chicago, changed the Twins' attitude about their day.
"It added some energy to the dugout," Kepler said. "Everyone was drained today. … It was kind of a momentum changer."