Trevor Plouffe's slow start to the 2015 season mirrored his team's. Maybe he and the Twins are coming out of it together.
Plouffe, 4-for-34 on the season as he stood in the batter's box in the 11th inning Friday night, walloped a 3-1 pitch from Bryan Shaw into the left-field bleachers in Target Field, earning the Twins their third consecutive victory, 3-2 over the Cleveland Indians.
The Twins collected only six hits all night, and none in the first five innings off reigning American League Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber. They are still hitting only .216 as a team. But like Plouffe, they are showing signs of putting a confidence-crushing start to the season behind them.
"It's quiet leadership that sustains you," manager Paul Molitor said. "At least for the time being, we've been able to overcome what was a frustrating beginning for everyone."
None more than Plouffe, who was batting .130 while the Twins opened the season 1-6. But he has a touch for these big moments: The third baseman has been at the plate for three of the Twins' past four walk-off wins, including a 10th-inning win over the Indians here last September.
"I'm confident [in those situations]. I think anybody in this clubhouse would want to be up there with the game on the line," he said. "I was never not confident [this season]. Frustrated, yes."
The Twins had reason to be frustrated, too, having little chance early against Kluber, then leaving the go-ahead run in scoring position in the sixth, eighth, ninth and 10th innings.
So when Plouffe led off the 11th by looking at three straight balls from Shaw, he wanted to swing at the 3-0 pitch, but Molitor put on the take sign. When Shaw's 3-1 pitch, a cutter at 90 miles per hour, crossed the middle of the plate, "a lot of frustration came out of me with that swing," Plouffe said. And the ball sailed deep into the night, a no-doubt home run from the moment it was struck.