CHICAGO – There's a belief that when the summer winds pick up, the Cubs offense takes off.
And when the Twins entered the Friendly Confines of Wrigley Field on Friday, they noticed that the flags were flying straight out to center field.
"Just playing here, seeing how the it was carrying in B.P., seeing the home runs that were hit," Twins outfielder Robbie Grossman said. "When the wind blows out, it's pretty self-explanatory."
When the wind blows out at Wrigley, you better get in character. Pitchers try to keep the ball down while hitters look to elevate them — especially in the launch-angle age.
The Twins must have missed the text message.
Five home runs later — four struck by the home team — the Twins lost 10-6 in the opener of their interleague series against the Cubs.
Joe Mauer drove in five runs for the Twins, including a three-run homer in the second that was kissed by wind until it dropped into the basket in left-center. The game turned in the fifth when Addison Russell hit a grand slam off Jose Berrios, a towering drive that floated and floated until it left the park.
"I've been here and have seen both sides of it," Twins manager Paul Molitor said. "Today, pretty high-end extreme of favorable to the offensive side. It played a little of a role in the game. We got a little bit of a boost on Joe's ball and on the grand slam. That one was a mile high and it just seemed to really have a lot of carry."