The Twins lineup combined to strike out 15 times on Saturday. Twice they had base-runners thrown out at home plate. And they still scored seven runs.
That qualifies as … progress?
In this case, yes. The feeble-hitting lineup has awakened from its slumber. It's a small sample size, but a 7-1 win over Cleveland marked the fifth time in six games that the Twins have scored at least seven runs.
Welcome to the party, guys.
"Any time you're hitting and scoring runs," first baseman Logan Morrison said, "it's going to be lively."
The offense has had the opposite effect before this stretch. Their lack of pop has been a real buzzkill and a big reason why the Twins find themselves in third place in the middling AL Central.
The Twins carry a 3-12 record in one-run games. Their season would look different right now if they had produced even a slight uptick in scoring.
Maybe this spark will lead to something reasonably sustainable that keeps them in the race and makes summer more than a painful slog of sub-.500 baseball.