Bob Melvin and Lloyd McClendon couldn't ask for any more than the Twins gave them Friday.
The Twins are not in a pennant race, and they haven't been in one in four years. But they did what they could to help Melvin's Athletics, McClendon's Mariners and any teams hoping to catch the Angels in September.
The Twins used a franchise-record nine pitchers, rallied from behind four times and, one out away from defeat, scored two runs off Huston Street to send the game to extra innings. But these are the sorts of games that turn playoff teams into title contenders, and the Angels finally proved their pedigree by outlasting the Twins 7-6 on an Erick Aybar sacrifice fly in the 10th inning at Target Field.
"The boys are giving it everything they have," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "Everybody is out there trying. And we end up just coming up short."
Oh, there were plenty of shortcomings, too, particularly on defense, where the Twins committed two errors and missed a handful of other makable plays, and in the bullpen, which, with closer Glen Perkins sidelined by a sore neck, coughed up three runs in the eighth inning and another in the 10th.
Still, it was an encouraging marathon for the Twins offense, which fought back from one-run deficits in the first, second and fourth innings, then took the lead in the sixth.
"We showed resiliency," said Trevor Plouffe, who missed a walk-off home run by about 5 feet in the ninth inning. "We've been doing that all year. I don't think we've been a team that just lays down. We come back."
Just not enough. It was the second night in a row that the Twins rallied only to come up one run short against the Angels, owners of baseball's best record. It's a sign, Plouffe said, that "things are going in the right direction."