Torii Hunter stood at second, pumping his arms and screaming at Brian Dozier, who had just crossed home plate. Dozier pointed at Hunter and screamed back. And there was a ruckus in the dugout, as Eduardo Escobar was jumping up and down while Kurt Suzuki sank fists into his sides.
"I was using him as a punching bag," Suzuki admitted. "And he was laughing."
They dance, they horse around, they laugh — all while distancing themselves from four years of losing.
Hunter's two-run double in the seventh inning pushed the Twins past Toronto 6-5 and capped a monstrous May during which they went 20-7, took over first place in the AL Central and proved that this year's team is not like the 90-loss teams of the past four years.
"All those things you look at that really good teams do, we've been able to do this month," righthander Phil Hughes said. "It's a small sample, and we have to continue this trend, but it's a positive sign for us."
The only other Twins team to win 20 games in May was Kirby Puckett and friends in 1990. That group went 21-7.
"A tough pace to keep up," Twins manager Paul Molitor said, "but we'll take what the month gave us for sure."
They are getting good starting pitching. They are driving in runners in scoring position. They are getting some luck, too, but good teams make their breaks as much as they get them.