It's nights like these, facing the challenge of a great pitcher, trying to string together rallies, throwing runners out at the plate, when the mind really wanders.
If the Twins were in the playoff race, if the Tigers were their antagonists once more, if these final seven head-to-head games between them were critical to bringing playoff games to Target Field, the intensity would heat up Monday night's 50-degree chill to a bonfire sweat.
Sigh.
Instead, the smallest crowd in Target Field history bundled up and tried to encourage its last-place team: Maybe the Twins could dig their way out of one night's deficit. Maybe they could stick out a leg and trip up the Tigers as they look to October.
"Those guys never give up over there," Torii Hunter said after his dramatic ninth-inning home run broke a 6-6 tie and lifted Detroit to an 8-6 victory. "That's the Twins way."
Nice of their former star to say, but the Twins way hasn't worked for a few years now.
Monday, the Twins chipped away at defending Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer, preyed upon Detroit's bullpen and overcame a 6-0 deficit. But Hunter and Miguel Cabrera opened the ninth inning with back-to-back home runs, Hunter's coming on Casey Fien's first pitch, and the Tigers maintained their 1½-game lead over Kansas City, which recorded its own ninth-inning rally to beat the White Sox 4-3.
The Twins played like the game meant something to them. But even so, it was hard not to notice which team was pretending.