Miguel Sano is turning out to be an error-prone third baseman, at least for the moment.
But the young slugger reminded his team, in the wee hours of Sunday morning, that his real value isn't in the field. Shortly after Saturday's 11-inning game resumed after a two-hour rain delay, Sano clubbed a double off the center field wall, setting up the game-winning run. Joe Mauer scored it moments later, when Indians catcher Yan Gomes made a critical error of his own, dropping a force-out throw from pitcher Joe Colon on Max Kepler's one-hop bouncer.
The result was a 5-4 Twins victory over the Indians that took only 15 minutes to complete after that long rain delay.
"I told the guys before we went back out there, we've been good in these situations as of late," manager Paul Molitor said. "Late night, come back the next day, win another one." Indeed, this was the third Twins game to end after midnight this month, and each time it's been followed by a day game. So far, the Twins are 5-0 in those back-to-backs, with Sunday's 1:35 p.m. start to come.
Sano committed two more errors at third base, giving him seven in his past eight games at his preferred position, and he's not-so-slowly turning into a dilemma for the Twins. But shortstop Eduardo Nunez made a couple of All-Star caliber plays at critical moments, preserving the tie and enabling his team to record a second-day victory when the game resumed.
A light rain turned into a substantial shower at 10:14 p.m., and the game was suspended with two outs and nobody on in the top of the 11th. By the time the rain ended shortly before midnight, only a couple hundred hardy fans, out of the announced 29,447 who turned out for Torii Hunter bobblehead night, remained in the ballpark. The game picked up at that point at 12:19 a.m., with Trevor May, the Twins' seventh pitcher of the game, taking over and retiring Gomes on two pitches to end the inning, extending Gomes' streak to 27 consecutive at-bats without a hit.
Mauer drew a one-out walk against Cleveland's Joe Colon in the Twins' 11th, and Sano fouled off a couple of two-strike pitches before pouncing on a fastball and drilling it off the wall in right-center. Mauer was held at third and Brian Dozier was intentionally walked, and the Indians added a fifth infielder as Kepler batted.
He bounced a one-hopper to Colon — the play might have been a double play had Colon not reached behind him to get a glove on it — and the pitcher pounced on the ball before flipping it home to try to force out Mauer. Gomes received it as Mauer slid home, but the ball popped out of his glove and the Twins had their sixth walk-off victory of the season — third against the Indians.