First Detroit, and now Cleveland. The Twins are butting into the American League Central race, and their kids are leading the way.
Oswaldo Arcia and Kennys Vargas both homered on Friday night, Arcia extended a ninth-inning rally off the Indians closer, and Danny Santana scored the winning run in the 10th, as the Twins won their third game in a row against a team desperate for victories, this one 5-4 over Cleveland at Target Field.
The loss, finalized when Trevor Plouffe dropped a one-out, bases-loaded single in front of center fielder Michael Bourn, does serious damage to Cleveland's wild-card hopes, since Seattle and Oakland both won, dropping the Indians five games behind the A's with nine to play. And it was another learning opportunity for the Twins' trio of breakthrough youngsters.
"They've done a great job," said Plouffe, who at 28 is practically ancient compared to his young teammates. "Danny's probably impressed me the most, how he's handled everything, [including] moving to different positions. That's something I've experienced, it's not easy. And Kennys has come along and been a middle-order bat that we need."
So has Arcia, who has finally begun ironing out the overeager inconsistency that drives him into deep slumps. On Friday, returning after a few days off because of a bad back, Arcia victimized Indians starter Trevor Bauer, whose curveball he knows he can hit. So when Arcia saw another from the righthander, on a 3-2 pitch in the third inning, "I got it, you know?" he said with some wonder.
It was Arcia's 19th home run of the season — four of them coming off Bauer. That's no fluke, either; Arcia hit a fifth homer off Bauer in May, when he was playing for Rochester and Bauer was pitching for Columbus.
Vargas followed Arcia's example the next inning — and fulfilled a promise he made to his mother, who was in attendance to see him as a major leaguer for the first time.
"I tell her before the game, I'm going to dedicate it for her," Vargas said, and when Bauer tried a 3-2 fastball, he delivered. His ninth homer of the season was so high, "I thought it was routine fly ball," he said. "I just run hard to first and the ball just go. I was like, OK, I take it."