Joe Mauer's batting average these days is a paradox: so mundane, it's remarkable.
As the Twins' season reaches its 60th game on Friday night, the three-time batting champion is shuffling along at .260, the lowest it has ever been so late in the season (aside from his injury-riddled 2011). He has two home runs, and only six over the past two seasons, and he hasn't hit a double in almost two weeks.
So what is Mauer doing in the heart of the Twins' lineup, batting third in all but one of the games he's started?
"He drives in runs," manager Paul Molitor said. "I've trusted him in an important spot in the lineup. Runs in today's game are tough to come by, [and] I think his production has been more than good enough for the role we've asked him to serve."
Mauer is second on the Twins in RBI with 34, only two behind Torii Hunter's 36. That total is partly built on opportunity, of course — Mauer has the benefit on most days of hitting behind Brian Dozier and Hunter, the two Twins who get on base more than anyone else — but he's also riding the best streak of clutch hitting in his life. Mauer is batting a career-high .397 with runners in scoring position, and his .517 slugging percentage in those situations is his best since his MVP season of 2009.
"The biggest thing I look at with Joe is, he's on a pace to drive in close to 100 runs," Molitor said. "Joe is holding up his end, as far as making sure he gets the guys in he's supposed to."
Maybe that pace can be sustained, and maybe it can't. But it's clear Molitor has a model in mind for Mauer's late-career production: Paul Molitor.
In the past 65 major league seasons, only two players have driven in 100 runs without also hitting at least 10 home runs: The Cardinals' Tommy Herr did it in 1985. And Molitor, near the end of a Hall of Fame career, managed the feat with the Twins in 1996, collecting 113 RBI while homering only nine times.