The clock in Carlos Correa’s head told him he had time, but everything had to function without the slightest of hiccups. Four components to one play that had zero margin for error.
The Twins executed it flawlessly. Correa was the star of the sequence with a rocket throw clocked at 92.2 miles per hour that preserved a much-needed win and left teammates gushing afterward in the clubhouse.
“That was incredible,” Kyle Farmer said.
“It was crazy,” Edouard Julien said.
“Special,” Byron Buxton said.
Correa’s relay throw home from the right field grass arrived a split second before Shohei Ohtani’s cleats for the third out in the seventh inning with the Twins leading the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-2.
Ohtani was called safe but replay review overturned it, allowing the Twins to keep their lead and hold on for a 3-2 win that snapped a four-game losing streak.
Julien hit two home runs and the bullpen held the Dodgers in check, but Correa’s throw was the defining moment because of the timing and degree of difficulty of that one play.