Jake Odorizzi wasn't in Minnesota when Brett Favre threw the interception or Gary Anderson missed the field goal. He has no memory of the North Stars moving to Dallas. He wasn't even alive when Fran Tarkenton went 0-for-3 in Super Bowls.
But Odorizzi has been here long enough to recognize the Minnesota sports instinct: Something bad is about to happen. And he wanted to fix all that on Saturday for "the city that's in panic mode right now" over a lost 11½-game lead.
"Somebody's got to apply the tourniquet at some point," the righthander said after shutting out the Indians for 5⅔ innings and pitching the Twins to a rain-delayed 4-1 victory before an announced 35,268 at Target Field. "Might as well be me."
The victory restored the Twins alone at the top of the AL Central after a one-day tie, ended their losing streak at four and perhaps calmed, for the moment, the sense of foreboding around this team. That was Odorizzi's goal: Win a game. And reassure the hysterical.
"We're not Minnesota people that have gone through [tough times]. We're here to win, and we're a pretty darn good team so far this year," Odorizzi said after improving to 13-5 on the season. "It's easy to find panic. But there's no panic in here."
The righthander picked the perfect night to deal, and then preach, and not just because the Twins hadn't even held a lead since Monday night, four ugly losses ago. He also lived that don't-panic maxim, by pitching into and out of trouble, time after time. Cleveland put runners in scoring position in all six innings he started, thanks to the six hits and four walks he gave up. But Odorizzi always stopped one step short of the ledge, holding the Indians to a 1-for-12 night with runners in scoring position, stranding runners on third base in four innings.
"He's looked good. In some moments where we've needed a big start, he's been there," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. "And doing it against a good team like the Indians makes it even more impressive. It was fun to watch him tonight."
After four days of facing big deficits — they trailed 11-0, 7-0, 4-0 and 6-0 in their past four games — the Twins finally established their offense first, though it took awhile. Cleveland righthander Adam Plutko held the Twins to one hit while recording 11 outs, but with two outs in the third inning, the Twins finally broke through.