Max Kepler's was the fastest. Jake Cave's was the longest. But Eddie Rosario's home run Sunday was the most critical.
Maybe the most unlikely, too.
"I don't know if [Rosario] was guessing neck-high fastball," Twins manager Paul Molitor joked about the 0-2 pitch from Alex Wilson that wasn't in the strike zone and didn't stay in the park, "but he guessed right."
The Twins added three more home runs to their weekend power splurge, an unexpected contagion that was fun for players and fans alike. Most important, though, is that Rosario's long fly ball carried just beyond the flower beds above Target Field's right-field wall, an eighth-inning blast that broke a tie and earned the Twins their fifth victory in six games, 5-4 over the Tigers.
"Everybody is happy when they're hitting homers," Rosario said after collecting his team-high 22nd. "It's good. All three outfielders hit homers today."
The Twins bashed 13 baseballs out of the park in four games with Detroit, with nine different players doing the damage, an audacious display for a team that ranks 12th in the AL in long balls. And they spread them out over the weekend, launching at least three in all four games.
That's the longest streak of three-homer games in Twins history, tying a Brian Dozier-fueled stretch of four games from Sept. 3-6, 2016. Dozier is gone now, but the Twins' power apparently isn't.
"When you look up and down [the lineup], there are threats throughout," Molitor said. "It's been a while for Jake, but he's been taking good at-bats. [Kepler], too, just kind of searching for consistency, and the home run is a big contribution."