At some point in the seventh inning Wednesday, Luis Arraez tried to give advice to rookie Matt Wallner as he prepared to face White Sox reliever Joe Kelly.
"Get your hands on the ball," was Arraez's message.
To which Wallner responded: "Dude, I try to get my hands to a Joe Kelly 97 [mph], it's just a little bit harder for me than you."
To be fair, Arraez is 5-10, 175 pounds to Wallner's 6-5, 220 pounds. Or as Wallner put it: "There couldn't be much different [of a] baseball player than with me and Luis Arraez."
Yet the pair's efforts at the plate against the White Sox helped the Twins to a 8-4 victory in front of an announced 22,332 at Target Field, keeping alive the 76-79 Twins' minuscule chances at a wild-card playoff berth, if only briefly. Later Wednesday, Seattle defeated Texas and eliminated the Twins from contention.
Wallner's two hits in three at-bats plus a walk, along with three RBI, was yet another strong outing in just 12 MLB games so far for the right fielder. Arraez went 2-for-5 with an RBI and drew level with Aaron Judge in the American League batting race, both at .313.
On Wednesday, Judge equaled Roger Maris' 1961 AL record of 61 home runs in a season. He has a chance at the Triple Crown, with 130 RBI as well.
Arraez said he tries not to scoreboard-watch, especially during games. But when he was doing film study between at-bats, he couldn't quite help what his eyes saw.