There was a reference to "heartbreak" for Twins fans in large type in Thursday morning's paper. We were really getting ahead of ourselves if losing in four games in a Division Series gave that emotion to even a small share of Minnesota's sporting public.
Now heartbreak … that would've been available to those turned fanatical about October baseball way back in 1991, if Atlanta's Lonnie Smith had not been duped into stopping at second base and the Twins and Jack Morris had lost 1-0 in Game 7 inside the madness of the Metrodome.
That's not the way it turned out, which many will recall, and others have been informed by their elders.
Actually, there was an urge to call Morris from the Target Field press box on Wednesday night to get his opinion on Twins starter Joe Ryan being removed after one run and two innings.
Common sense prevailed, since we were so far removed from this being a dramatic twist in October baseball that it wasn't worth bothering Black Jack.
You do realize this, right:
The Twins needed eight postseason victories to win it all in 1987 and 1991 — four in the ALCS and four in the Series.
And when they returned home for two games this week, the Twins had won three — two vs. Toronto, one in Houston — and still required another 10 victories to claim a third World Series title a generation and a half after the second.