Good things happen when you don't strike out. Maybe the Twins will catch on.
Three outs away from letting the White Sox execute one of the ugliest shutouts of the season, the Twins instead escaped with one of the most surprising walk-off victories of the year.
"A win like that is always such a good boost," Ryan Jeffers said after singling home Kyle Farmer in the 12th inning, finishing off a 5-4 victory and a sweep of the White Sox. "We waited until the ninth inning to start scoring, but we scored when it mattered."
They did, turning an aggravating afternoon of strikeouts and missed chances into a stirring comeback and a three-game lead in the American League Central Division, their widest in more than a month. The Twins put 11 runners on base in five innings against Lucas Giolito yet couldn't score. They went 1-for-11 with runners in scoring position over the first whiff-filled eight innings, and the one hit merely resulted in an out at the plate.
Just when it appeared they would go down meekly, however, a walk and three ninth-inning hits against Kendall Graveman produced three runs to send the game to extra innings, where they excel. They matched Chicago's 10th-inning run, then shut out the White Sox until Jeffers delivered the winner, improving the Twins to 9-4 in games tied after nine.
"When we're not getting the runs, we're kind of starting to believe in ourselves, that we can come back and get hits on whoever's out there," Jeffers said. "When your bullpen is able to hold in extra innings, it's a huge bonus. You get that [automatic] runner on second base, and it feels like it's easy to get him in from there."
They even used a pair of players, Willi Castro and Joey Gallo, who are still having vision trouble after contracting conjunctivitis.
"Yeah, pink eye can't hold these guys down," manager Rocco Baldelli said.