HOUSTON – If the final 6½ weeks of the season are going to mean anything for the Twins, if they are going to be more than just another grim march into oblivion, maybe Ron Gardenhire has come up with a rallying cry for it.
"Hopefully, this can be a good finish to a season," the Twins manager said after Wednesday's 3-1 victory over the Astros, "and we can come on and irritate the living fire out of some people."
Peskiness may be all they have left now, but annoying is better than anonymous. The Twins wrapped up a 3-4 road trip Wednesday, not awful considering they played four games in Oakland, and now step directly into where they have always wanted to be: a pennant race.
Too bad it's in a spoiler role. But the Twins, on pace to finish 74-88 after three consecutive seasons of at least 96 losses and desperate to remain somehow relevant in September, might play a decisive role in determining who makes the playoffs — and more importantly, they appear more equipped to do it every day.
Beginning Friday, 32 of their final 43 games will be against their AL Central brethren, and 27 of them are against the Royals, Tigers and Indians, all within five games of the postseason. Throw in a pair of four-game series against the AL East-leading Orioles and wild-card-leading Angels, and the Twins, with 26 home games and only 17 left on the road, are in position to make some news.
Better yet for the fans at Target Field: They are a new bunch of Twins, too. Just in the course of this road trip, the Twins added Trevor May and Tommy Milone to the pitching staff and jettisoned Josh Willingham and Kevin Correia. Danny Santana, who had four hits Wednesday, looks like a fixture atop the lineup for, oh, about the next decade, and Kennys Vargas, who drove in two runs to make it 3-0 with a clutch bases-loaded hit, is learning something new every day.
"We're getting some younger people in here, and we're moving a few people around. That's exciting," Gardenhire said. "We've got some younger pitchers, and we're going to get [Ricky] Nolasco back, who we were counting on for our future."
This season was always pegged as a transitional one, especially once Miguel Sano and Byron Buxton suffered major injuries, so clearing a few veteran contracts and putting a few youngsters in place is still a worthwhile step forward, even if it tests fans' patience. Now that a few parts of the future have arrived, that tolerance should gradually return. Because as the Astros demonstrate, progress with kids is better than backsliding with veterans.