On June 7, Max Kepler's career bottomed out.
In the midst of a 2 ½-year slump that threatened to become his new normal, the Twins right fielder was batting below .200 when he made an inexcusable baserunning mistake.
Trailing Tampa Bay 1-0 in the ninth inning at Tropicana Field, the Twins had Kepler on first when Michael A. Taylor stole third. The Rays weren't holding Kepler, so he could have easily followed Taylor and stole second, and had he done so, he would have scored the go-ahead run on Royce Lewis' subsequent single.
Instead, he stood on first, appearing lost in his own thoughts, and the Twins lost their fourth game of five consecutive losses to fall below .500 for the first time this season.
Kepler wasn't hitting, he wasn't paying much attention, and the Twins system was filled with promising corner outfielders who could have easily replaced him. It wasn't hard to find members of the Twins organization who were ready to trade Kepler.
Such a trade would have made sense. The Twins would have saved money, gained a prospect and opened a position for one of their promising sluggers.
At his lowest point, Kepler had one important person in his corner — Twins President of Baseball Operations Derek Falvey.
Falvey decided to stick with Kepler, and Kepler has justified his faith, becoming one of the main reasons the Twins surged from below .500 in June to division champion in mid-September.