NEW YORK — It was just a coincidence, a postponement borne of Hurricane Henri, that brought the Twins to Yankee Stadium on Monday. But somehow it seems preordained, doesn't it? The end to the Twins' two-year reign as AL Central champions has long been inevitable, but what more appropriate way to clinch it than with yet another rip-your-heart-out loss to the Yankees?
Minnesota was mercifully, mathematically eliminated from the AL Central race on their most cursed diamond, blowing a five-run lead over the final four innings and absorbing a 6-5, 10-inning walkoff loss that completes New York's four-game sweep of the Twins begun three weeks ago.
"It's unfortunate. Everything on paper can look great — World Series-bound, you name it," reliever and seven-year Twins veteran Tyler Duffey said. "You've still got to go out and win the games. We started flat and never really recovered."
With nearly three weeks still to play, the Twins will be formally eliminated from the wild-card race, too, on Tuesday or Wednesday. But Duffey said he still sees positive signs in this last-place team.
"We've been playing great baseball for the last month and a half. We've played some great series against some division-leading teams," Duffey said of the Twins, 20-20 since July 31. "There are a lot of guys who have gotten a lot of experience this year in a lot of big moments — guys like Nick Gordon, people getting chances to play and make a name for themselves and set their feet for next year."
Short start
John Gant felt great Monday morning — until his last couple of warmup pitches in the bullpen.
"I felt it [but] wanted to go out and see if I could get things done," Gant said of a dull pain in his abdomen. "Wasn't able to make it happen."
Gant threw 12 pitches, seven of them balls, and after walking Aaron Judge, signaled for trainer Michael Salazar. He was removed from the game, diagnosed with a mild lower-abdominal strain, and according to manager Rocco Baldelli, will likely go on the injured list Tuesday.