Schedule, Improved Play Aids Twins
The Twins' surge, winning five of their
last six games, has moved them up in the Central Division standings.
They are one half game behind second place Chicago and 4.5 games back of
first place Detroit.
The remaining 2009 schedule, starting
tonight at home against Texas, has the Twins playing 18 games in
Minneapolis and 17 on the road. The Twins are seven games over .500 at
home so far and eight games under on the road.
The teams remaining on the schedule, in
addition to Texas, are Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Kansas City, all
home and away, plus Oakland at home and on the road at Toronto. Only
two of those teams, the Rangers and Tigers, are playing over .500
baseball. Cleveland, Kansas City, Oakland and Toronto are a
combined 66 games under .500.
All of this reminds us of a sports truism:
it’s not just how good your team is, it’s also about the ability of the
opposition and how that team is playing right now. The Twins won five
of their last six against two of the worst teams in the American League,
Kansas City and Baltimore.
While Texas is 71-55, Chicago and Detroit
also have challenging weekend assignments. The White Sox are at New
York (79-48) and Detroit is home against Tampa Bay (69-57). The Tigers
have to play Tampa Bay again in September while the White Sox's schedule
includes Los Angeles (75-51).
To their credit, the Twins have been
receiving improved performances from players like outfielder Delmon
Young, second baseman Alexi Casilla and pitcher Scott
Baker during their surge. Those are contributions that haven’t
always been there this season when the Twins wanted to roll with a win
streak like the five gamer that ended with a loss to Baltimore Wednesday
night.
More contributors, assisting the team’s
core players, have enabled this group to not only win more as of late,
but sometimes rally in games when needed. That says something about the
team’s leadership which includes manager Ron Gardenhire, pitching
coach Rick Anderson, relief pitcher Joe Nathan, catcher
Joe Mauer, first baseman Justin Morneau and outfielder
Michael Cuddyer. There’s no panic or give up in their DNA.
The Twins have winning records against
division rivals Chicago (7-5) and Detroit (7-4). Also, in their last 10
games neither the White Sox (4-6) nor Tigers (5-5) have been delighting
observers with their performances.
If there was no divisional play in the
American League, the Twins would be 16 games behind league-leading New
York in the loss column and watching from far behind as the season moves
toward an early October close. Whoever created the idea of splitting
the league into three divisions and creating more competition is
smiling today. Twins fans can be happy knowing the team is playing
better and facing mediocre opposition between now and season’s end.