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A wild Tiger toss leads to wacky 5-4 Twins victory

Just when it looked like they wouldn't be able to pull off the win, a chaotic play in the bottom of the ninth pushed Minnesota over Detroit.

MINNEAPOLIS — Baseball is a funny game, as the story goes, and Detroit Tigers catcher Eric Haase and the Minnesota Twins chipped in with another offbeat chapter.

The difference between winning and losing can sometimes be small - and oh so strange.

Haase made a throwing error on a botched rundown in the bottom of the ninth inning, capping a chaotic play that gave the Twins two runs for a wild 5-4 victory over the Tigers on Tuesday night.

“Once in a while you walk away and you just kind of throw your hands in the air, and you smile, and you take the win,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said.

Miguel Sanó had the final hit for the Twins, and his subsequent ill-advised move on the bases wound up helping his club claim their fifth game in a row.

“It’s a painful loss,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said with understatement.

The Twins trailed 4-3 when Tigers closer Gregory Soto (1-1) walked Trevor Larnach and Gio Urshela to start the ninth. Soto, who notched just his second blown save in 22 opportunities since the start of last season, bounced back to strike out Max Kepler, who homered earlier and drove in three runs.

Then came the craziness. Cue the circus music and call up Sanó  The big fella hit an 108 mph line drive that glanced off right fielder (and former Twin) Robbie Grossman’s glove and rolled to the wall for a rocket of a single.

“Just try to hit the ball, a long way," Sanó said. "That’s what I tried to do.”

Larnach thought the ball was going to be caught, so he tagged up at second and didn’t have a head start. So he was held up at third base, after Grossman quickly threw the ball in.

But Sanó kept running after rounding first, lumbering toward second once he saw the relay go home. That prompted Urshela to run from second to third, where Larnach was trapped.

Ball in hand, catcher Haase ran up the base line to begin a rundown.

Except that never started, because Haase’s lollipop throw soared over third baseman Jeimer Candelario’s head and into the outfield on a night when the temperature fell to the mid-30s.

“Never had a good grip," Haase said. “Grabbed a big ol’ mud ball and just sailed it.”

The errant throw let Larnach score easily and allowed Urshela to race home for the winning run, with a mob of giddy teammates waiting for him at the plate.

“We made some boo-boos on the bases, and we somehow made our way out of it and smell like roses,” Baldelli said.

Haase entered the game in the seventh as a pinch-hitter for Tucker Barnhart.

“Everyone had a little trouble gripping the ball, especially late in the game. It got even more cold, the wind picked up a little bit, it was just dry. Just tough to handle, I guess,” Haase said.

Griffin Jax (1-0) pitched the ninth for the victory, after Javier Báez gave the Tigers the lead with a three-run homer in the eighth against Emilio Pagán.

Báez also hit a two-out RBI double in the sixth to chase Chris Paddack, the only run allowed by the Twins starter. He struck out six and threw 87 pitches, a season high for a Twins pitcher.

CORREA'S COMMITMENT

Carlos Correa reiterated his interest before the game about making his stay in Minnesota more than one season. The All-Star shortstop, whose three-year, $105.3 million contract has an opt-out after this season and next, said he has expressed as much to team officials.

“It’s about happiness, right? I show up every day, and we’ve got a great group of guys to work with,” said Correa, who struck out all three times he faced Tigers starter Eduardo Rodriguez. The Twins highest-paid player is batting .179.

JOIN THE CLUB

Tigers left-hander Andrew Chafin was reinstated from the injured list before the game, further reinforcing a bullpen that entered the evening with the third-best relief ERA (2.29) in the majors. Chafin had been sidelined by groin trouble after signing a two-year, $13 million contract with the team.

TRAINER'S ROOM

TWINS: RHP Sonny Gray (hamstring strain) is on track to come off the injured list and rejoin the rotation later this week. Gray was hurt in his second start.

C Gary Sánchez missed his fourth straight game with abdominal tightness. He'll ramp up his activity on Wednesday and ought to be able to avoid the injured list if the pregame session goes smoothly, Baldelli said.

TIGERS: RHP Casey Mize (elbow sprain) has begun a throwing program at the team's minor league facility in Lakeland, Florida, in weather more conducive to rehab. The first overall pick in the 2018 draft landed on the injured list after making two starts.

RHP Matt Manning (shoulder inflammation) is still experiencing tightness and has not been cleared yet for activity. He was placed on the injured list last week.

UP NEXT

Tigers RHP Michael Pineda (1-0, 0.00 ERA) takes the mound on Wednesday night against the team he spent the previous four seasons with. Joe Ryan (2-1, 1.69 ERA) starts for the Twins in the middle game of the series.

Pineda threw five scoreless innings last week in his Tigers debut to beat another one of his former teams, the New York Yankees. Ryan beat Kansas City with six scoreless innings in his last turn.

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