Twins find cure for road woes

Bartlett's five hits help Minnesota overcome deficit

? After losing 18 of their first 23 road games, the Minnesota Twins have found success away from the Metrodome.

Jason Bartlett had a career-high five hits, and the Twins beat the Kansas City Royals, 11-5, Sunday to complete a four-game sweep and tie a Minnesota record with their eighth consecutive road victory.

Minnesota also won eight straight road games from Sept. 8-26, 1965 – the franchise record of 16 in a row was set by the Washington Senators in 1912.

“We struggled early on the road,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. “We got blown away in Detroit, in Chicago, in Cleveland. All around the United States, we didn’t do too well. We were massacred on the road. Everybody had their brooms out on top of our dugout when we left town. We’ve rebounded. We’ve played a lot better on the road to stay in the race.”

Minnesota is 26-30 on the road and has the best home record in the major leagues at 39-15.

“We’ve got to balance it out,” said Torii Hunter, who had three hits.

Minnesota Twins' Jason Bartlett watches the flight of his double in the fourth inning. Bartlett had a career-high five hits, and the Twins defeated the Kansas City Royals, 11-5, Sunday in Kansas City, Mo.

The Twins, who overcame a 4-1 deficit, had 22 hits in all, their most since getting 23 against the Royals on June 19, 2003.

Jason Tyner had four singles, and Michael Cuddyer had three hits, including a two-run homer. Luis Castillo, Mike Redmond and Hunter also had three hits apiece for the Twins, who won for the 30th time in 39 times overall.

The Twins swept a four-game series at the Royals for the first time. They scored 41 runs, had 56 hits, drew 36 walks and had five hit batters during the sweep. Two others reached on errors in the series, giving them 99 base-runners in the four games.

“I can’t even imagine that,” Hunter said. “That’s amazing.”

Bartlett, Minnesota’s No. 9 hitter, extended his hitting streak to nine games, which includes five multihit games. He is batting .543 (19-for-35) during the streak, raising his batting average from .328 to .377.

“I found the holes,” Bartlett said. “Five hits might never happen again for me. I just have to cherish the day.”

Royals manager Buddy Bell rather would forget the day and the series.

“The fact is the Twins played as good as you possibly can, and we didn’t play good,” Bell said. “It’s as simple as that. By no means did we play very well, but the Twins should be credited with a lot of good baseball. Everything they did this weekend was about as good as you can do.”

Dennys Reyes (4-0), the third Twins pitcher, pitched two scoreless innings. Twins starter Mike Smith, who made his first major-league appearance since Sept. 28, 2002, allowed four runs, three hits and three walks in three innings. He was called up Thursday from Triple-A Rochester, where he was 9-4 with a 3.52 earned-run average.

“He threw 80 pitches in three innings,” Gardenhire said. “That’s not the way we pitch up here. We attack the hitters. It’s 100 degrees out there. We need to move the game along, pick up the pace, make them hit the ball, get the fielders off the field.”

Smith said he had “extra adrenaline” flowing.

“I threw more balls than I’m used to throwing,” he said. “I think that was from the excitement of being back in the majors. I tried to do a little too much with the ball.”

Todd Wellemeyer (0-2) allowed the go-ahead run after Odalis Perez gave up five runs and nine hits in five innings. Perez made his second start since the Royals acquired him from the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 25.

“I thought Perez was OK,” Bell said. “We still need to try to stretch him out. I thought he might have got tired in the fifth and got some pitches up.”

Minnesota began its comeback in the fourth, when Bartlett doubled in a run and scored on Castillo’s triple. Cuddyer’s homer put the Twins ahead 5-4 in the fifth, but Emil Brown tied the score with a single off Matt Guerrier in the bottom half.

Ryan Shealy hit a two-run homer in the third for Kansas City.