Tigers rally past Twins

Published 9:50 am Thursday, April 29, 2010

The Detroit Tigers got the win and Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire got ejected.

Brennan Boesch hit a go-ahead double shortly after a disputed play that wound up with Gardenhire getting tossed, and the Tigers rallied for six runs in the sixth inning to beat the Twins 11-6 Wednesday night

“We’ve had a few comebacks, and that’s been pretty important for us,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “Our bullpen has done a great job for us, but we can’t keep expecting to do this. We’ve got to get our starters deeper into games.”

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The Twins took an early 6-1 lead, and still led by a run in the sixth. With one out and a runner on first, Johnny Damon hit a deep drive and center fielder Denard Span appeared to make a running catch.

Span, however, lost the ball after taking two steps in the left-center field alley. After a lengthy discussion, the umpires ruled Span hadn’t held the ball long enough for an out, and Gardenhire was ejected for arguing the call.

“The replay showed he caught the ball, took three steps, and dropped it when he went to take it out of his glove to throw it. That’s all there is to that,” Gardenhire said.

Detroit quickly took advantage of the two-base error. Pat Neshek relieved Ron Mahay and walked Magglio Ordonez, loading the bases. Miguel Cabrera was hit by a pitch that forced home the tying run, Boesch and Brandon Inge hit two-run doubles and Ryan Raburn added an RBI double.

“We fell behind tonight, but we felt like it was just a matter of time before we got the bats going,” Inge said. “We were staying aggressive, and it worked out well for us in the end.”

Damon was the only batter that Mahay (0-1) faced. Brad Thomas (1-0) picked up his first major league win in relief, nine years after making his debut with the Twins.

“It’s been a lot of hard work,” said Thomas, who came into the game with a 8.44 ERA. “It’s been embarrassing what happened before today, but I did my job today. You have to keep this team close, because we hit so well that there’s always a chance.”

Jim Thome’s homer off Tigers starter Max Scherzer put the Twins ahead 2-0 in the first. The Tigers got a run back in the bottom half on Ordonez’s RBI double.

In the third, Luke Hughes became the first Twin since 1984 to homer in his first major league at-bat. Minnesota made it 6-1 on RBI singles by Jason Kubel, Span and Orlando Hudson in the fourth.