By their last one, the twins come back to defeat the sailors

Seattle - Perhaps this is the result of Carlos Correa's mention of the adjustments he made in the batting cage in recent years. Perhaps as he believed, it was indeed the power of his positive thinking.

Either way, however, Willi Castro is very aware that Andrés Muñoz has not allowed to run yet and tells himself the fact that he will be changing that goal. He certainly had two outs in the ninth inning, down three games.

Castro's two home runs Muñoz was his second night Muñoz, bringing the twins back to the run. A few batsmen later, the twins tied it up with Byron Buxton's hits, fresh hit percentage on the injured list, and Trevor Larnach, who finished four on the day, tied it up. One inning later, Carlos Correa started the 10th inning of the sixth with his third home run in seven games, a game that helped get the twins to beat the Seattle Mariners 12-6 at T-Mobile Park.

“It’s as fun as we play baseball this year,” Correa said. “Probably the best game of the year, it feels great.”

For the twins (31-25), it certainly didn't start.

Zebby Matthews started the third time this season, allowing a pair of singles to lead the first inning. Not long after, on the first court he saw from Matthews, sailor catcher Cal Raleigh stood out on the first court he saw. Two North Carolinas are from the same town of Cullowhee and attend the same high school.

Matthews sighed, “Anyone (otherwise) would be great.”

Raleigh's home run was the second day of the day (the other was his former Florida teammate Cole Sands) - the first of two for Matthews, who threw the twins into a four-inning deficit. But Matthews recovered quickly, threw six innings after that, giving up only two hits, and cruising quickly and effectively on the Mariners' roster (30-26). His seven-inning efforts marked the longest game of his career in major leagues.

"I'm angry there, I can't lie to you," Matthews said. "No one wants to go there and give up a quartile sooner.

Of course, when Matthews gave up four runs among the first five batsmen of the game, his teammates started to take Seattle to lead. The twins got two runs in Game 4, one of which was on Lanaher's eighth home run this season. Castro's seventh home run brought the twins back to the game.

But when the beach allowed two innings to hit the eighth time, put the twins down three again. They looked even more shocked when Muñoz threw 23 2/3 of the no-brain innings entered Friday, and he won the first two games of the ninth inning, which was their chances of winning in the game.

"In the world, there are very few pitchers who come out of the bullpen and have the same thing as what he has," said manager Rocco Baldelli. "It's great stuff, but we have great hits. …It's hard not to like what you're watching in that inning."

Or what they watched on the 10th when the twins piled up. Correa's home run was preceded by two RBI hits by Buxton and Larnach, as the twins have been rewarded for their good baseball hits. All in all, the twins got nine runs in the final two innings of the game and used the contribution from the upper and lower squads to do that.

"We did a lot of runs, but the way we did it was in the inning, two strikes, some home runs, some just hits, some used the opposite area - there was a lot of things going on there," Valderley said. "I think it must be one of the biggest wins we have to have so far and one of the best wins I've really remembered in recent memory."