MLB

Tigers fail to secure date with Yankees

The Yankees will continue to wait for their first-round playoff opponent.

Scott Baker got plenty of run support and pitched Minnesota to a testy 8-3 victory on Thursday, preventing the Tigers from clinching their first division title in 22 years.

Minnesota avoided elimination from the playoff race and moved within two games of the first-place Tigers with three to play.

“We just didn’t want to see them celebrating,” Twins outfielder Denard Span said.

The teams wound up splitting their crucial four-game series. The Tigers had a chance to wrap up their first division crown since 1987 in the finale, but their bats were quieted and their pitchers got roughed up in a three-run third inning and a four-run eighth.

The tightest race in baseball won’t be decided until this weekend — or early next week if a tiebreaker is necessary. The winner will play the Yankees in the ALDS, likely beginning Wednesday.

Detroit manager Jim Leyland was ejected during a face-to-face argument with umpire Angel Hernandez in the eighth inning after Minnesota’s Jose Mijares threw behind Adam Everett.

Both benches and bullpens emptied in the ninth after Tigers pitcher Jeremy Bonderman plunked Delmon Young in the leg. An angry Young slammed his helmet to the ground and shouted toward Detroit’s dugout, but there was no pushing or punching.

Bonderman and Tigers catcher Gerald Laird also got tossed. The Twins ended up blaming Mijares for the dustup.

“It absolutely turned into a bit of a strange game toward the end,” Leyland said.

The showdown in Motown didn’t determine much: Detroit started the series with a two-game lead and ended it with the same tenuous cushion.

“We controlled our own destiny today and we had a chance to clinch it out, but you have to give them credit,” Laird said. “We’re still two games up with three to play, and we’re in the driver’s seat. We just have to play good baseball like we have at home, take it to the White Sox and we’ll be celebrating.”

Minnesota clinched the season series and would host an extra game if needed, likely on Tuesday because the Vikings play an NFL game Monday night at the Metrodome against the Green Bay Packers.

If Detroit beats the Ozzie Guillen-led Chicago White Sox twice at home, it would win the division. If not, the Tigers would need some help from the last-place Kansas City Royals, who end the season at Minnesota.

Royals ace Zack Greinke is slated to start on Saturday.

Detroit, which has owned at least a share of the AL Central lead since May 10, will make history if the Twins finish in first. No major league team has remained in first place from May 10 — or sooner — until losing the division title in the last week of a season.

“We’re going to the dome for the last weekend and we’ve still got a shot,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. “We’ve got to beat the Royals and, ‘Come on, Ozzie!’ I’m going to leave him a note.”

Baker (15-9) gave up an unearned run and five hits over five innings.

Jon Rauch, Ron Mahay and Matt Guerrier combined to pitch 2 2-3 scoreless innings until Minnesota matched its season high with a fourth error, allowing Detroit to score a pair of two-out runs that made it 8-3.

Tigers starter Nate Robertson (2-3) yielded four runs — three earned — and nine hits in six-plus innings. Rookie Ryan Perry and Fu-Te Ni each struck out a batter in the seventh to get out of a bases-loaded jam, but Casey Fien and Bobby Seay each gave up two runs, putting the game out of reach.

Minnesota had plenty of punch at the plate in a game it needed to win to keep hopes alive for rallying in the AL Central as it did in 2006, when the Twins surged and the Tigers slumped at the end of the season. Detroit finished as the AL wild card, defeated the Yankees in the first round, and lost to St. Louis in the World Series.

The Twins went ahead 3-1 in the third on Joe Mauer’s RBI single, Michael Cuddyer’s run-scoring single and Jason Kubel’s sacrifice fly. They broke the game open in the eighth when Orlando Cabrera hit a three-run double and Mauer followed with an RBI single to make it 8-1.