Leury García crashed a successful pitch-and-catch college reunion for Dallas Keuchel and James McCann.
No one on the Chicago White Sox seemed to mind.
García homered from both sides of the plate, and Chicago pounded the Minnesota Twins 10-3 on Saturday.
Keuchel won his White Sox debut while throwing to McCann in a battery comprised of former teammates at the University of Arkansas. But the diminutive García, listed at 5-foot-8 and 185 pounds, stole the show with his second career multihomer game.
“I’m not trying to hit the home run. I know what I can do,” García said.
Edwin Encarnación hit a two-run drive as the White Sox bounced back nicely after losing 10-5 to the reigning AL Central champions on Friday night. McCann and Eloy Jiménez also went deep on the second day of the pandemic-delayed 60-game season.
Keuchel, who agreed to a $55.5 million, three-year contract in December, allowed two runs in 5 1/3 innings. McCann finished with three hits and two RBIs.
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Nice day for a pair of Razorbacks.
“James is still the same old guy,” Keuchel said. “Sometimes he’ll lull you to sleep with kind of the lack of emotion, but he’s kind of like me where the deep down emotion is what carries him to be a great player.”
Nelson Cruz connected for Minnesota, which hit a major league-record 307 homers last year. Randy Dobnak pitched four effective innings in a spot start after the Twins decided to give Rich Hill a couple more days to prepare for his debut with the team.
“I thought it was pretty good,” Dobnak said. “A few I kind of let get away from me a little bit, but overall I thought the slider was doing what it was supposed to be doing.”
After Dobnak (0-1) departed, the White Sox jumped all over Zack Littell. García led off with a drive to right-center. With José Abreu aboard after a two-out single, Encarnación and Jiménez hit consecutive homers for a 5-0 lead.
It was Encarnación’s first hit for his new team after he signed a $12 million, one-year contract with Chicago in free agency. Jiménez’s drive to right hit the top of the wall and skipped over.
Littell allowed four homers in 37 innings all of last season.
“They were a very talented team last year and they’ve only gotten better,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “You look at different parts of their lineup, they’re dangerous. A lot of their guys that are young and developing are making adjustments that you can see.”
Minnesota chased Keuchel (1-0) in the sixth, and Cruz hit a three-run shot off Steve Cishek. But the White Sox poured it on against the Twins’ bullpen.
McCann singled in Adam Engel before García belted a three-run drive off left-hander Devin Smeltzer in the seventh, making it 10-3 White Sox.
It also was the 11th time a White Sox player had connected from both sides of the plate in a single game.
“It was just a nice contribution across the board with everybody,” manager Rick Renteria said.