ANAHEIM, Calif. -- C.J. Cron said during spring training he believed that the Minnesota Twins were going to have a good offense this season. Their hitting hasn't just been good, it has been powerful.

The Twins tied a franchise record with eight home runs and beat the Los Angeles Angels 16-7 on Thursday to complete a three-game sweep. The Twins, who also went deep eight times earlier this season at Baltimore, joined the 2005 Texas Rangers as the only teams in MLB history to have multiple games in a season with eight or more home runs.

"It's all just kind of clicked and hopefully there's no stopping," said Cron, who had five hits, including a home run against his former team. "When you are hitting like this it is contagious. If you look at this lineup you are going to see a lot of power. We have the ability to do that and it is nice to show it."

Miguel Sano and Jonathan Schoop went deep twice for Minnesota. Max Kepler, Jorge Polanco and Eddie Rosario also homered.

It was the third time in franchise history, dating to their days as the Washington Senators, that Minnesota homered eight times.

The Twins have an MLB-best 98 home runs through their first 49 games this season, putting them on pace for 324 homers. That would shatter the 2018 New York Yankees' record of 267 home runs.

The 98 homers are tied for the second-most homers through a team's first 50 games in MLB history, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. The 1999 Seattle Mariners had 102 homers in their first 50 games.

"It's pretty amazing. Our guys continue to go up there and not give up at-bats," manager Rocco Baldelli said. "We've had some games this season where we have hit a lot of homers. It's not as if our guys go up there swinging for the fences."

Schoop drove in four runs and Sano three as the Twins won six of seven on a road trip that began in Seattle and wound up with their first sweep in Anaheim since 1996. Minnesota, which leads the American League Central by eight games at 33-16, hit 22 homers against the Mariners and the Angels.

There were a total of 11 home runs in this game, which was originally set for Wednesday but postponed because of unplayable field conditions following a pregame storm.

The eight home runs also tied the Angels' mark for most allowed. It previously happened twice, with the most recent coming in 2005 vs. Texas.

Four of the seven hits Matt Harvey (2-4) allowed in 2⅔ innings went over the wall as the right-hander gave up eight runs for the second time this season. Noe Ramirez and Cody Allen gave up two long balls apiece.

"The long balls were killing us. It's hard, like I've said times, to tell where on the plate it is, but they came out swinging," manager Brad Ausmus said.

Tommy La Stella hit his first grand slam in the ninth for the Angels, who have dropped four straight. David Fletcher and Brian Goodwin also homered for Los Angeles.

Minnesota broke open the game in the second inning with six runs, which included a three-run shot by Schoop and two-run drive by Polanco. Harvey was chased in the third after solo homers by Cron and Sano.

The Twins hit three home runs in the seventh to extend their lead to 14-2. Sano's two-run shot and Schoop's solo homer marked the sixth time the Twins had gone back-to-back this season. Kepler added a two-run drive.

Twins starter Martin Perez (7-1) went five innings and yielded two runs and five hits.

ROAD WARRIORS

Minnesota is 18-8, batting .292 and averaging 6.96 runs on the road, which are all the best in the majors.

The Twins batted .326 (89-for-273) with 37 extra-base hits against the Mariners and Angels while outscoring them 67-27.

"We've played well on the road. We don't get distracted," Baldelli said. "I don't see any difference in how we prepare here compared to home."

TOUGH DAY

Angels right fielder Kole Calhoun came up twice with the bases loaded but was unable to get a hit. He struck out in the third and grounded into a force out to end the fifth.

LATE RELIEF

Angels first baseman Jared Walsh, who made five relief appearances at Triple-A Salt Lake this season, pitched for the first time in the majors. He gave up a run, two hits and a walk in the ninth.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Twins: Kepler bruised his right knee when he hit the wall while chasing Goodwin's home run in the ninth inning. Baldelli didn't think it was serious. ... DH Nelson Cruz (left wrist sprain) returned to Minneapolis. He is eligible to come off the injured list Friday, but Baldelli said they are still seeing how he is swinging during batting practice.

Angels: SS Andrelton Simmons (left ankle sprain) saw a foot and ankle specialist Wednesday and expected to remain in a walking boot for at least two weeks. ... LHP Andrew Heaney (elbow) had a bullpen session before Thursday's game and could make his season debut Sunday.

UP NEXT

Twins: Return home and open a three-game series against the Chicago White Sox. RHP Jose Berrios (6-2, 3.39 ERA) has seven or more strikeouts in his past four starts.

Angels: Conclude their homestand with three games against Texas. RHP Griffin Canning (2-3, 3.80 ERA), who became the second Angels starter to go seven innings last Saturday against Kansas City, gets the call on Friday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.