The Twins started June with a 10-game road trip to the West Coast. They had won two of three in Anaheim and were playing the Sunday game. It was 1-1 in the fourth inning and Eddie Rosario was at the plate with runners on first and third.
Rosario was ahead in the count and then swung at a neck-high pitch. He wound up striking out, then struck out twice more. The Twins rallied to win, but it was soon apparent that Eddie had again frustrated manager Paul Molitor with his wild swinging.
There was an off day and Rosario wasn't in the lineup when a series opened in Seattle. He was on the bench twice more on the road trip, and then was out of the lineup again Monday when the Twins returned home to play Seattle.
Rosario is not what you could call a guy with an easy smile, at least not when the media is circulating in a Twins clubhouse in Minneapolis or Fort Myers. And it's guaranteed that Eddie was not smiling over Molitor's preference for others occupying his place in the outfield.
"Yeah, I don't feel so good when not playing,'' Rosario said.
Rosario's inactivity had been self-induced. Eddie's willingness to chase pitches had him at .297 on-base percentage, compared with Robbie Grossman at .431.
Thus, when the manager is in San Francisco without a DH, or if he wants to play the recalled Kennys Vargas, Molitor is willing to go with Grossman's cumbersome fielding over Rosario's athletic excellence in order to have one more baserunner per night on average.
Rosario was in the lineup for the fourth time in eight games Tuesday night, and it was not with maximum dignity. Molitor had him batting ninth for the eighth time in 51 starts.