The performance and the psyche of this Twins outfit are so shaky that it must be assumed a game- losing blowup by Jesse Crain or Bobby Keppel would cost him a place in the bullpen.
Brian Duensing might not have wanted to chance a disaster, either, until Tuesday night, when the lefthanded option of this moment -- Jose Lugo -- arrived at the mound for Class AAA Rochester, said he felt pain in his side while warming up and was unable to throw a pitch against the Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs.
This occurred with Terry Ryan and Tom Kelly, trusted evaluators of talent, in attendance. Jim Rantz, the Twins minor league director, also was in the stands.
Lugo was not alone in damaging his chance for being summoned to the big club. A similar fate befell righthander Armando Gabino, not because of injury but performance.
On Sunday, baseball boss Bill Smith was answering questions on his radio show and Rochester's Gabino was the first in-house candidate mentioned for the bullpen. Come Tuesday, under the gaze of Ryan, Kelly and Rantz, he entered with a 4-3 lead and promptly turned it into a 6-4 deficit.
Rantz was asked Wednesday if there were other candidates at Rochester and said: "The best arm there is Juan Morillo's. He touches 98 [miles per hour] and his breaking ball has improved. Control is an issue, but when he's on, he mows down hitters."
The Morillo method was on display Tuesday. There was an Iron Pig on third and Morillo was intentionally walking Andy Tracy. He threw the third intentional ball over catcher Jose Morales' head to the backstop, enabling a run to score. And then Morillo struck out Tracy on the next three pitches.
Gabino gets ripped. Lugo gets hurt. Morillo hits the backstop during an intentional walk. All these things happen on the same night in Rochester.