You know who's really getting sick of watching the Twins lose? And who sounds like he's beginning to wonder whether he's the only one?
Their manager.
The Twins committed four errors Sunday, and it could have been six or seven. Hector Santiago's third start with his new team was no better than his first two, and Kansas City's Edinson Volquez pitched his team to victory over the Twins for the seventh start in a row.
And after the world champions' 11-4 rout was done, and the Twins finished an optimism-killing 2-5 homestand with a particularly embarrassing loss, Paul Molitor openly questioned whether his last-place team understands that the season might be lost but it's not over.
"We have a lot of people who have a lot to play for. There's a lot of things up in the air," Molitor said, in what sounded like a warning. "I hope they understand that."
The Twins have invested a lot of effort in training their top prospects to avoid the sort of clumsy defense they exhibited Sunday — which wouldn't be an issue if it was an occasional hiccup. But the kicked grounders, bobbled throws, even a dropped catch this time, have been a season-long curse. The Twins have been charged with 92 errors this season; no other AL team has more than 78.
"You don't get too overly critical when you know the work's being put in," Molitor said of the Twins defense before the game. "I'm a big believer that you learn as much from the mistakes you make as the good plays you make."
After the game, though, he sounded as though he wished his team wouldn't have quite so many teaching moments.