The MVP didn't play, and the Cy Young Award winner lasted only five innings. So … it could have been worse?
Hard to imagine. The Twins gave up at least two runs in five innings Sunday, surrendered a historic number of hits and a mortifying number of runs, and limped out of Target Field in a rainstorm — or was it a seltzer blast to the face? — after absorbing a 13-4 loss to Detroit that sends them on a weeklong tour of first-place ballparks on the worst note possible.
At least they have Monday off. Rarely has a club appeared to need it more.
"I think everybody is worn out," manager Ron Gardenhire said after the longest nine-inning game in Twins history, a 4-hour, 10-minute epic of endurance. "We've played a lot of baseball."
Yes, but the idea is to display quality, not quantity. And while the Tigers hardly looked like a champion-in-waiting this weekend in getting outscored 42-31 over two wins and two losses, they made all the big pitches when they needed to Sunday, and collected way more hits than necessary. In fact, Detroit amassed 18 hits, even with two-time MVP Miguel Cabrera on the bench because of a sprained ankle, giving the Tigers 60 during the series. That's the most that the Twins have ever given up in a four-game series, and the most the Tigers have put together since 1956.
The Twins racked up four runs and 11 hits themselves, most coming against reigning Cy Young winner Max Scherzer. But Scherzer exhibited a talent that Twins starter Kyle Gibson hasn't mastered yet: damage control.
"He didn't have his best stuff," Gardenhire said of Scherzer, "but he made just enough big pitches."
Scherzer left runners on third base in the third, fourth and fifth innings, and while his pitch count skyrocketed, the Twins believed they were in good shape, because Detroit's battered bullpen was worked even harder this weekend than the Twins'.