HOUSTON – Chris Carter probably doesn't know what he's done. And he surely doesn't care.
Carter, the powerful Astros designated hitter, walloped two home runs Tuesday night off Twins starter Yohan Pino, almost certainly consigning the 30-year-old rookie back to Class AAA Rochester after 10 big-league starts. "He's in the rotation," manager Ron Gardenhire insisted after a 10-4 loss, but that probably won't be true once the Twins return home.
Then again, Gardenhire didn't exactly sound convinced that Trevor May, who stands to inherit the starting spot, is ready to throw strikes, record outs and win games. May received a second look Tuesday once Pino was pulled, and while it wasn't the avert-your-eyes catastrophe of his weekend debut, it wasn't Bob Feller, either.
"You've got to throw the ball over the plate. He's not commanding his fastball right now," Gardenhire said after May faced 11 batters, retired six of them, walked a couple, and surrendered three runs. "When he gets his next start, hopefully he'll have figured something out."
That next start is scheduled for Monday in Target Field, assuming the Twins don't have second thoughts. But if May's first couple of outings haven't inspired confidence, neither did Pino, which is why his roster spot will probably be turned over to Ricky Nolasco when the veteran righthander returns from his elbow injury on Friday.
"I don't know anything about that," Pino said of his job security. "I want to get back to work. They know what they're doing. There's nothing you can do about that."
Pino's status was shaky anyway, after posting a 4.59 ERA in his first nine starts, and his outing — seven runs in 4⅓ innings, plus three home runs — hardly appeared job-saving. He pitched well for two innings, but the last 14 batters he faced collected seven hits.
The loudest of them belonged to Carter, who slammed a homer off Tommy Milone on Monday, too, and now is just one home from his career high and two away from becoming the first Astros player to hit 30 since Carlos Lee in 2007.