Sports media and athletes do all they can to destroy the meaning of formerly useful words.
Like "resilient." Break a 10-game losing streak, and someone with a microphone will call you resilient. Athletes who compete are not resilient. They are athletes. Competing is exactly their job.
Another: Consistency. As if a streaky hitter who produces 50 home runs isn't as admirable as a drone who hits .250 all season.
By the new, meaningless definition of the word, Kyle Gibson is a paragon of consistency. Since his first start of 2017, the season during which he was supposed to move toward the top of the Twins' rotation, he has finished just one start with an ERA lower than 6.00.
Criticizing Gibson's performance may seem redundant, but he showed again on Thursday why his failure is so important to the Twins.
He was a first-round pick in 2009 by a franchise desperate for pitching. He teased in his first two full big-league seasons, going 13-12 with a 4.47 ERA in 2014 and 11-11 with a 3.84 ERA in 2015. If not an ace, he seemed destined to pitch in the middle to top of the rotation for years.
Thursday, he allowed three earned runs in four innings while throwing 97 pitches and fell to 6-10 with a 6.05 ERA.
He should spend next spring trying to make the Padres, or the Saints, but baseball is so bereft of functional pitchers that he may get another shot with the Twins.