PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. – Scott Diamond doesn't know if he'll get another start. But he knew he probably wouldn't if Saturday's outing wasn't good.
The lefthander, one of four candidates for the lone open spot in the Twins' rotation, allowed two runs over 3⅔ innings at Tradition Stadium, and believes he made a good case for staying in the competition.
"I felt like my timing was better, my rhythm was a lot better, my pace was better," Diamond said. "So I'm happy with the outcome."
Some of the 5,505 fans at Tradition Stadium might not have agreed, since the game ended in a 3-3 tie — the third time in a week that a Twins game has ended deadlocked.
Eduardo Escobar drove home two runs with a bases-loaded, eighth-inning single, and Jermaine Mitchell finished the three-run rally with a single to score Chris Colabello.
Diamond is trying to recapture the job he lost during a disappointing 6-13 season last year, but he has to stave off Vance Worley, Samuel Deduno and Kyle Gibson, among others, to do so.
And the pressure is beginning to build, Diamond said, especially since his 5.59 spring ERA is worse than Deduno's and Gibson's.
"I thought today was a big day. If I didn't show some progress or take big steps toward getting back to my former self, I think it was going to be a real tough stretch," the 27-year-old Canadian said.