Kyle Gibson never wanted to be a cautionary tale, but the timing couldn't be more apropos. At the same time the current cover of Sports Illustrated proclaims Gibson's team "fat with Twin phenoms" and annoints Byron Buxton and Miguel Sano as "the next Mike Trout, the next Bryce Harper," Gibson reminded Minnesota that prospects don't come with guarantees and that hype doesn't trump results.
"We just wanted to see what he had, see how he did," manager Ron Gardenhire said after Gibson absorbed the brunt of the Twins' fourth consecutive loss, 6-1 to the Mets on Monday, then was returned to Class AAA Rochester. "Not too many people can go out and dominate right away."
It's true, but it's a lesson the Twins must be getting tired of learning. Gibson is the third former first-round pick to be handed a full-time job by the Twins this season, and just like Aaron Hicks and Chris Parmelee before him, he's the third to be spending late August in Rochester instead of Minneapolis.
"The Twins gave me an opportunity, and obviously I didn't take advantage like I wanted to. I didn't come up here and have the success that I wanted," said Gibson, whose ERA stands at 6.53 after he retired only eight of the 20 Mets hitters he faced. "So I'm going to go down and work on some stuff and hopefully I'll be back as soon as possible."
That's the Twins' hope, too, though it's not likely to be this year; the 11 outs he recorded Monday bring his innings count, major and minor league, to 143⅔, in his first full season after his September 2011 elbow reconstruction surgery. Gibson said he hopes to help Rochester as it fights for an International League championship, but that's going to be up to the Twins.
"His innings are really big right now. They're to the point where I don't know how much he's going to do down there," Gardenhire said. "Let's get him down there and then we'll decide."
Figure the Twins to be patient and cautious; that's been their method for years, and it's why Hicks and Parmelee almost certainly will get another shot next year. And it's why, when Buxton and Sano finally arrive with fanfare that will be practically Favre-ian, if the attention being paid while they're still at Class A and Class AA is any indication, the Twins will try not to invoke Willie Mays and Hank Aaron right away.
"We want our players to live up to their talents," General Manager Terry Ryan said earlier this month, "not [someone else's] expectations."