There is "pitching" and there is "throwing," and Francisco Liriano has not had a reputation for pitching his way out of trouble.
As a four-month phenom in 2006, he overpowered difficult situations by throwing a 97-miles-per-hour fastball and an unhittable slider. As a helpful starter in the 2008 stretch drive, he tried to do the same with lesser versions of those pitches. As a member of the rotation for 4 1/2 months in 2009, he was a mess.
On Wednesday, Liriano pitched his way through four threats in seven innings and was the hometown guy most responsible for a 6-0 victory over Cleveland that allowed the Twins to avoid the following:
Being swept at home in a three- or four-game series by an under .500 team for the first time since May 2008; and being swept for the first time at Target Field.
The first two games of this series were so ugly, what with the Scott Baker clunker on Monday and the Joe Mauer scandal on Tuesday, that giving the Indians a head start might have sent the home team quickly into another funk.
To prevent this, Liriano had to throw a double-play ball after allowing the first two batters to reach in the second. And he struck out the dangerous rookie, Carlos Santana, to strand two runners in the third.
The Twins finally ended the nonsense with four runs in the bottom of that inning. They could have had more if Delmon Young had been stopped at third, rather than getting thrown out at home by several feet.
This was the first of numerous blown scoring chances for the Twins -- more evidence of a clutch-hitting flaw that has been lost in the angst over a rotation that went 60 percent putrid.