Before the Twins' 4-3 loss to the Tigers on Sunday, General Manager Terry Ryan talked about how a team is going to struggle when it doesn't put pitching and hitting together.
Well the Twins are 15-32 after Sunday's loss, and and once again they lost because they couldn't put pitching and hitting together.
The pitchers Sunday did a good job, allowing only two runs until Matt Capps gave up a go-ahead, two-run homer to Miguel Cabrera in the ninth. But the Twins once again couldn't take advantage of a lot of opportunities, leaving 11 men on base and not getting key hits when it counted.
"When you can't put it together you're going to struggle," Ryan said. "That means you really are going to have to pitch until your offense gets going, and that's exactly what we need. We need good starting pitching to allow our offense to get going and see if we can put some runs on the board.
"It's not just our starting pitching. We had chances here in the last couple days to bunch together some hits and some runs, and we didn't get it done. It's been a combination of things."
Ryan added: "We haven't scored a whole lot. We do think that we've got some offense on this club. [Justin] Morneau and [Joe] Mauer and Ryan Doumit and Josh Willingham are guys who have a career history of being able to produce with the bat some. We're hoping that will come around."
Willingham, who hit .347 with five home runs and 15 RBI in April, is hitting .270 with three home runs and only 12 RBI this month. That gives him eight home runs and 27 RBI and a .267 average so far. He is on pace to roughly match last year's totals with Oakland, when he hit .246 with 29 homers and 98 RBI.
Ryan said he isn't worried about the righthanded slugger's slow month.