Paul Molitor is as even-tempered as a manager can be. He's not a tantrum-thrower. But his angry eyes and his clipped tone after the Twins' mistake-filled 5-2 loss to the White Sox on Wednesday revealed the truth more than any bombastic tirade could: He's upset at how his team is playing.
"They've outplayed us," Molitor said of the last-place White Sox, who have taken two of three games this week. "They've run aggressively, they've made more plays defensively. We had one good inning, in the first game yesterday."
That about sums up an ugly night in which Hector Santiago — yes, that Hector Santiago — gave up two singles, four doubles and three walks in just five innings, and somehow still earned the victory when the Twins turned all that offense into a paltry two runs.
"Well, we helped him," Molitor pointed out. "He gave us opportunities. He's going to compete, I know him well enough to know that. We made him work, we just didn't take advantage."
The loss dropped the Twins five games out in the AL Central, and 9 1/2 games out of a wild-card spot.
Two mental mistakes stood out in this one, though Molitor was careful to note that those "two big plays [were] not the only things that kept us back."
The first came in the second inning, when Robbie Grossman led off with a single, and Mitch Garver doubled him to third. Ehire Adrianza followed by crushing a Santiago fastball off the center field wall — but Garver, believing the ball might be caught despite how shallow center fielder Adam Engel was playing, loitered around second base until it bounced off the fence, too late to score.
"Not a good read," Molitor grumbled. "Second day in a row that we didn't score on a double from second base."