Oh yeah, it's mental at this point.
"Everyone knows it," Twins hitting coach Tom Brunansky said. "Everyone senses it. They press and try to do too much."
It looks like the Twins are grinding sawdust out of their bat handles as they try, and fail, to drive in runs. It couldn't have been more clear Sunday as the Twins fell to the White Sox 5-2 while going 2-for-18 with runners in scoring position. Chicago took three of four games in this series, and the Twins are 2-5 on their homestand with one game left to play.
For a change, there's something holding the Twins back other than sputtering starting pitching.
They were 9-for-46 with RISP in the four-game series against the White Sox. They are .211 during their homestand, where they should feel more comfortable at the plate.
"It's one of those things where you look at our lineup," said second baseman Brian Dozier, who doubled and scored the Twins' second and final run in the third inning. "We've got a great lineup and I feel like a lot of people are doing their jobs, but at the same time, you have to come up with those big hits. You can't let someone come in here and outhit us. Even if you get down by a few runs early, I don't think anyone should outhit us."
If you add the four games in Chicago before this homestand — where the Twins were 3-for-37 with RISP — they are hitting .167 in those situations the past 11 games. In the Mike Redmond days, the Twins coined a phrase, "Smell those RBI," when runners reached second and third.
No one should get close enough to this offense to get a whiff of it right now.