The Twins are utilizing Rochester's staff on Saturday for a new fifth starter. While they're at it, they will need a fourth starter, too.
Kyle Gibson, a fixture in the Twins rotation since his 2013 debut, pitched four more chaotic innings in a substandard season Thursday and provoked the team into taking action. His next start will be for the Class AAA Red Wings, he learned after an 8-5 loss to Oakland, and a current minor leaguer will take his spot.
"It's not working. [He's] putting us in a bad spot more times than not," Twins manager Paul Molitor said after breaking the news to the 29-year-old that he was being optioned out. "I still have faith in him, but we need to give him an opportunity to work things out."
The Twins did that, of course, for the first month of the season, but the righthander's frequent flops, summed up by his 8.20 ERA, became too much for them to endure. Fired up about a breakthrough year after adopting a new workout program and altering his throwing angle, Gibson was a disappointment from the start, never lasting six innings in any of his six starts, and never giving up fewer than three runs.
Thursday, as the Twins tried to solidify their surprising-but-temporary hold on first place in the AL Central, Gibson gave up eight hits and three walks in only four innings, all fraught with A's threats. While Gibson didn't give up a home run for the first time all season, three balls ricocheted off outfield walls.
"It was just too much turmoil," Molitor said. "Those things aren't easy to do, to tell a guy you have a lot of respect for, but I think it's going to be best for him in the long run."
In the short term, though, the Twins will likely call up a reliever Friday for this weekend, especially with Nick Tepesch, who gave up only three runs in three starts for Rochester last month, making his Twins debut on Saturday against Boston. If Tepesch were given another start next week, the Twins wouldn't need to fill Gibson's spot in the rotation until May 14.