WASHINGTON – Kyle Gibson completed spring training looking like he was ready to take the next step in his development. Right now, he looks like someone else.
The righthander was unable to control the strike zone or finish off hitters Friday, and it cost him and the Twins in an 8-4 loss to the Nationals.
A four-run first inning and a three-run third were enough to hook Gibson. Putting on 10 baserunners in three innings will lead to such a consequence. Gibson gave up seven runs on seven hits, two walks and one hit batter while striking out just one, dropping his record to 0-3 and raising his ERA to 6.10.
Gibson hasn't been crisp this season, but he had managed to post a 2.13 ERA over his previous two starts despite five walks. Bases on balls have been a constant problem: He has 12, one off the American League lead, in only 20⅔ innings.
The extra men on base aren't giving him a chance to compete.
"Some of the starts he's been able to hang in there, but the concerning part is the amount of pitches he's thrown," manager Paul Molitor said. " Every start he's just burning through pitches and long counts and walks.
"Not sure what it is, but I know we are going to try to figure some things out."
Anthony Rendon delivered a one-out single in the first. Bryce Harper reached on a fielder's choice for the second out, but Gibson then walked Ryan Zimmerman on five pitches, then gave up an RBI single to Daniel Murphy to open the scoring.