ARLINGTON, TEXAS – Aaron Hicks spun, took a dozen swift steps back toward the center field fence, and began to slow down as Mitch Moreland's fly ball descended. He was in deep center field, but still short of the warning track, and seemed to have no trouble tracking the final out of the eighth inning, snuffing Texas' bases-loaded rally and preserving the tie.
Actually, it wasn't so simple.
The ball glanced off the thumb of Hicks' glove as he ran and bounded to the wall. Rangers runners, believing the inning was over, suddenly sped up, with Delino DeShields jumping in the air for joy as he touched the plate. The two-base error broke a tie, and doomed the Twins to their first four-game losing streak of the season, and a painful 6-2 loss to Texas.
"It's just ridiculous. I don't understand how I missed the ball," Hicks said after his first error of the season. "I know I make that play every time."
Every time but one.
"He tracked it down, from my viewpoint, and then the ball was behind him," manager Paul Molitor said. "Sometimes you lose your vision because it's a little harder to follow into the glove that last 3 or 4 feet."
And while Hicks' error, and a two-run single that followed it, enabled the winning runs to score, the real culprit for the Twins' loss was their hitting, not their defense. After being dominated by Jason Vargas and Chris Young earlier in the week, the Twins once again looked helpless against a soft-tosser, this time Texas righthander Wandy Rodriguez. With a fastball that doesn't even match the low-90s temperatures around here, Rodriguez befuddled the Twins for long stretches, inducing one ground ball after another. He struck out six, retired 18 consecutive batters at one point, and threw 122 pitches, fourth-most in a game this season.
But maybe his pedestrian speeds were beside the point. Junkballer or fireballer, "I don't really know if it matters right now, because we seem to be pressing at the plate," Molitor said of the Twins, who have scored only five runs during this losing streak. "The pattern is, we're just not putting together very good innings, no matter who's out there."