Miguel Sano trudged back to the dugout, head down, after striking out to end the 12-3 loss to Cleveland.
Sano sort of embodied the 2021 Twins experience Wednesday: a glimmer of early promise, an out-of-character mistake, a fleeting chance at hope before, ultimately, inevitable disappointment.
His double in the second inning was the Twins only hit for most of the game, the only barrier to a no-hitter as Cleveland stacked up 12 hits through seven innings. He also kept the Twins from being shut out, recording his second hit on a three-run blast in the bottom of the seventh inning. But Sano also committed a fairly egregious throwing error in the fifth inning, turning a fielder's choice into a two-men-on scenario before a game-breaking three-run homer.
In the end, neither Sano's bungles nor his bounties singularly won or lost the game. That, the Twins did together.
"We couldn't get anything going," manager Rocco Baldelli said. "We dug ourselves a hole … and we didn't swing the bats enough to get out of it."
Ultimately, Cleveland, a team that has been no-hit four times this season, outhit the Twins 14-3, taking this series 2-1. The Twins hardly reaped any offensive output from their heavy-hitters, including Byron Buxton, Josh Donaldson and Max Kepler, the entire series.
Cleveland blanked Buxton through the three games; he had just a walk Wednesday, eventually scoring thanks to Sano. Buxton's been back since Aug. 27 after departing June 21 with a broken hand. Baldelli pointed to that as a reason to give Buxton some benefit of the doubt.
"The numbers that he put up early and what he's shown us for most of this year when he's been on the field are so spectacular, that he has a series or a dozen at-bats where he doesn't square the ball up, and it does become conversation. But I don't want to let it become conversation because it's no big deal," Baldelli said. "… Coming back from this hand injury, I do think that that is going to take some time before he feels completely back to normal."