DETROIT – You need a strong stomach to watch the Tigers these days. And to play for the Twins, apparently.
The farcical Tigers issued 11 walks, allowed 14 hits and threw in an error, a wild pitch and a passed ball for the heck of it, too — and that's all before turning to a position player to pitch the ninth.
The only serious adversity the Twins faced Monday, in fact, was in Luis Arraez's digestive system.
One day after Byron Buxton departed in the third inning because of intestinal distress, Arraez did the same. It got so bad, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli and head trainer Michael Salazar came out of the dugout to assess Arraez's condition in the middle of a plate appearance in which he didn't swing the bat.
"He had some uncomfortable feeling, kind of right in here," Baldelli said, pointing to his upper chest. "It's something that certainly makes you concerned, just because you don't know exactly what it is."
The Tigers' team doctor examined Arraez and ran a couple of tests, Baldelli said, "and there doesn't appear to be any long-term concern. Luis was even able to make it down to the dugout and started to feel a little bit better later on."
Buxton's and Arraez's illnesses were different enough that the team believes they are unrelated, and both appear to be relatively minor, unlikely to keep them out for long.
The biggest relief, especially after the season-opening series between the Mets and Nationals was postponed due to COVID-19 last week, was that test showed that neither one has been infected with that particular virus.