BALTIMORE – Trevor May appeared on the verge of a breakthrough Friday, setting down the Orioles on one hit through three innings.
"He was pretty much running through their lineup," manager Ron Gardenhire said. "But it's more than three innings."
And it's more than just a couple of bad pitches for the Twins prospect. May's latest meltdown began with a leadoff single, heated up with back-to-back hit batsmen, and exploded with Chris Davis' grand slam into the right-field seats. Delmon Young added a controversial homer an inning later, Baltimore tagged May for eight runs all together, and the Twins lost for the fifth time in six games, 9-1 at Camden Yards.
"You'd hope they would just miss a ball once or twice, but I got myself in those situations," May said after falling to 0-4 in his month-old major league career. The strong start "is a step in the right direction, but all that matters is how many runs you give up."
That's true. Another awful start inflated May's ERA to 10.42, through Gardenhire said the Twins will stick with the 24-year-old through these growing pains. "He's one of our starters," Gardenhire said flatly.
But figuring out how to keep May from imploding has become one of the season's great challenges. May struck out the side twice Friday, and eight of his 14 outs were whiffs, showing he has the tools for success. "We saw great stuff," Gardenhire said, fastballs "with an angle [and] great changeup in some big situations. A nice little breaking ball." But when it started to go wrong, he couldn't get it back. After giving up five runs in the fourth, he surrendered a leadoff double to Nick Markakis in the fifth, then an RBI single to Adam Jones. With two outs, he left a pitch over the plate to Delmon Young, and it ended up in the left-field seats."
Said May: "I say it every single time — make a pitch. I didn't make a pitch. Two pitches account for six of those runs. Both times, I didn't make a pitch and I paid for it."
Gardenhire said it looked as though May lost his poise after plunking Jones and Nelson Cruz. "He's got to learn to control his emotions," Gardenhire said. "You hit a guy, he's got to take a deep breath and go at it. You've got to be able to slow it down."