ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Somehow, the Twins found a way to make their slump hurt even more.
Held without a run or even a serious threat to score for eight innings, the Twins parlayed a hit batter, two stolen bases and a clutch line-drive single by Royce Lewis into a tie game, with their fearsome closer on the mound to keep it that way.
But Jhoan Duran's second pitch was rocketed into the right-field seats by Randy Arozarena, and the Twins watched the game, and their winning record, get taken away in a 2-1 walk-off loss at Tropicana Field.
"That is tough. I mean, it happened so fast that we didn't really get a chance to settle in after scoring," said Rocco Baldelli, manager of a .500 team for the first time this season at 31-31. "We're where we want to be — we're back in the game!"
Only for two pitches, though, both of them 98-mph sinkers. Arozarena fouled off the first one, but he ambushed the second, handing Duran the first walk-off loss of his career.
"He's got power. He's a good hitter," Duran said with a shrug after the Twins' fourth straight loss. "I'm a good pitcher, so I do the best pitch I can and he does the best swing he can, and he won tonight. It's OK."
Not much is OK with the Twins' offense, which has posted a popgun performance for five straight games. The Twins have scored five runs on 26 hits in that time, and until their ninth-inning surprise rally, had scored only one run in their previous 30 innings. They hadn't scored at all for 18 straight innings, hadn't even advanced a runner to third base.
And even when they broke that up by manufacturing the tying run off Rays closer Jason Adam, they still managed to douse any positive vibes in the way that inning ended. After Lewis' run-scoring single, the Twins' first hit since the third inning, they loaded the bases with just one out when Willi Castro was hit by a pitch.