CHICAGO – Phil Hughes was right.
"I felt like tonight could have been seven or eight shutout for me if a few things happen differently in the fourth inning," he said.
It was set up to be the latest in a run of encouraging performances by the Twins' staff ace before self-inflicted damage allowed the White Sox back in the game. Then J.B. Shuck, a pest to the Twins all night, lofted a sacrifice fly to center in the eighth inning that enabled the winning run to score in the Twins' 3-2 loss to Chicago at U.S. Cellular Field on Friday night.
The Twins jumped on White Sox righthander Jeff Samardzija for two runs in the first inning and tried to ride that to their fifth victory in six games. But Adam LaRoche was leading off the fourth, and Hughes is still smarting from a homer he gave up to the Chicago first baseman on April 12. That, plus the fact Hughes' stuff wasn't at its best Friday, made him be careful with LaRoche, and he walked him.
Two flyouts later, Shuck tapped a Hughes pitch between first base and the mound. "A PFP play from spring training," Twins manager Paul Molitor said.
PFP stands for pitchers' fielding practice, and Hughes went against everything he worked on in sunny Florida, failing to come up with the ball. The misplay was ruled an infield single, one that put runners at the corners.
"I wasn't sure if Joe [Mauer] was coming for the ball or covering first," Hughes said, "so I wasn't sure if I should keep going or go for the ball. You really have one chance and I caught an in-between hop and couldn't make the play."
Geovany Soto's double down the left field line scored both runners to tie the score 2-2. Walks will haunt. Missed plays will haunt.