One ugly loss in what remains the meat of a 162-game baseball season is not worthy of an overreaction. But two against teams that entered the contests a combined 54 games under .500?
Throw in the fact both featured a meltdown from a newly acquired fixer of the bullpen and an epidemic of angst among Twins followers would be permitted.
On Thursday, the Twins were frolicking with a three-run lead entering the bottom of the ninth against the punchless Marlins (41-65 at game time). Sam Dyson, fewer than 24 hours removed from being acquired from San Francisco, faced four batters, didn't get an out, allowed three runs and the Twins lost to the Flailin' Fish in 12 innings.
On Friday, the Twins returned home after eight days on the road, to the scene of the carnage of pitchers that took place in a three-game series vs. the Yankees. The Twins scored 27 runs, gave up 30, and lost two of three.
Now, the opposition was Kansas City, four seasons removed from a World Series championship, and now buried with a 40-70 record.
Nelson Cruz hit a Scud missile for a two-run home run in the bottom of the first to give the Twins a 2-1 lead. Cruz boomed an RBI double to deep right-center to give the Twins a 5-5 tie in fifth. Cruz hit a two-run double to the same place to give the Twins an 8-6 lead in the seventh, and it became a five-run lead.
Enter Dyson. Redemption turned to nightmare.
He gave up four hits — admittedly, one a broken-bat hopper toward third, another a six-hopper up the middle — but it was 11-8 by the time manager Rocco Baldelli signaled for Sergio Romo to get the last out, and then three more in the ninth.