The Twins are obsessed with deficits these days, calculating how far back they are behind Houston, figuring out how many games are left. So the last thing that Kyle Gibson wanted to do was give his teammates another deficit to overcome.
That's what happened, though, and it took only three pitches.
A ball low. A strike on the corner. And a fastball clocked at 89 miles per hour that landed in the shrubbery blooming near the left-field foul pole. Jason Kipnis' opposite-field home run deflated the Twins' send-off party before it even started Thursday night, and the home team never recovered the lost vigor. The Indians' one-run lead became three, then six, and Cleveland eventually left town with a party-wrecking 6-3 victory at Target Field.
"This team relies on me going out and putting up zeros. When you don't do that right off that bat, with the first batter, it's pretty frustrating," Gibson said after falling to 10-11. "It stings a little bit, that's for sure."
The damage was serious but not unrepairable, since the Angels and Astros, the Twins' chief competition for the American League's final wild-card spot, did not play Thursday. The Twins dropped into a tie with Los Angeles at 78-74, 1½ games behind Houston with 10 games to play, the next seven of them on the road.
"We've backtracked a little bit in the past and found ways to regroup," Twins manager Paul Molitor said, coincidentally while the TV in his office was airing video of the Royals celebrating after eliminating the Twins and claiming their first division title since 1985. "We're getting down to it. It's still fun."
Maybe so, but it didn't feel like it after Gibson surrendered six runs and recorded only eight outs, a performance that halted whatever momentum the Twins had built up, whatever pennant fever had infected Target Field, whatever pressure the Twins were putting on their fellow playoff pursuers. After Kipnis' homer, Gibson gave up a two-out, two-run single to Lonnie Chisenhall in the first inning, then a devastating three-run homer by Carlos Santana two innings later.
"I went back and watched all the video — when I was missing, I was missing over the middle. Belt high, over the middle," said Gibson, who had given up more than one homer in a game only once this season, on June 5 against Milwaukee. "Every start's going to be a big start, that's the frustrating part about tonight. We had a chance to complete a sweep, have a big win, and three innings in, I really made it tough on the offense. Everybody in this locker room deserves better."