Chip Scoggins
Paul Molitor had a full plate of pivotal decisions Thursday and he didn't even make it until the end of his workday.
The Twins manager earned his first ejection of the season in the eighth inning of a 6-2 loss to Cleveland that moved slower than a 40-yard dash between three-toed sloths.
Molitor reached his breaking point with home plate umpire Alan Porter, who had an inconsistent strike zone all game. Molitor leapt out of the dugout to protest a checked-swing strikeout of catcher Jason Castro, and Porter gave Molitor a quick hook.
Molitor was upset that Porter didn't ask his colleagues for help on the checked swing.
"That's a hard call for him to make if he's tracking the pitch," Molitor said.
Molitor encountered his own set of difficult calls. He sent out his starting pitcher to start an inning with his pitch count at 93 to face the middle of Cleveland's order. He called for an intentional walk to load the bases. And he pinch-hit for his best defensive outfielder in the seventh inning of a close game with a short bench.
Baseball managers subject themselves to second-guessing on a daily basis with decisions involving their pitchers or substitutions. Molitor made three intriguing moves before getting tossed. Two worked out, one didn't.
"There are a lot of decisions in a close game when you're really trying to win and salvage one," he said. "You've got your best pitcher on the mound and you're trying to discern how far you can take him with a high pitch count. You don't have a lot of offensive bullets on the bench [with only three players because of a 13-member pitching staff]."