Momentum in baseball is like ghosts — most people say they don't believe it exists. But the Twins thought they could detect a little bit of a breeze at their back as they returned to Target Field on Monday, on the heels of three wins in four games, for an 11-game homestand.
It was gone before the Twins even came to the plate.
"We wanted to get off to a good start," manager Paul Molitor said. "It didn't happen."
No, home runs happened. And David Price happened. And the Twins' fourth loss in four games against the Tigers happened, this time by a 5-4 score.
"It was an uphill battle," Brian Dozier shrugged after Detroit broke the mood by belting Twins starter Tommy Milone for four first-inning runs. "But good teams find ways to come back and win."
He meant that optimistically, not as an indictment of his team's inability to complete the rally, but the truth is, the Twins had chances. Most notable was the ninth inning, when Jordan Schafer led off with a single and was bunted to second base. That brought up Dozier and Torii Hunter to face Tigers closer Joakim Soria, and both were foiled by startlingly sloooow pitches, a 75-miles-per-hour rainbow to Dozier and a 67-mph curve to Hunter.
"I knew he was probably going off-speed — he throws a lot of cutters, maybe the slider — [but] I wasn't expecting the eephus thing he throws," Dozier said. "I picked it up right out of his hand, and it kept fading and fading … I guess it was just a little slower than I thought."
The Twins' entire April has been slower than they thought, after breaking camp convinced that they might be better than advertised. But Price punctured that new-beginnings enthusiasm by shutting them out on Opening Day and three weeks later, he was only less dominating by degree. The Twins made him work a little harder, but Price was still Price: six hits, seven strikeouts, and hardly any sense that the Twins might beat him, especially after Milone's disastrous first.