FORT MYERS, FLA. - An injury epidemic turned what would have been a bad year into a disaster for the 2011 Twins. Monday marked the six-month anniversary of the 99th and final loss.
When you look at the fallout from that carnage, a case can be made that it wasn't an injury suffered for the Twins but rather for the Rochester Red Wings that might have the most-lasting effect.
There's no asset the Twins could use more at this moment than Kyle Gibson, their No. 1 draft choice in 2009, getting ready to take his place in the season-opening rotation.
Gibson didn't rate as a phenom, but at 6-6 and with plenty of angles and sink on his pitches, he would have been the best new arm to join the Twins rotation since Francisco Liriano and Matt Garza in 2006.
Gibson was shut down at Class AAA Rochester because of a sore elbow on Aug. 2 and underwent Tommy John surgery five weeks later. He could throw a few innings in the minors near the end of this season and, best case, show up next spring as a candidate to make the Twins.
The presence of a healthy Gibson would have given the Twins a viable option to Scott Baker -- and the team's brain trust would like one of those after Tampa Bay's bombardment of the veteran righthander Monday.
Baker has long been the king of the mixed message. He was ripped by Pittsburgh minor leaguers March 10 and said there was soreness in his elbow. This is now three years in a row with various degrees of an elbow problem.
Last week, the General Manager Terry Ryan mentioned the need to identify a starter to fill the rotation "if Baker isn't ready to start the season."