SAN FRANCISCO – ESPN's Buster Olney offered the theory in spring training that the Twins were facing the toughest 40-game stretch to open the season in the major leagues. The analysis was based on the Twins facing 22 road games and 31 games against winning teams from 2014 in the first quarter of the schedule.
The number of games was reduced to 39 — 22 on the road, 30 against winning teams — when an April home game vs. Detroit was postponed to Aug. 23.
The Twins were 19-20 after beating the Tigers on May 15. They followed by winning two of three vs. Seattle last weekend at Target Field, and then won twice at San Diego.
It was after the second of those victories on Wednesday night when closer Glen Perkins was engaged in a bus-ride conversation with other veteran players.
"We were talking about how it almost feels strange to be competitive," Perkins said. "After three years where we were so beaten down that they felt like six years, it's unusual — in a good way, obviously — to come to the park every night knowing you have a good chance to win."
Perkins was saying this on Friday night, in the visitors clubhouse at AT&T Park, after the Twins lost 6-2 to the Giants. The Twins were in trouble from the first inning, when blunders on the bases (Brian Dozier), in the field (Trevor Plouffe) and on the mound (Kyle Gibson) gave the home team a 3-0 head start.
Yet, even a clunker like this one didn't leave the Twins with the same hopeless look that was the trademark of 291 losses from 2011 through 2013. They were a gapper from being back in the game a couple of times, and there are a few guys that you actually think have a chance to produce such a hit.
"We've had players get better this season," Perkins said. "That didn't happen in 2011, didn't happen in 2012, and it didn't happen last season. Now, Dozier is better, Plouffe is better … [Eduardo] Escobar, once he started playing, has been a lot better.