The Twins clubhouse Monday resembled the dramatic scene from the movie "Titanic" when musicians played their instruments amid chaos, hoping to distract paying customers from doom and gloom.
Don't panic, long season, Twins players said. One bad week of baseball doesn't make a season, they cautioned.
"To get down on ourselves right now would be ridiculous," Trevor Plouffe said.
That's a well-worn viewpoint when a baseball season starts in the gutter, and the Twins are clinging to the "small sample size" notion like a security blanket.
Forgive the rest of us for feeling a little queasy.
The first seven games have been truly bad baseball in every way imaginable. Butchered defense, shoddy pitching, feeble hitting — all of which, combined, adds up to a 1-6 record.
It's one thing to lose. It's something else entirely to lose like this.
"We're not pitching particularly well, we're not fielding particularly well, we're not swinging the bat particularly well, and we're probably not managing particularly well," manager Paul Molitor said.