BALTIMORE - Writing about Opening Day is like writing about the opening tee shot of the Masters. It might be a hint of future performance, or it might turn out to be a picturesque moment devoid of meaning.
Friday afternoon, the Twins lost to a bad team on Opening Day. Before a ninth- inning rally, they had managed four hits, all singles. Their 4-2 defeat at the hands of the Baltimore Orioles gave them 100 losses in their past 163 games.
For the Yankees, this kind of performance might require four firings and one news cycle filled with ridicule.
For the Twins, this might actually qualify as progress.
That's how lousy the Twins were in 2011: Any sign of competence portends improvement.
Last year on Opening Day, the Twins lost 13-3 at Toronto, and prized new infielder Tsuyoshi Nishioka couldn't make it through his first inning without botching two plays.
As meaningless as most Opening Day performances can be, last year's foreshadowed the worst season in Twins history, a 99-loss campaign in which they failed to stand in the right spot on cutoff plays and their fielders often appeared to be auditioning to become extras in "The Walking Dead."
Friday, new shortstop Jamey Carroll made three deft plays. A year after Delmon Young and others roamed left field as if it was festooned with land mines, Josh Willingham threw out a runner at home from left and hit his first homer as a Twin, a two-run shot in the ninth.