CHICAGO – Scott Diamond resembled the pitcher who went 12-9 last season on Wednesday, not the one who is 6-11 this year.
By attacking the strike zone early in the count, Diamond was able to induce plenty of ground balls and zip through easy innings. He set the tone for the Twins, who beat the White Sox 4-3 to avoid being swept in the three-game series at U.S. Cellular Field.
"It's taken a long time," Diamond said. "I'm a little disappointed in that."
Diamond had bone chips removed from his elbow during the offseason and was a little behind the other pitchers when he reported to spring training. He tried to cram a full throwing program into a smaller window than normal. Eventually he backed off, then wasn't effective when he took the mound. He was 5-10, and frustrated, when he was sent down Aug. 1. He's back up for September and, on Wednesday, broke a personal five-game losing streak.
Diamond held the White Sox to three runs over 6⅓ innings on five hits, two walks and no strikeouts. He's far from a power pitcher, and Wednesday marked the seventh consecutive start in which he's gotten one or no strikeouts.
"I might have created some bad habits because of [rushing during spring training], but we are slowly getting rid of them," he said. "It has taken just a little longer than I wanted."
Diamond entered the seventh having given up only one run, but Jordan Danks hit a two-out, two-run single off him as Chicago pulled within 4-3. Still, Twins manager Ron Gardenhire was pleased.
"He attacked the strike zone a lot better and did his job," Gardenhire said. "That was a huge performance and a confidence booster for him."