Paul Molitor's days are becoming rote in the face of his team's 11-34 record: Start the day by expressing hope, end it by cauterizing wounds.
So it was on Tuesday, when the prospect of a once-reliable virtuoso on the mound enabled the Twins manager to daydream about a sudden turnaround in his team's play.
"We think that every day — I know it sounds a little bit odd," Molitor shrugged as he spoke about a team that finds itself 12 games out — of fourth place. "You'd like to think this [game] will be competitive and Ervin [Santana] somehow finds a way to give you a chance as you get into the latter stages of the game."
Oh, well. Try again this afternoon.
Santana was roasted by the Royals, who slapped him into submission in fewer than four innings, and the Twins raised hopes with a ninth-inning rally that produced only more frustration. The result was Minnesota's third consecutive loss and eighth in nine games, 7-4 at Target Field.
"We made them work at the end of the game there," Molitor said sanguinely as he autopsied the Twins' latest breakdown. "But we talked about hopefully getting a good start, and that didn't happen."
Quite the opposite, in fact. Santana was kicked around for nine hits and six runs, both his worst totals of the season, and he lasted only 3 ⅔ innings, his shortest (non-rain) outing of the year. Four of the hits were for extra bases, and his ERA bloated by more than a run, from 3.13 to 4.17.
"Basically, [my] location was not good. Everything was little bit out of the zone," Santana said after falling to 1-3 this season — still tied for the best record in the Twins' rotation. "The two-seamer to [Salvador] Perez was right in the middle. That's not good."