Twins can't cash in on Detroit; Tigers win in extras

The Twins had chances but fell in extra innings.

May 13, 2015 at 12:45PM
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DETROIT – Anthony Gose hurled his glove to the turf in anger Tuesday night, and you can understand his fury. Thanks to his lousy throw to the plate, the Twins actually scored a run in Comerica Park.

It was all just wasted emotion, though, as Gose should have known — the Twins, even as one of baseball's hottest teams, can't score lately in this park — and two innings later, he bubbled over with jubilation. Ian Kinsler dropped a single into center field, Gose scored from second base and the Tigers handed the Twins their fourth loss in many games this year in their chamber of horrors, 2-1 in 10 innings.

"It's disappointing when you feel like you have opportunities to score," said Twins manager Paul Molitor, whose team was outscored 22-1 in three season-opening losses here last month. "We weren't able to have as good at-bats with runners in scoring position as we have been lately, and left some opportunities out there."

Second and third with nobody out in the second. A leadoff double in the fifth. A leadoff single and a stolen base in the sixth. Nothing came of any of them, so when Danny Santana's deep drive to right missed a home run by 18 inches to lead off the eighth, forcing him to settle for a triple, you couldn't blame Molitor for wondering how the Twins would kick this scoring chance away.

But "you turn the page," Molitor said. "We only had a one-run deficit there, with [the top of the order] coming up. You hope you find a way."

They did, barely. Brian Dozier hit a line drive to right that wasn't deep enough to move Santana. Then it appeared that Torii Hunter had done the same when he blooped a pitch to Gose in shallow center. Santana decided to test Gose's arm, however, and the throw was wide, missing the plate by 15 feet. Gose had a mini-tantrum in frustration as Santana crossed home plate to tie the score.

That was it for offense, though; the Twins might have outscored every team in baseball this month, but they could barely touch Alfredo Simon and his split-finger fastball.

Detroit, like everyone else lately, couldn't do much against Kyle Gibson, however, so the game was tense throughout. The righthander extended his scoreless-innings streak to 20, but one pitch to J.D. Martinez ended that. Martinez bashed a first-pitch fastball into the right-field seats in the fourth inning, a solo home run that seemed like enough for much of the night.

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"He'll come out and ambush you," Gibson said of Martinez, who has hit four of his team-high seven homers against the Twins this season. "One pitch, letting them kind of taking control of the game, it's a little frustrating."

The Twins foiled a couple of Detroit attempts at a rally, with Hunter making a running, shoe-top grab of a James McCann fly ball that would have ended the game in the ninth had it landed. Blaine Boyer, who kept his own scoreless-inning streak of 13 ⅓ intact, held his breath at first, "but I thought, 'I'm glad Torii's out there,' " he said. "I got inside [McCann] just enough and he got under it just enough, I knew it would hold in the air a little bit. And Torii was like Superman, coming in there to get it just in time. It was awesome."

Only a brief respite, though.

The real frustration came in the 10th, when Gose drilled a Ryan Pressly fastball to the warning track in left-center with one out. Then Kinsler looped a curveball into right-center, leaving Aaron Hicks no chance to get Gose and setting off a celebration.

"It's disappointing, but we've played them well," third baseman Trevor Plouffe said. "I'm not worried about how we've played them. It'll even out over the course of the year."

Detroit Tigers players celebrate an Ian Kinsler game winning single scoring Anthony Gose against the Minnesota Twins in the tenth inning of a baseball game in Detroit Tuesday, May 12, 2015. Detroit won 2-1. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Tigers players began the celebration after Ian Kinsler singled home Anthony Gose with the winning run in the 10th inning. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Detroit Tigers center fielder Anthony Gose, center, is congratulated by Miguel Cabrera, right, scoring on an Ian Kinsler single as Minnesota Twins catcher Kurt Suzuki reacts in the tenth inning of a baseball game in Detroit Tuesday, May 12, 2015. Detroit won 2-1. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Detroit’s Anthony Gose scored the winning run in the 10th inning Tuesday night as teammate Miguel Cabrera rejoiced and Twins catcher Kurt Suzuki reacted with disappointment. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Minnesota Twins pitcher Kyle Gibson throws against the Detroit Tigers in the first inning of a baseball game in Detroit Tuesday, May 12, 2015. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Twins starter Kyle Gibson was solid again — one run and five hits allowed over seven innings — but got a no-decision. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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about the writer

Phil Miller

Reporter

Phil Miller has covered the Twins for the Minnesota Star Tribune since 2013. Previously, he covered the University of Minnesota football team, and from 2007-09, he covered the Twins for the Pioneer Press.

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