On three separate occasions Sunday, a Twins player incited a rally by blasting a home run out of Target Field. Trevor Plouffe's solo shot in the ninth inning was the final attempt at a decisive comeback that remained elusive all afternoon, and the Twins ultimately fell to the Kansas City Royals 9-8.
But it wasn't hitting that cost the Twins the game. To manager Ron Gardenhire, the culprit was the very thing that made three rallies necessary in the first place.
"We gave the ballgame away early," Gardenhire said. "You saw no errors on the board, and this is one of those games, if you look back on it, we threw to the wrong base. We weren't smart with our defense, didn't know who was running at least twice. We gave them runs early."
In the third inning, a hopping Pedro Florimon bobbled the ball, resulting in a slow throw to first that could have been an easy out. Instead, Kansas City's Lorenzo Cain reached base, and the Royals scored twice in the inning to take a 2-1 lead.
Chris Parmelee also had a couple of misplays in right field, including a poor decision on David Lough's two-run double in the fourth inning.
"I didn't do my job today," a visibly frustrated Parmelee said after the game. "There's really no explanation for it, other than I screwed up and threw to the wrong base."
Gardenhire didn't have any complaints about his hitters following Sunday's game. The Twins scored eight runs, five of which came on homers from Clete Thomas, Justin Morneau and Plouffe. The only offensive red flag was the continued slump of Joe Mauer, who came into the game hitting .467 against Royals starting pitcher Ervin Santana, yet finished the game 0-for-5 and is in an 0-for-16 slump.
The Twins, however, couldn't overlook their defensive mistakes.