It was supposed to be the other way around.
Twins pitching was expected to be the shaky link on this squad. The Twins spent the offseason signing veteran groundball-inducing righthanders for the rotation and using the waiver wire and the Rule 5 draft to fill out the bullpen. It was justifiable to doubt this team's chances just on their arms alone.
But that hasn't been the problem. No starter is on the hot seat right now — that includes righthander Mike Pelfrey, who might be clearing some of the hurdles associated with recovering from Tommy John surgery. The bullpen is the most reliable part of this team.
Even without a bona fide leadoff hitter, the Twins offense was supposed to be productive. Not this hitless group.
We've debated the Twins pitching to contact. How about complaining about swinging to contact?
The Twins lost to Detroit 5-2 Sunday in a game in which they had no hits until Brian Dozier lead off the sixth inning with a home run. They had two hits and one run left in them after that in dropping two of three games to the Tigers.
Even with their six-run explosion Saturday, the Twins are averaging 2.6 runs over their past 12 games. Saturday's victory over Detroit is the only game in that span where the Twins scored more than four runs.
"You look at the guys in the middle," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "We count on them to drive them in, but you have to have people on base."