Quick, someone reassure Aaron Hicks: He might have a 20-year career, and it's possible he will never face a pitcher as tough as the one he drew for his first at-bat in the big leagues.
Come to think of it, better remind the entire Twins lineup. No, they're not all like Justin Verlander.
The Twins lost on Opening Day for the fifth consecutive season on Monday, battling deep-freeze weather and one of the most unhittable aces in baseball before absorbing a 4-2 loss to the Detroit Tigers. But they followed a plausible script for beating Verlander's Tigers by keeping the game close, making the starter work hard, and then trying to mount a comeback against Detroit's bullpen.
For the want of a clutch hit — the Twins left five runners stranded, four of them in scoring position, in the first two Verlander-free innings — it could have been the Twins warming themselves with a victory instead of space heaters.
"One more big hit, we get it tied up. We just didn't finish it," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "We got them up there and had some really good at-bats. But we just didn't finish them."
Wilkin Ramirez, a Tiger himself for 15 games in 2009, had a shot, pinch hitting for Pedro Florimon with the bases loaded (on a double and two walks by lefthander Drew Smyly) and two out in the sixth inning. Ramirez got down 0-2 with aggressive swings, took a wild pitch that bounced into the Detroit dugout and scored the Twins' first run, ran the count to 3-2, but then hit the top of a fastball clocked at 94 miles per hour, grounding it to short.
"I felt like I was on a couple of pitches," Ramirez said, "but he got me inside."
Next inning, Joe Mauer and Josh Willingham singled with one out and Smyly walked Justin Morneau, loading the bases again. Ryan Doumit greeted right-hander Al Alburquerque with a single to left that closed the gap to 3-2, but the Tigers reliever stuck with his diving slider to whiff Trevor Plouffe for the second out. He threw a couple more to Chris Parmelee, the last one a 3-2 pitch that broke so sharply, it nearly hit Parmelee's shoetop as he swung and missed.