ARLINGTON, TEXAS – When you're 26 games below .500, not much more can happen that could be described as a season-ruining event. But the Twins encountered — and, they hope, dodged — one Friday.
Byron Buxton collided into the outfield wall in the first inning while unsuccessfully trying to catch a deep fly ball, and he collapsed to the turf when his right knee "locked up" a few moments later. The Twins eventually lost to Texas 6-5 at Globe Life Park to end a three-game winning streak, but if their rookie center fielder really escaped with only a bruised knee, as doctors have tentatively concluded, they might petition to have the game considered a victory.
Buxton, limping in the clubhouse after the game, will undergo a magnetic resonance imaging test Saturday, and there is plenty riding on it. With the Twins mired hopelessly in last place, this season is now about making young players such as Buxton, Max Kepler and Miguel Sano comfortable and confident. And it looked for a moment like Buxton's chances of doing so this year had been ripped up by a headlong impact with a wall.
"You watch him go down, you're always a little bit fearful potential collisions like that," manager Paul Molitor said. "There's a lot of violence to that position when you play it like him. [It] reminded me of Torii [Hunter] and the Kirby [Puckett] days."
Buxton didn't catch Rougned Odor's ball, which turned into an RBI triple, and he slumped to the ground after impact. When the play ended, he gingerly got to his feet but seemed to be in pain. Molitor and athletic trainer Dave Pruemer jogged out as Buxton sat back down on the ground; when Pruemer and left fielder Robbie Grossman tried to help him to his feet, Buxton's leg suddenly gave way when he put weight on it.
"It really scared me a little bit more when my knee gave out on me," Buxton said. "I've never experienced something like that, so it just kind of made me panic a little bit more."
Buxton wore a compression sleeve on the knee, and he will apply an electronic muscle stimulator on it overnight, in hopes the limp goes away quickly.
"We went through a bad bone bruise with Trevor [Plouffe] earlier in the year, and I hope that's all we're dealing with here," Molitor said.