DETROIT – For all the Twins' intentions of making things different in 2015 — the Paul Molitor Twins, the we're-turning-this-ship-around Twins — the initial results could not have been much more identical.
The 2014 season, and the Ron Gardenhire era, ended last September with a 3-0 loss to David Price in Detroit. The 2015 season, and the Paul Molitor era, opened Monday with a 4-0 loss to David Price in Detroit.
Welcome to the future.
"When you get beat by a good pitcher," Molitor shrugged after dropping to 0-1 in his managerial career, "there's not a lot you can do."
He's learning fast. Price retired the first 13 batters he faced, allowed only five harmless singles over 8 ⅔ innings, and handed the Twins their seventh consecutive Opening Day loss, in front of the fourth-largest crowd in Comerica Park history.
Counting the season finale six months ago, that's 16 consecutive scoreless innings pitched against the Twins by Price; the Tigers have recorded zeros in 21 of the past 22 innings in which Price has faced Minnesota hitters.
The only thing different, actually, was all the Opening Day pomp — the unveiling of the Tigers' division-champion pennant, the introductions, the Four Tops singing the anthem. Once the game began, everything was familiar. And yes, it's only one game, yet it still felt deflating, given how confidently the Twins had come north, hoping to confound their many skeptics and reverse four disastrous seasons of losing.
"I don't think [Twins players] are paying a lot of attention to what prognostications are, and what people are saying our team is capable and not capable of," Molitor said. "They're very focused and they're ready to compete. It's a transition here for us, including myself, but I think everyone is ready to go."