Vance Worley on Friday won the first game of his American League career, but the righthander didn't feel as if he had gotten over the hump.
He gave up three first-inning runs. He got through 5 ⅓ innings, giving up five runs on 11 hits. But his ERA is 7.15 — the highest of any AL pitcher with enough innings to qualify for the league leaders. Only San Francisco's Ryan Vogelsong (7.78) had a worse ERA entering play on Wednesday.
''I wasn't happy, of course not. I'm a perfectionist, and this whole spring, it's taken a lot longer than I would have liked to figure out what was wrong," Worley said
Worley sought answers and went to the tape or, in modern terms, the iPad. Worley looked at some old outings and spotted a mechanical difference. He incorporated it into his bullpen session Monday, and it worked.
''Everything was much cleaner. My arm speed was faster, and the ball was moving like it used to," Worley said. ''It's just a matter of knowing where I need to start my pitch, and throwing it the way I'm supposed to, and if I do that, it's going to move the right way. Just a small little glitch, but this last bullpen, I had sink and I had [break]. It wasn't one or the other, it was together, and that's what I've been missing."
He had a second bullpen session Wednesday. Some pitchers have a second bullpen session between starts — at less than maximum effort — to fine-tune their command.
Worley is looking forward to his next start, scheduled for Friday against Boston.
Mastroianni not improving
Outfielder Darin Mastroianni, on the disabled list because of a stress reaction in his left foot, is not making progress. And the Twins might have to consider all options with him, including surgery.