KANSAS CITY, MO. – Twins closer Glen Perkins, in the game for a four-out save Tuesday, has a slider opponents hate to see.
While extremely effective, the pitch can get away from a catcher. And with speedy Paulo Orlando on third in the eighth inning of a tie game against the Royals, Perkins stuck with his fastball.
He got two strikes on Mike Moustakas, tried the fastball, got too much of the plate with it and dropped his head as Moustakas flared a single to left to drive in the winning run in the Royals' 6-5 victory at Kauffman Stadium.
"It's tough to go to a slider there with a guy on third." Perkins said, worried that a wild pitch would have allowed Orlando to score. "I have to do a better job with the fastball with two strikes."
But Perkins wasn't the only Twin who left for the hotel in the Country Club Plaza with a bad taste in his mouth. They scored four runs in the sixth to take a 5-3 lead but the bullpen could not make a winner out of lefthander Tommy Milone, who was shaky but fudged his way through 5⅔ innings.
After nine Twins went to the plate in the four-run sixth — six of them getting hits — Milone got the first two outs of the bottom of the inning then walked Orlando on four pitches. Blaine Boyer entered the game, but Christian Colon laced a double to center to make it 5-4. There was a feeling of impending doom, because a one-run deficit is nothing to a team fresh off a World Series appearance that has some power and plenty of speed.
"We had a good game." Twins manager Paul Molitor said. "A lot of good things happened. We just couldn't contain them there at the end."
Twins pitchers seemed to end up one out short of where they needed to be. Milone failed to get through the sixth. Aaron Thompson was asked to get through the seventh, got two outs but walked a batter, forcing Casey Fien to come in and clean up the mess.