ANAHEIM, CALIF. – If Saturday night's loss was a blowup, Sunday's matinee mishap was the fizzle and eventual snuff.
Despite taking an early lead off Byron Buxton's two-run homer, the Twins never really looked convincingly like winning the series. So when Max Kepler struck out to end a 4-2 loss to the Angels, making the Twins a lip-curling 1-4 during this Southern California road trip, it really just felt predictable.
Dropping 10-3 and 8-5 at the Dodgers earlier in the week was painful to watch but not altogether surprising, given that team has the majors' best record at 79-34. The Angels are not that — a distant fourth in the AL West with a 51-64 record.
And yet the Twins won 4-0 Friday, only to squander a three-run lead Saturday and lose 5-3 in 11 innings.
But manager Rocco Baldelli was hesitant to look at the time in Orange County as a missed opportunity.
"I can't think of it quite like that," Baldelli said, mentioning how Anaheim had good pitching and timely hitting when his team did not. "… You can't just say it's all going to even out. We've got to find ways to do it. We're working on that.
"… Our goals this year have not changed one bit. We're still right in the middle of things right now. We have to start today. We have to start tomorrow. And get back on track to where we need to be to make these games consequential. We want to play consequential games. We want to go to the playoffs. We want to do all these things."
The Twins made negative progress on those aspirations this week, though. At 58-55, they are now tied with the White Sox for second in the AL Central, 2½ games back from Cleveland, also two games back in the wild card race.