DUNEDIN, Fla. – Aaron Hicks has had a hit in each of his past two Grapefruit League games. And it's only gotten him into trouble.
Hicks was removed in the fourth inning from Tuesday's 5-3 victory over Toronto after making a mental mistake on the bases for the second straight day.
"We can't have that," manager Paul Molitor said after Hicks lost track of the number of outs while on base. "So we let him think about the game a little bit, and hopefully he'll respond."
The rest of the Twins responded well to facing R.A. Dickey, with Kennys Vargas and Eddie Rosario each smashing a home run out of Florida Auto Exchange Stadium. And Kyle Gibson was sharp in his three-inning start. But Molitor and his staff also had plenty of teaching moments, too, starting with their third-year center fielder.
Hicks looped a single into short left field with one out in the third inning against Dickey, then watched Eduardo Escobar pop out to the catcher for the second out. But the scoreboard still read one out, and when Eduardo Nunez lifted an inning-ending fly ball to right, Hicks went halfway to second base, paused, then headed back to first.
"Part of our baserunning [instruction] is, you can't trust the scoreboard," Molitor said.
After Toronto batted, he asked Hicks what happened as he came off the field, and Hicks, fighting to earn the Opening Day assignment in center field for the third straight year, admitted he was fooled by the scoreboard.
The mistake comes one day after Hicks was picked off, sort of, twice in one sequence by Pittsburgh in Bradenton. After a single, he left early on a steal attempt, but Pirates pitcher Angel Sanchez was startled into a balk. Then Hicks strayed too far off second base, anticipating a bunt that didn't happen, and he was easily picked off by catcher Elias Diaz.