DETROIT – Baby steps. The Twins' goal for Thursday should be to put a runner on third base.
They haven't done something that audacious for the past 27 innings they've played, including all 18 this season, so forget about scoring. These days, the Twins can't get more than halfway there.
The Tigers thrashed Minnesota 11-0 on Wednesday and, to be fair, the lack of hitting might not have been the Twins' biggest problem. Their defense was mistake-prone and their pitching was mostly awful, but all of it was overshadowed by their incredible hitting drought. The Twins have shattered their franchise record of scoreless innings to open a season — it had been 11, back in 1988 — by getting shut out in the first two games, and if you count the finish of the 2014 season, they haven't scored in their past 28 innings.
No wonder Torii Hunter, after watching his new team play punchless and sometimes pointless baseball for two games, made such a gloomy observation afterward. "I definitely think," he said in the clubhouse, "that we've got 160 games to go."
Oh, wait — he meant that's a good thing.
Well, perhaps it will be, and the Twins were adamant they aren't discouraged or disheartened, and certainly not panicked, by the lousy start. They're not going to face David Price or Anibal Sanchez every day, right?
"Let's not get carried away and have a dark cloud over our clubhouse. It's two games," said Jordan Schafer, proud owner of the Twins' lone extra-base hit this season; his leadoff double in the sixth inning merely meant he was left stranded on second base, not first. "Obviously we'd like to start better, but that's the way the ball's going right now. Everything is fine, it's perfectly fine. We've just got to put better at-bats up there, make a few plays, and we'll be all right."
More at-bats like the Tigers', in other words. Detroit has outhit the Twins 25-9 in two games, drawn nine walks to Minnesota's two, and gone 9-for-29 with runners in scoring position. Tigers shortstop Jose Iglesias, who missed all of last season because of fractured shins, has six hits already, only three fewer than Minnesota's entire roster. Iglesias went 4-for-4 with a walk Wednesday, a handy way to spark an offense considering Alex Avila, hitting directly in front of him, got on base four times as well, three of them on walks.