Twins end awful weekend with 3-1 loss
Published 8:44 am Monday, April 9, 2012
BALTIMORE (AP) — One win. That’s all the Minnesota Twins are looking for after a lost weekend Baltimore.
The Twins were held hitless for seven innings by Jason Hammel and dropped a 3-1 decision Sunday, leaving them 0-3 for the first time since 1981.
Next up for Minnesota: the home opener against the Los Angeles Angels on Monday.
“It’s nice to go home,” manager Ron Gardenhire said. “Unfortunately we’d like to have won a game or two here.”
Minnesota scored only five runs in the three-game series and has yet to put up a run before the eighth inning. The Twins were six outs away from being no-hit until Justin Morneau led off the eighth with a double.
Operating with 14 players that were not on last year’s opening-day roster, Minnesota has not yet jelled as a team.
“We got a lot of new guys. Maybe we got a few guys trying to do too much and trying to impress,” Morneau said. “We got some good baseball players here, guys with experience. Once we get that first one, guys start to settle in a little bit and the team starts to play together and do what we’re capable of. I think we’re going to be a lot better than we’ve shown so far.”
In his Baltimore debut, Hammel (1-0) faced the minimum 21 batters through seven innings, allowing two walks, before Morneau doubled off the right-field wall.
“It wasn’t actually that bad of a pitch,” Hammel said. “Obviously, Morneau is a great hitter. It was a changeup that was up just a little bit. Oh well.”
The crowd of 14,738 stood in appreciation of Hammel’s performance.
“It was a pleasure to do that for the fans, the first time they’ve seen me,” he said. “They sure knew what was going on and they backed me up pretty good.”
The no-hitter was gone, but Hammel still had a 3-0 lead to protect.
Josh Willingham followed with an RBI double and Sean Burroughs drew a one-out walk before Hammel finished by striking out Luke Hughes and retiring Ben Revere on a fly to right.
Jim Johnson worked a perfect ninth to earn his second save and complete the two-hitter.
Hammel came to Baltimore in February in a trade that sent Jeremy Guthrie to Colorado. Hammel allowed three walks and struck out five over eight memorable innings.
Asked if it was the best he’s ever thrown, the 6-foot-6 Hammel replied: “For sure. I haven’t been much better than that.”
After beating Tampa Bay in three straight games on the road last year, the Orioles have opened the season with successive three-game sweeps for the first time since 1996-97 — both of which turned out to be playoff seasons.
J.J. Hardy homered for the Orioles, who have won seven straight over the Twins by a collective score of 39-9. The streak began with a four-game sweep last August in Minnesota.
The only other times Minnesota started 0-3 were in 1969 and 1981.
“We’re going to keep grinding,” said Ryan Doumit, who went hitless in the series. “We have some pretty good baseball players on this team. We’re going to be fine.”
Twins starter Anthony Swarzak (0-1) performed admirably in place of Liam Hendriks, who was hospitalized over the weekend with apparent food poisoning. Swarzak, who’s normally used as a long reliever, gave up one run and four hits in five innings. The lone glaring flaw was Hardy’s first-inning homer.
“Swarzak threw the ball great today,” Morneau said. “We haven’t done a whole lot early in the games. They’ve thrown the ball well. Their hitters managed to get it done and we didn’t.”
Swarzak was replaced by Matt Maloney, who allowed two runs in the sixth. Adam Jones hit a leadoff single, Nick Johnson was hit by a pitch with one out and both moved up on a double steal before Wilson Betemit doubled in two runs for a 3-0 lead.
That proved to be enough offense to back Hammel, who was extremely sharp leading up to the eighth.
The only runner against Hammel over the first four innings was Willingham, who walked in the second before Doumit hit into a double play.
Morneau drew a leadoff walk in the fifth, but Willingham promptly bounced into a 1-4-3 double play. Baltimore put runners at the corners with two outs in the bottom half before Nick Markakis flied out to right.
Hammel kept the no-hitter intact in the sixth, getting three straight routine groundouts. The same thing happened in the seventh.