The ‘Twins Way’ has been beset by bad starting pitching

Published 8:32 am Thursday, July 14, 2016

During the previous decade, as Minnesota piled up division titles as a spunky overachiever, the organization’s ability to produce fundamentally solid players and competitive teams without expensive power hitters or starting pitchers became known around baseball as the “Twins Way.”

They’ve become the wayward Twins these days. They’re on pace at the All-Star break to pass the club record of 102 losses.

“Like a lot of people, I don’t look at the record too much anymore. It’s kind of counterproductive for me,” manager Paul Molitor said after a historic, horrific first half of the schedule during which the Twins went 27-54.

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“I try not to go down that road. Obviously I hope we have a better half,” said Molitor, who in his first year running the team oversaw an 83-79 record that had the Twins in postseason contention until the second-to-last day on the 2015 slate.

Having averaged 96 losses over the four years prior to Molitor’s debut, the 0-9 start this season that didn’t get much better throughout April and May looked more like the trend. The optimism-fueling 2015 finish looked more like the outlier.

“Not where we want to be,” said first baseman Joe Mauer, in his usual understated manner.

What can’t be overstated is the organization’s persistent problem procuring and maintaining adequate starting pitching. Twins starters are 19-38 with a 5.26 ERA this season, ahead of only Cincinnati.

The backbone of the “Twins Way” was durable starting pitchers who didn’t walk many batters, trusting stout defense behind them to minimize potential damage from pitches to contact. The philosophy was formed around the time manager Tom Kelly took over in 1987, leading the Twins to their first of two World Series titles. There were lean years in the 1990s, but the club was in contention in Kelly’s last season, 2001, and kept it up under his replacement, Ron Gardenhire. The Twins won the American League Central division six times from 2002 through 2010.

Since then, quality starters have simply stopped coming through the farm system.

Kyle Gibson, the team’s first-round draft pick in 2009, has settled in as a capable middle-of-the-rotation right-hander. Tyler Duffey has shown potential in 24 major league starts. Jose Berrios is waiting in Triple-A. But the dearth of starting pitching has prompted general manager Terry Ryan to dole out close to $200 million in free agent contracts since he returned to his post nearly five years ago.