FORT MYERS, FLA. – Twins starters face two thresholds during their spring training outings, innings or pitches thrown, whichever comes first.
And Kyle Gibson was back in the clubhouse after two innings, an inning early, because he needed 45 pitches to get through two laborious innings during the Twins' 6-5 loss to the Marlins on Friday.
Gibson gave up two runs over two innings, allowing seven batters to reach base.
"I didn't have fastball command today," Gibson said. "The sinker wasn't really sinking. That's why I ended up getting behind on those pitches inside to lefties."
No command. No sink. No good for a sinkerballer. Miami jumped out to a 2-0 lead behind an RBI single by J.T. Realmuto in the first and a sacrifice fly by Marcell Ozuna in the second. But Gibson continued to work on his curveball, a pitch he's determined to use more this season.
"The curveball actually has been pleasantly surprising," Gibson said. "If there's anything to take away from that is that the curveball and slider and changeup were fairly good today.
''If I can keep that curveball right there, then it's going to be a pitch I'm going to be able to use this year."
Gibson's spot in the rotation is secure, so he has the luxury of spinning curveballs until he's satisfied with the results. But he kept catcher John Ryan Murphy on his toes for two innings as he failed to spot his fastball.