The Twins will open the 2023 season in Kansas City next March 30. That gives them — well, those who return — six months to forget the awfulness of this week's visit to Kauffman Stadium.
Josh Winder allowed only three runs over six innings on Thursday, making him the second starter on their eight-game road trip to turn in a so-called quality start, but the Twins' offense remained in its early-offseason slumber. The Royals homered twice, put up single runs in four different innings, and held the Twins to two paltry singles to complete a sweep of the three-game series with a 4-1 victory in Kansas City, Mo.
The lifeless loss completes a season-wrecking 1-7 road trip, the Twins' first to include seven losses since they suffered three such calamities in 2018, and drops them four games below .500, at 73-77, for the first time this year. It also reduces their elimination number in the AL Central race to just three, with nearly two weeks left to play.
"[This is] probably as low on the scale you can imagine," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli lamented. "I don't know how it could be more challenging for the group."
Give it time. They have 12 more games, including another road trip, to find out. The Twins are 30-45 outside Minnesota now, and just 5-23 outside Target Field since July 28; they haven't had a worse stretch of 28 road games since early in the 1982 season.
"You hit the road, you have to find ways to still focus and stick with your routines. But we do those things. That hasn't changed," Baldelli insisted. "I haven't seen anyone losing focus on the road. The performance hasn't been as good on the road, but there's no real reason for that."
The Guardians and Royals might take offense to that because for a full week they dominated a Twins team that led its division for four months. Minnesota was outscored 41-24 in the eight-game trip, and batted .211 with a .266 on-base percentage and .305 slugging. Cleveland and Kansas City combined to post .282/.352/.453.
Twins pitchers posted a 4.52 ERA over the eight games, including 4.95 by their starters. Guardians and Royals pitchers allowed just 2.19 earned runs per nine innings, 2.66 by the starters and a sparkling 1.76 by relievers.