Scott Diamond locked in as Twins take doubleheader opener vs. Tigers
by
Donnie Dwyer
Posted: 09.23.2012 at 11:05 PM
Scott Diamond
knew he was probably facing his biggest batter of the day. As it turned out, he was right.
With his Twins losing 2-0 to the Tigers, Diamond was facing
Omar Infante
with a runner on and two outs in the fifth. Infante himself wasn't what Diamond was worried about -- it was the batter on deck.
"When I walked
Austin Jackson
, I realized that if I didn't get Infante, I was going to have to face
Miguel Cabrera
with two runners on base," he said. "That's a dangerous situation."
He didn't have to worry. Infante hit a grounder to short and Diamond got out of the inning. Minnesota then scored five runs in the sixth and cruised to a 10-4 victory in the first game of a day-night doubleheader.
The loss dropped Detroit a full game behind the White Sox in the AL Central.
Diamond (12-8) allowed two runs on four hits in seven innings, and improved his career ERA against the Tigers to 3.07 in four starts. He struck out five.
"After my last couple starts, I've worked really hard on keeping the ball down in the zone," he said between games. "Today, I was able to execute my pitches where I wanted them."
After leaving his previous start with shoulder weakness,
Max Scherzer
(16-7) pitched five shutout innings despite a fastball that topped out at 93 instead of his usual high-90s. However, he couldn't get an out in the sixth, and ended up allowing three runs in five-plus innings.
"I knew if I could go out there and mix speeds, it would be just as effective as having velocity," he said. "I know I don't have to have velocity to be a good pitcher."
He wasn't getting any arguments from the Minnesota clubhouse.
"He's still got great stuff, even if he wasn't throwing 97," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "He's got the great change, a great breaking ball and everything is moving all over the place. We really had to be patient with him."
The Tigers led 2-0 early, with an RBI and a run from Miguel Cabrera, but Detroit's notoriously bad defense melted down in the sixth, leading to five Minnesota runs.
Ben Revere
led off with a fly to left that
Andy Dirks
dropped just short of the wall. By the time Dirks could locate the ball, Revere was at third with what was ruled a triple.
Joe Mauer
pulled the Twins within 2-1 with an infield single, and
Josh Willingham
moved him to third with a double. That brought
Phil Coke
into the game, and he got
Justin Morneau
to fly to shallow left.
Dirks, though, got a very late break and the ball dropped for a game-tying single.
Ryan Doumit
walked to load the bases, and
Trevor Plouffe
made it 3-2 with a single on
Brayan Villarreal
's first pitch. The Twins then added a bizarre run when a third strike got away from
Gerald Laird
.
Villarreal covered the plate, but stretched for a force out instead of tagging Morneau. He only realized his mistake when home-plate umpire Tom Hallion singled safe. The fifth run then scored when
Pedro Florimon
beat out an inning-ending double play.
"That's something I've never seen in 49 years of baseball," Jim Leyland said. "He saw the batter heading for first and thought it was a force play. He's probably not an expert on the rulebook, to be honest with you."
In the seventh, Revere walked, stole second, took third on Laird's throwing error and scored when Dirks made a diving catch of Mauer's foul fly to left. The Twins made it 8-2 on RBI singles by
Eduardo Escobar
and Revere in the eighth, and Mauer's triple later in the inning got Minnesota to double figures.
"We put together three great innings in a row and got ourselves a win," Gardenhire said. "At this point in the season, that's great to see."
Avisail Garcia
's two-run single in the ninth slightly narrowed the final gap.