Twins turn page on 103-loss season
Published 8:40 am Wednesday, March 29, 2017
There’s hardly value in finishing 59-103, no full-color brochure touting the benefit to a franchise of losing that many baseball games in a single season.
The Minnesota Twins have no choice but to find some.
They’ll try to use their year-ago ineptitude as a stimulus of sorts, certain they’re better than that abysmal record showed and hopeful the exasperating experience has hardened and exposed enough of their young players to the unforgiving grind of the grand old summer game.
“We will try to use it as a springboard,” said manager Paul Molitor, who described 2016 as the most difficult season he’s endured in any capacity, playing or coaching, over his life in the sport. “It was very challenging.”
Plenty of important players remain from the 2015 team that produced a respectable 83-79 record and stayed in the wild-card race until the next-to-last game on the schedule, so a return to competency and competitiveness isn’t such a far-fetched vision. The blueprint for a turnaround is entrenched in a potentially potent lineup highlighted by the under-25 core of Byron Buxton, Max Kepler and Miguel Sano.
“You’ve got to keep learning and learning until you figure things out,” said Buxton, the speedy center fielder and former No. 2 overall draft pick who was twice sent back to Triple-A last year before totaling nine home runs among 17 extra-base hits with 22 RBIs and a .357 on-base percentage over his final 29 games. “I think we started to do that at the end of last season, and hopefully that carries over.”
From Buxton to the bullpen, there’s a fresh outlook throughout the organization following the appointment of 34-year-old former Cleveland assistant general manager Derek Falvey as chief baseball officer. That’s one of the timeworn charms of the sport, the annual optimism that comes each spring.
“There’s a different attitude in how we go about things,” reliever Taylor Rogers said. “You still want to learn from your mistakes, but there is a balance there of having a short memory and forgetting about things but also remembering what got you into that spot that you didn’t want to be in.”
The Twins face Central Division foes in each of their first 19 games, with only four of those against defending American League champion Cleveland and 13 of them at home including the opener on Monday against Kansas City. That schedule ought to provide a better opportunity to avoid a repeat of 2016.