Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

Recommended Posts

Posted
Image courtesy of © Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images

Box Score
Starting Pitcher: Mike Paredes, 3 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 4K
Home Runs: Royce Lewis (4), Byron Buxton (20)
Top 3 WPA: Buxton (0.20), Anthony Banda (0.16), (0.09)
Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs): 

image.png

It was another muggy day at Comerica Park, and the game action fizzled just as it got started. With a passing storm cell sitting just 15 minutes away, the umpires spoke with both managers on whether to press on ahead. The teams agreed to begin the contest, but only got a half inning—where Framber Valdez looked like his Astros self, rather than the brutal showing the Twins took advantage of in April—before the crews decided to ask fans to take shelter and wait for a storm to pass for the next 67 minutes. 

The game then began in earnest after a half-inch of rain dumped onto the field, with Mike Parades making his second big-league start in a planned bullpen game. The relatively unknown prospect threw a mix of sweepers in the high 70s and a four-seamer in the mid-90s, managing two strikeouts to escape the first inning.

Fram(b)e(r) Up
To some surprise, Valdez returned to the game. He had obviously kept fresh in between with no reduced velocity, but the humidity may have been too much. Royce Lewis punished the southpaw with a solo home run—50th of his career and first since April—that he crushed a tape-measure 444 feet. Lewis’s home run came on an elevated sweeper that came in at 95.2 mph, for the St Paul velocity bean counters.

Valdez continued to look shaky, covered in heavy sweat throughout his five innings. He allowed a couple bloop hits and a walk that loaded the bases, but a foulout by Brooks Lee caught by Spencer Torkelson at the railing ended the rally. The shaky pitcher ran out of luck in the fifth. Valdez managed to plunk both Alex Jackson and Austin Martin in non-competitive pitches before Byron Buxton launched his slider for a 413-foot shot. Derek Shelton’s management played a nice role here, moving Buxton out of the lead-off spot and allowing this to be just his second non-solo home run of the season. 

Relief Carousel  
Mike Paredes almost escaped a third-inning jam, before a Gleyber Torres chopper deflected by a diving Buxton resulted in a run. That was enough for Shelton (who perhaps wanted to get Paredes the Pitchergami), who began his parade of bullpen arms, beginning with Taylor Rogers before moving to Andrew Morris. Morris struggled with command once again, but the defense was his real undoing. Luke Keaschall committed two should-be errors in the frame, leading to two should-be-unearned runs. If Shelton hoped to scratch two innings out of Morris, the 41-pitch count ended the conversation.

That meant Travis Adams was put on call to do what Morris couldn’t for the sixth inning. But after pulling a 1-2-3 inning with a pair of strikeouts, Adams had trouble finding the strike zone and put runners on first and second for the seventh. That threw Anthony Banda into commission. Happily, Banda continued his recent dominance with an easy pop-out and a strikeout. Banda allowed a walk to Riley Greene to begin the eighth, but worked a few fly outs to send the game to the ninth. 

Hit Parade
Having used five relievers the night before, AJ Hinch eventually turned to post-hype prospect type Ty Madden to face the top of the order to begin the seventh. Madden showed craft with his diverse pitch mix, but struggled to get swing-and-miss (though Orlando Arcia managed to chase one outside the zone). With switch-hitting Josh Bell up, Hinch turned to Drew Sommers, but the mid-90s fastball left in the zone resulted in a bloop single and another run on the board. Sommers also walked Lewis on four pitches before firing a wide pitch that snuck Brooks Lee home. Keaschall loaded the count, but a harmless flyout to right field ended the rally. The Twins managed multiple base runners in both the eighth and the ninth, but well-hit but poorly positioned swings from Buxton and Bell resulted in double plays that kept the damage limited.

Yoendrys Gómez looked shaky in his save situation, putting on a pair with only one out. A launch from Matt Vierling spelled trouble, but the ball died at 408 feet in deep center and fell harmlessly into Buxton's glove. Dillon Dingler smacked a ball between Arcia and Lee to add one to the Tigers' count. but Gómez managed a strikeout of Riley Greene to finally shut the door.

Notes
Like many teams in the league, Twins.TV sells digitally commissioned ads overlaid onto the physical ones behind the batter's box. For whatever reason, these were particularly egregious tonight in creating digital artifacts, and at points, the ball disappeared from view on its way to the plate.

Byron Buxton recorded his sixth stolen base of the season, but only his second in the last month. 

Lewis continued to look good at first base, making a few nice defensive plays. It was his third consecutive day in the position.

Post-Game Interview:

What's Next?
After some more storms pass over the region overnight, Zebby Matthews will face Keider Montero in a high noon getaway game. The Twins will need serious length to ensure a fresh bullpen for their weekend series against the Cardinals.

Bullpen Usage: 

  SAT SUN MON TUE WED TOT
Laweryson 0 36 0 12 0 48
Morris 0 41 0 0 39 80
Orze 17 0 0 23 0 40
Lawrence 0 12 0 26 0 38
Rogers 15 0 0 17 14 46
Adams 0 0 0 0 31 31
Gómez 14 0 0 0 27 41
Banda 0 0 0 0 30 30
Paredes 0 0 0 0 58 58

 


View full article

Posted
4 hours ago, knothole61 said:

Peter, can you can you summon up enough mojo (and special icons) to give the Twins a bit of a winning streak? I request that they play .700 ball for the rest of the month...see what you can do.

I’ll do my best!!! Great to finally see Royce hit one out!!! 444 feet!!! Buxton with huge home run as well as it was difference in winning!!! Got bit nervous in bottom of 9th but Gomez got the save!!! Let’s take series today and get on long winning streak!!! 

Posted

If anyone doesn’t understand why ERA is a bogus stat just look at the official scoring from last nights game. Glad the Twins scratched out a win from a bullpen game but our starters are gonna need to pitch efficiently for the next couple of games. Buck was the difference again but Paredes did a nice job. 

Posted
12 minutes ago, Saxophone Joe said:

I'll take the W...but dang, always interesting in the 9th with this collection. Glad I decided to watch the Knicks comeback instead of sweating through the end of this one. 

Buck's homer was a thing of beauty...he knew it was gone. 

bullpen can never be trusted ..not a single one of them... i would not feel confident even with a 5 run lead

Posted
1 hour ago, Linus said:

If anyone doesn’t understand why ERA is a bogus stat just look at the official scoring from last nights game.

The number of times that Twins pitchers have needed to get 4-5 outs in an inning due to substandard defense really makes it difficult for the manager because of pitch counts. Morris feels like he needs to strike every batter out because of the defense behind him, which is counterproductive to good pitching. It is going to take time but the Twins need to find players who can turn those outs into outs.

40 minutes ago, Jeff K said:

I wish I understood why Keaschall can't seem to improve at 2nd base.  He is too good of an athlete to play like this.  At least his hitting is slowly improving.

Keaschall is a confounding player. His approach looks like he is trying to power the ball but he lacks any power. He has good speed but his jumps on ground balls look poor and he just has too many problems fielding ground balls. The lack of improvement is concerning, even if he is relatively inexperienced. Outfield seems like an option until one remembers that his arm is weak. I'm not sure what the Twins can do with Keaschall. The article that suggested he relax and play in AAA for a bit doesn't really fix his weaknesses either. We can be certain that conversations are ongoing among the dugout staff seeking solutions.

Posted
1 hour ago, Jeff K said:

I wish I understood why Keaschall can't seem to improve at 2nd base.  He is too good of an athlete to play like this.  At least his hitting is slowly improving.

It takes time and repetition. He has the athleticism to play second base. This might be the first time he actually has struggled to perform as an athlete. MLB is difficult and unforgiving.

Posted
1 hour ago, Jeff K said:

I wish I understood why Keaschall can't seem to improve at 2nd base.  He is too good of an athlete to play like this.  At least his hitting is slowly improving.

He’s like Eddie Julien in the field, but with better hair.

Posted

A shaky win ...

All batters got at least 1 hit but left the bases loaded twice , so hits were not timely and left 9 on base , grounded into 3 double plays ...

Pitchers struck out 14 batters and battled towards the win ...

Lewis showing a better selection of pitches and started us off with scoring ( homerun ) ...

Let's get this 3rd game for a series win  ...

 

Posted

Time to be honest here the whole infield is subpar and has now gotten ever worse. How has that happened,bringing Lewis back and having him learn to play 1st on the fly. With Kody who played it fairly well now being moved to the OF adding another LH bat there. Lewis was drafted as a SS so play him there instead of changing who plays SS day after day. That is a position he knows and should be able to play.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Twins community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...