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    Astros 2, Twins 1: Offense Absent Again, Houston Rallies Late to Sweep Series

    The Twins held a lead late, but the Astros were able to storm back and take advantage of an inept Twins lineup to sweep the series in Houston.

    Hans Birkeland
    Image courtesy of © Erik Williams-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score:
    Starting Pitcher:
    Simeon Woods Richardson: 5 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K (53 Pitches, 38 Strikes, 71.7%)
    Home Runs: Brooks Lee (7)
    Bottom 3 WPA: Jhoan Duran (-.309), Christian Vázquez (-.203), Cole Sands (-.194)
    Win Probability Chart (Via Fangraphs):
    image.png.9fb546986ff64027919217a0dc7884ff.png

    You would be well within your rights to avoid watching Sunday's game in favor of celebrating Father's Day, watching the US Open, or drinking yourself into oblivion—maybe even all three! Nevertheless, there was a game to play, despite the Twins losing Pablo López, Zebby Matthews, Royce Lewis and (maybe) Byron Buxton in the past two weeks to injury, while losing games at an accelerating pace. Today was definitely a game to avoid, but the Twins themselves didn't have that privilege.

    To try and salvage a win from this series against the Houston Astros, the Twins turned to Houston native Simeon Woods Richardson, who was obliterated his last time out, returning from the minor leagues to allow seven runs to the Texas Rangers—until then, a struggling offense.

    Woods Richardson either made some adjustments, or was pitching angry, as his velocity was up and both his breaking balls looked sharp. He breezed through the first four innings on 31 pitches, without allowing a baserunner. If you've watched him at all, you know he tends to struggle to end at-bats and can be inefficient, even on a good day, so this was a welcome change of pace.

    Meanwhile, the Twins were up against journeyman lefty Brandon Walter, making his third career start. Walter moved around his cutter pretty well with good command, but the Twins made pretty good contact against him. Brooks Lee extended his hitting streak to 15 games by smacking a hanging cutter into the Crawford Boxes for the game's first run in the third. 

    Lee then began the fifth inning with a sharp single to center field. After Ryan Jeffers was hit by a pitch and Carlos Correa advanced the runners, Willi Castro (already with two hits on the day) came up with two outs and ran the count full—before taking a sinker right down the middle to end the inning.

    The Astros finally got a baserunner in the fifth, as Jake Meyers hit a one-out grounder up the middle that deflected off Correa's glove. Woods Richardson then ran the count full against Saturday's walkoff hero, Cam Smith. All of a sudden, the game seemed to be in the balance, as this would not be the first time Woods Richardson looked great over the first three or four innings before giving it all up in the fifth. Smith did walk, which brought up the recently recalled Cooper Hummel for his fourth at-bat of the year. The Twins starter won that matchup, though, with a nasty changeup (allegedly a new split-change) darting away that got Hummel swinging. Mauricio Dubón did make decent contact with a Woods RIchardson fastball, but lined out to Harrison Bader in center to end the threat.

    With the bullpen fairly fresh and Woods Richardson in need of some confidence, Brock Stewart was summoned to begin the sixth inning. This, despite the starter being at just 53 pitches and not through the lineup a second time. Perhaps if the Twins had extended the lead in the fifth or sixth, instead of going down 1-2-3 in quick fashion, Rocco Baldelli may have given his young righty more leash.

    Conversely, Walter was allowed to begin the seventh inning. He allowed a one-out hit to Lee (his third), and was lifted after striking out Christian Vázquez for the second out. Credit to Walter: he showed some gumption, and has now delivered the injury-ravaged Astros rotation three solid starts. Whether he is actually part of the solution for Houston, or whether his good day was just a product of the Twins' offensive struggles, is hard to ascertain.

    The bottom half of the inning began ominously, as Louis Varland hit Jose Altuve with a pitch on his right forearm. However, Victor Caratini immediately grounded to Lee at second, who began a fairly easy double play before Jake Meyers grounded out to end the inning, the lead still intact.

    Varland was asked to start the eighth inning, as well, and he was greeted with a laser off the bat of Smith that nearly tied to game. It was hit so hard that Smith couldn't advance to second, however, as Castro made a nice play on the ball. A questionable sacrifice bunt call and two groundouts later, Varland escaped unscathed yet again.

    Jhoan Duran was summoned to close out the game, after throwing 20 pitches and taking the loss on Saturday. He was tasked with the top of the Houston lineup and began Jeremy Peña with four straight balls. He recovered to strike out Yainer Diaz on a devastating splinker, but Peña stole second on the first pitch to Altuve the following at-bat. After running the count full, Altuve reached out (on ball four) and tapped a ground ball to Correa, who was playing back and wasn't able to retire Altuve, 

    Altuve not taking the walk proved costly, as Caratini swung at the first pitch from Duran and lifted a sacrifice fly to tie the game at 1-1.

    Extra innings ensued, and the Twins executed their half of the inning about as poorly as humanly possible. The first hitter was Vázquez, who failed to advance the runners and popped out. Jeffers then struck out, and Correa popped out.

    Cole Sands did his part, not allowing the advance on the first hitter, as Smith tapped out to the left side and Hummel struck out swinging. Dubón then lifted a fly ball to deep left-center that Castro appeared to get a glove on, but the ball dropped, allowing Houston to win and sweep the series.

    Stray  Observations:

    -Lee isn't just producing, but it looks somewhat sustainable, as he appears to be swinging less and waiting for the pitcher to come to him before making better contact; he's not getting popped up as often. His OPS has eclipsed the .700 mark for the first time in quite a while.

    -Castro picked up two more hits batting right-handed, moving his OPS from that side of the plate over .800, a far cry from the hopeless at-bats Castro took against lefties the second half of 2024.

    -Jonah Bride looks cooked, missing hittable pitches and running his hitless streak to 24 at-bats. There's a good hitter somewhere in there, but the Twins could use his roster spot a lot more efficiently right now. The combination of Edouard Julien and Jose Miranda being ineffective with Lewis and Luke Keaschall getting hurt have all conspired to keep Bride's spot on the team.

    What’s Next: David Festa (1-1, 4.76 ERA) takes on the Reds and Andrew Abbott (6-1, 1.87 ERA) in the bandbox known as Great American Ballpark. The Reds have been playing well lately and Abbott is trying to strengthen his case for his first All-Star appearance. By the way, Abbott is a lefty. Festa looked great his last time out against the Rangers, pitching deep (for him) into the game in the one win they had in that Texas series. Festa establishing himself as a reliable starter every fifth day would go a long ways towards the Twins surviving the next 90 days without Lopez.

    Postgame Interviews:

     

    Bullpen Usage Chart:

      WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT
    Durán 13 0 0 20 21 54
    Wentz 0 38 0 0 0 38
    Varland 16 0 0 0 22 38
    Sands 0 26 0 0 12 38
    Jax 0 0 17 13 0 30
    Stewart 13 0 0 0 10 23
    Coulombe 0 1 19 0 0 20
    Topa 0 0 16 0 0 16

     

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    Featured Comments

    42 minutes ago, Blyleven2011 said:

    Here's something to watch , desclafini has been sign to a major league deal with Arizona  , he has been rehabbing with Arizona minor league clubs , so he must be ready for the show  ...

    Watched DeScla pitch against the Saints last week. He has nothing. If he gets someone out it is more luck than talent. He understands the game and will allow poor batters to get themselves out but get toasted by competent hitters.

    9 minutes ago, tony&rodney said:

    Personally have no interest in defending ownership but FWIW the POBO/GM put together the team. The Pohlads likely never heard of some of the players before they were a part of the organization. The authorized the highest budget in the AL Central and deferred to their hires. Is that their error? Perhaps.

    If the pohlads have never heard of some of these players , it's because they don't like the game , they should be more involved with teams and team players if you own a baseball club ...

    My point should have been it's a team effort from ownership down to FO,  coaches and players 

    I'll be the one to defend the Vasquez at bat.  It seems like the running strategy is for the away team to score more than one run in Manfred ball in an effort to try to end the game in that inning and so the home team doesn't get to tie it so easily and we continue with the game.  Also, I've never seen Jeffers or Correa (the next two batters) ever change their batting approach to try to drive in the run even if the runner was on third base.  In fact, I believe the only player that actually takes a separate approach at the plate is our friendly punching bag Ty France.  Jeffers struck out and Correa hit a weak pop up.  I have A LOT of decisions that I don't agree with Rocco within this game, but the Vasquez at bat was not one of them.

    3 hours ago, jkcarew said:

    Today would have been a good day for Buxton to gut it out.

    SWR with a step in the right direction. Nice to see Lee showing some pop from the right side recently.

    Otherwise, same old, same old. The back end of the bullpen is far from dominant or even really good.  I’d call it extremely ordinary.

    The pitching is above average.  The bats are pathetic.  The defense is below average.  

    3 hours ago, Mark G said:

    Well, you know the old saying, "it's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it".  So I will be the one.

    5 innings of shutout ball, 1 hit, and only 53 pitches.  Then Rocco pulls the plug again, and the parade of RP's start.  As I have said until you all are tired of reading it, all it takes is one in the bunch to not be on that day and........🤕

    SWR didn't just deserve a better fate, he deserved the chance to decide his own fate.  I just can't stand this anymore.......🤢

    Someone shut me up, please.......😷

    Someone fire Rocco.

    2 hours ago, purplesoldier4u said:

    Back down to a game over .500. The Twins can be at bad teams, but struggle against "good" teams - a movie we've all seen before. Tough times result in making tough decisions, and Bride is not an MLB player. In addition, I'm not sure that Vazquez's defense out weighs his frequent offensive futility. 

    We're now halfway between Memorial Day and Labor Day, the time where teams show what they are. Yes, the starting rotation is facing some hurdles, but the offense is not carrying their collective weight and with few options available, it looks like an 85 win season. Welcome back to mediocrity.

    They will not win 76

    45 minutes ago, tony&rodney said:

    Watched DeScla pitch against the Saints last week. He has nothing. If he gets someone out it is more luck than talent. He understands the game and will allow poor batters to get themselves out but get toasted by competent hitters.

    He went 2.1 innings today against San Diego.  3 hits, 2ER, 0 walks, 2 K's

    4 hours ago, CRF said:

    Very catchable ball that ended the game. We'd probably blow it at some point anyway, but Castro should have caught that one. 

    Bad defense loses close games....

    4 hours ago, Mark G said:

    Well, you know the old saying, "it's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it".  So I will be the one.

    5 innings of shutout ball, 1 hit, and only 53 pitches.  Then Rocco pulls the plug again, and the parade of RP's start.  As I have said until you all are tired of reading it, all it takes is one in the bunch to not be on that day and........🤕

    SWR didn't just deserve a better fate, he deserved the chance to decide his own fate.  I just can't stand this anymore.......🤢

    Someone shut me up, please.......😷

    I agree but, this to create a narrative around a pitcher. Why is he constantly being pulled in winning situations with pitch counts between 50 - 70?

    50 minutes ago, Hubie29 said:

    He went 2.1 innings today against San Diego.  3 hits, 2ER, 0 walks, 2 K's

    I actually admire these guys, like DeSclafani, who work very hard and keep going for another shot because they love the game. I tried to pitch two years with a torn rotator cuff before surgery myself because I loved playing, even at the hack level.

    I just think there are better options for the Twins. Arizona is hurting for pitching. The Diamondbacks were a team I wanted to trade with last winter. Still think it is possible but it would be very difficult. 

    4 hours ago, Mark G said:

    Well, you know the old saying, "it's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it".  So I will be the one.

    5 innings of shutout ball, 1 hit, and only 53 pitches.  Then Rocco pulls the plug again, and the parade of RP's start.  As I have said until you all are tired of reading it, all it takes is one in the bunch to not be on that day and........🤕

    SWR didn't just deserve a better fate, he deserved the chance to decide his own fate.  I just can't stand this anymore.......🤢

    Someone shut me up, please.......😷

    He did deserve a better fate, but him coming out of the game didn't lose it.  That's on the offense, which was "offensive".  I don't love Duran giving up the game tying run, nor Sands giving up the game winner, but they get to do that, and if the offense were even functional, it wouldn't be an issue.  

    C'mon boys!  We've gotta get some runs!

    5 hours ago, Mark G said:

    Well, you know the old saying, "it's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it".  So I will be the one.

    5 innings of shutout ball, 1 hit, and only 53 pitches.  Then Rocco pulls the plug again, and the parade of RP's start.  As I have said until you all are tired of reading it, all it takes is one in the bunch to not be on that day and........🤕

    SWR didn't just deserve a better fate, he deserved the chance to decide his own fate.  I just can't stand this anymore.......🤢

    Someone shut me up, please.......😷

    I saw the downvote of this post and knew immediately who it was, before I looked.

    Some folks just refuse to look the truth in the face.

    <rant on>

    As an avid former Townball/Senior League baseball player and now MLB paying fan, it’s sickening to me to see a team culture that has apparently normalized guys loafing on the field. Occasionally on this board there’s a suggestion that guys don’t give max effort on ground balls because of the increased risk of injury. Maybe, but I ain’t paying to watch that. I don’t know what happened to nutrition, strength training and flexibility routines, but it seems like we’re supposed to be holding our breath every time one of our big name players tries to beat out a grounder. And for the most part we’ve abandoned the finer points of base running and built a roster of station to station plodders. I believe that’s a problem at the FO, Manager, and roster level. Not conducive to a great fan experience. 

    <rant off>

    1 hour ago, jdr said:

    I agree but, this to create a narrative around a pitcher. Why is he constantly being pulled in winning situations with pitch counts between 50 - 70?

    Because Rocco is not good at his job.  Never has been.

    We have just experienced two days of excellent pitching, (except for the All-Star closer-yes) especially in that crazy Houston bandbox; and two losses that could easily have been wins with even a modicum more of offense...just a modicum! 

    It's hard to blame Rocco when the batters are so lame. But I do damn his intractability regarding his frequent "cautionary rest days." When he sits Buxton, for example, he has no intention of allowing him to come in late in a game to pinch run or hit with the game on the line. He just won't do it! Today, Buxton should have hit in the 10th...he's having a great season and he's a real threat at bat right now. Rocco does some things well, but his utter inability to throw caution to the wind (even just a bit) drives me crazy. 

    Hey SWR, great job today! 

    6 hours ago, jkcarew said:

    I mean he has, and needs to be, held to a higher standard than any other free agent simply based on price. So, not great. But, still no.

    bWAR since he joined the club: 10.6

    Buxton over the same period: 10.3

    When the club has managed to make the postseason over that period..

    Correa: 9 hits, 4 RBI, and about a 1.000 OPS.

    Buxton: 1 plate appearance (career postseason OPS is 286)

    Buxton = 15 million a year; Correa = 30+ million a year.

    I'll take Buck on the better bWAR over the next 3 years. 

    Correa has been a disaster at the plate for almost a year now

    I am beyond frustrated with this team and this game encapsulated everything that this organization is doing to not create a winning team.

    They don't develop starting pitching well, SWR, pull him after 53 pitches and one hit because they won't let him face the order a third time.  They are doing the same thing in the minors, they think they are going to change the pitching model for baseball.  How can pitchers be expected to go more than 4 or 5 innings up here if they are not doing it in the minors.

    The AB by Vasquez called for a bunt, but no they think he will get lucky again against Hader and hit a HR again.  Play situational baseball, something this team does not do well at all.

    They want all players to be utility players.  It is great Castro can play multiple positions but he doesn't play them all well and some of that is not getting reps at the positions.  The ball in the 10th was catchable and a player with more reps in the OF probably catches it.  He also threw to the wrong base in the 9th inning that did not hurt the team.  But this is not the first he has made these type of mistakes.  He makes up for some of his mistakes with his athleticism but let's stop treating players like a chessboard.

    The AB by Altuve where he got his bat on the ball in the 9th inning vs.  Castro and Correa looking at called third strikes.  How often does this happen because they want their pitch to drive instead of just getting the bat on the ball.  This is a team wide problem.

    This all starts with the FO and the philosophy they have implemented and it is creating a .500 team over the past 8 years.  But Rocco at some point has to say in this moment this move will give the team a better chance to win even if it does not fit in with the organizational philosophy.  

    When they win, it is usually against lesser teams that they are able to outplay their mistakes.  And once in a while Rocco will go against his spreadsheet but never with any consistency.

    This organization needs to be blown up and figure out what they have in the young players by letting them play.  Then fill holes where needed and not with one year stopgaps.

    15 hours ago, Mark G said:

    Well, you know the old saying, "it's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it".  So I will be the one.

    5 innings of shutout ball, 1 hit, and only 53 pitches.  Then Rocco pulls the plug again, and the parade of RP's start.  As I have said until you all are tired of reading it, all it takes is one in the bunch to not be on that day and........🤕

    SWR didn't just deserve a better fate, he deserved the chance to decide his own fate.  I just can't stand this anymore.......🤢

    Someone shut me up, please.......😷

    At some point in a tight game the Closer has to end the game……..walking the lead-off hitter on 4 pitches has nothing to do with SWR getting taken out (whenever), nor the Manager.

    Period.

    Score some runs or pitch perfectly………SWR leaving the game had Zero to do with the outcome!

    Sad recognition of a Carlos Correa shortcoming. C4 has diminished range this season. I absolutely love what a steady player Correa is at shortstop. Balls hit to him are routinely gobbled up and his throws to first base are textbook perfect on nearly every occasion. Two plays yesterday displayed the cracks in his play though. A grounder up the middle that eluded him and a slow roller that he had to come in on furiously. A couple of years ago at full health Correa makes both plays. Correa and Buxton are both diminished in range from their best days but remain our best defensive players by far. This not is not a criticism but merely a reality. 

    8 hours ago, knothole61 said:

    We have just experienced two days of excellent pitching, (except for the All-Star closer-yes) especially in that crazy Houston bandbox; and two losses that could easily have been wins with even a modicum more of offense...just a modicum! 

    It's hard to blame Rocco when the batters are so lame. But I do damn his intractability regarding his frequent "cautionary rest days." When he sits Buxton, for example, he has no intention of allowing him to come in late in a game to pinch run or hit with the game on the line. He just won't do it! Today, Buxton should have hit in the 10th...he's having a great season and he's a real threat at bat right now. Rocco does some things well, but his utter inability to throw caution to the wind (even just a bit) drives me crazy. 

    Hey SWR, great job today! 

    Was Buxton pulled from a game in Houston after getting hit on the elbow or not?

    I’m confused.

    Glad to see that it's still bad bullpen management that costs the Twins games when the offense scores 1 run in 10 innings. Oh, and it was the closer that would've been used anyways that blew that whopping 1 run lead. I know, I know, the guy who nobody had a problem with getting demoted a couple weeks ago and had an ERA touching 6 coming into the game was definitely going to throw a complete game shutout if Rocco wasn't such a fool so Duran wasn't actually going to be used.

    Never change TD.

    1 hour ago, karcherd said:

    I am beyond frustrated with this team and this game encapsulated everything that this organization is doing to not create a winning team.

    They don't develop starting pitching well, SWR, pull him after 53 pitches and one hit because they won't let him face the order a third time.  They are doing the same thing in the minors, they think they are going to change the pitching model for baseball.  How can pitchers be expected to go more than 4 or 5 innings up here if they are not doing it in the minors.

    The AB by Vasquez called for a bunt, but no they think he will get lucky again against Hader and hit a HR again.  Play situational baseball, something this team does not do well at all.

    They want all players to be utility players.  It is great Castro can play multiple positions but he doesn't play them all well and some of that is not getting reps at the positions.  The ball in the 10th was catchable and a player with more reps in the OF probably catches it.  He also threw to the wrong base in the 9th inning that did not hurt the team.  But this is not the first he has made these type of mistakes.  He makes up for some of his mistakes with his athleticism but let's stop treating players like a chessboard.

    The AB by Altuve where he got his bat on the ball in the 9th inning vs.  Castro and Correa looking at called third strikes.  How often does this happen because they want their pitch to drive instead of just getting the bat on the ball.  This is a team wide problem.

    This all starts with the FO and the philosophy they have implemented and it is creating a .500 team over the past 8 years.  But Rocco at some point has to say in this moment this move will give the team a better chance to win even if it does not fit in with the organizational philosophy.  

    When they win, it is usually against lesser teams that they are able to outplay their mistakes.  And once in a while Rocco will go against his spreadsheet but never with any consistency.

    This organization needs to be blown up and figure out what they have in the young players by letting them play.  Then fill holes where needed and not with one year stopgaps.

    Throwing to the right base and the knowledge and capability to do it properly is developed when a kid is 10 - 12 - 16 - 20 …….. certainly shouldn’t be a question mark for someone in their late 20’s making $7M per year in the Show?

    The left fielder knows when a 2B should cover the bag on a steal - where they should throw the ball - etc. If fans know where the proper play should be made the player surely knows….. definitely shouldn’t know.

    If you & I are in our Lazyboy and, I assume, are both screaming at our TV’s because we cannot believe where Castro threw the ball …… that’s 110% on the knucklehead player!!! The Manager/coaching staff can’t hold the player’s hands on every play. I guarantee that Brooks Lee - Vazquez - France - Duran were all wondering what the hell Castro was doing.

    Responsibility to catch the ball and to throw to the right base is on the player. There’s no outfield practice that makes the catch of a ball 7ft in the air at the fence at the end of a sprint any easier…….he makes the play or not. A regular left fielder may have played it better but is that Larnach?……Bader can’t play all 3 OF spots if Buxton is hurt.

    11 hours ago, jdr said:

    I agree but, this to create a narrative around a pitcher. Why is he constantly being pulled in winning situations with pitch counts between 50 - 70?

     

    9 hours ago, Parfigliano said:

    Because Rocco is not good at his job.  Never has been.

    I mean, it's actually impossible to answer the question. Because it's based on a false statement. SWR is not "constantly being pulled in winning situations with pitch counts between 50-70." He's constantly being pulled with pitch counts between 80-100. He's pulled in the 5th a lot because he's incredibly inefficient with his pitches because he can't put hitters away. He's averaging over 17 pitches an inning on the year. 

    Were you guys super upset when they demoted him? Didn't think he deserved that? His ERA touching 6 coming into the game yesterday wasn't a concern to you? Is it possible that he's pulled early because he simply isn't that good of a major league pitcher?

    The only other game this year he's been pulled with fewer than 70 pitches thrown as presented in this question was on 5/7 against Baltimore. The Twins were up 3-1 going into the 5th. SWR got 2 outs to start the inning before giving up a double and back to back singles to make it a 1 run game with the tying run on 3rd and the go ahead run on first and Cedric Mullins coming up. Rocco brought in Coulombe who still had a 0.00 ERA at that point to face the lefty and stop the implosion before Baltimore took the lead. He struck him out.

    The Twins won that game, by the way. In case that matters to you. Baltimore didn't score another run the rest of the game. And those are the only 2 games SWR has been pulled in the situation described in the question.

    And if you're thinking of arguing that Rocco's been doing it to him his whole career, SWR had 3 of 28 starts last year that fit this statement. Was 0 for 0 the year before (although he did throw 97 pitches in his one 4.2 inning appearance that year). And 0 for 1 the year before that. So, he's 5 for 38 on his career. I'd say that's far from "constantly" being pulled with 50-70 pitches thrown.

    10 hours ago, USAFChief said:

    I saw the downvote of this post and knew immediately who it was, before I looked.

    Some folks just refuse to look the truth in the face.

    I have been thinking the same thing as you Chief. Usually a down vote that has me shaking my head because it should be a thumbs up or at worst no reaction. And more often than not no explanation for the thumbs down which even makes it more confusing. 

    35 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    Glad to see that it's still bad bullpen management that costs the Twins games when the offense scores 1 run in 10 innings. Oh, and it was the closer that would've been used anyways that blew that whopping 1 run lead. I know, I know, the guy who nobody had a problem with getting demoted a couple weeks ago and had an ERA touching 6 coming into the game was definitely going to throw a complete game shutout if Rocco wasn't such a fool so Duran wasn't actually going to be used.

    Never change TD.

    I had no problem doing the 5 and fly move with SWR. He was unraveling in the bottom of the 5th and luckily got out of the jam. Runs were an absolute premium yesterday and our bullpen minus Jax was available to pitch. 




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