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    Astros 3, Twins 2: The Season is Over


    Thiéres Rabelo

    In an incredibly well-pitched game, the Twins had hopes until the very last pitch of the game, but they couldn’t spark a rally rally. The 2023 Minnesota Twins season is officially over.

    Image courtesy of Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    Starting Pitcher:
    Joe Ryan, 2.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K (26 pitches, 18 strikes, 69.2%)
    Home Runs: Royce Lewis (4), Edouard Julien (1)
    Bottom 3 WPA: Jorge Polanco (-.240), Caleb Thielbar (-.202), Max Kepler (-.117)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)
    chart.png.6660d0b9ed5a6d1df332a78814f3ce25.png

    Teams exchange solo shots, Ryan gets pulled early
    The Twins were doomed on Tuesday afternoon after a poor first inning that saw Sonny Gray give up four runs, and Minnesota was unable to bounce back. This time, though, things looked completely different in the early going as Joe Ryan breezed through the top of the first on only ten pitches. Most fans and pundits wanted the Twins not to throw a pitch to Yordan Álvarez in this series anymore, but Ryan had no trouble getting him to fly out to end the inning.

    The offense was also in business early. Édouard Julien led off the home first with a long double to center. It was of no use, though, as Jorge Polanco hit a very soft liner directly at Jeremy Peña, who was able to tag out Julien quickly for a double play. Despite such a deflating play, the Twins didn’t come out empty-handed.

    In the following at-bat, Royce Lewis took José Urquidy deep for a line-drive home run to left to make it 1-0 Twins. That was Lewis’ fourth home run this postseason, and he’s now tied with Kirby Puckett for most home runs in a single postseason in franchise history (1991). At four home runs, Lewis is also tied with Greg Gagne for second-most homers all-time in franchise postseason history, behind only Puckett, with five.

    Ryan looked sharp again in the top of the second, recording two quick outs on only seven pitches. He got a first-pitch strike against Michael Brantley next, but on the very next pitch, Brantley tied the game with a solo home run to deep center. Chas McCormick singled next, but Ryan took care of Peña to end the inning. That’s when things took an unexpected turn. In a surprising move, Rocco Baldelli pulled Ryan from the game after two innings and only 26 pitches.

    Houston takes the lead with another home run
    Brock Stewart came in relief of Ryan in the third and took care of business with a 1-2-3 inning on 12 pitches. With the offense going 0-for-7 with a walk after the Lewis home run, the Twins brought lefty Caleb Thielbar in the fourth to face the southpaw trio within the heart of the Astros lineup. He managed to limit Álvarez to a single and struck out Kyle Tucker next. But when righty José Abreu stepped up to the plate, he clobbered an opposite-field two-run shot for his third home run in two days, making it 3-1 Astros.

    Chris Paddack took over to get the final out of the fourth, and he went on to toss a flawless 1-2-3 fifth with ease, with a pair of punch outs. While Urquidy continued to make Twins hitters look silly by retiring seven in a row, Paddack looked just as brilliant in the sixth with another 1-2-3 effort, this time against hitters three to five. That included a strikeout against Álvarez. Fans might allow themselves to feel very excited about Paddack’s presence in the Twins rotation next year.

    Twins get one back, get Urquidy out of the game
    Urquidy made it eight consecutive batters retired when he got Michael A. Taylor to ground out to open the sixth. But his night was about to be over. Julien got his second hit of the night, a solo home run to left, snapping a collective 0-for-14 for the Twins offense since the first inning and cutting Houston’s lead to only one run. Jorge Polanco flied out next, but not before fighting for seven pitches and hitting a bullet (100.7 mph) to deep center.

    Dusty Baker brought in Hector Neris to try to get the inning’s final out, but Lewis worked a six-pitch walk to keep the Twins rally going. Max Kepler came to the plate representing the go-ahead run, and he got ahead of Neris in the count, 2-0. But the Astros reliever settled down and, with a big help from home plate umpire Jansen Visconti, got Kepler to “strike out”, ending the inning.

    It’s all about the bullpens, and the Astros hold on
    Griffin Jax came in to pitch the seventh, and he retired the side, making it ten consecutive Houston batters retired in a row. Had the offense been able to make some noise in the home half, the Twins could get some momentum going. But Neris did a tremendous job tossing a 1-2-3 inning. Then, Jhoan Durán was brought in for the eighth, and he also kept the Twins’ chances alive with a scoreless frame, making it 13 consecutive Astros retired.

    Target Field got loud in the bottom of the eighth when Byron Buxton walked up to the on-deck circle. Donovan Solano struck out to open the inning, and Buxton had the chance to tie the game next. His at-bat, however, was short-lived. He took the first two pitches for an even count but swung on the third one to pop out to shallow right. Julien struck out next to end the inning, making it seven consecutive Twins batters retired.

    With the Twins season on the line, Durán needed to put up another zero in the top of the ninth. He handed Álvarez his second strikeout of the night on three pitches, then got Tucker to ground out, taking it to the bag himself. After an Abreu single, Brantley jumped on the first pitch for an easy lineout to center.

    It was up to Polanco, Lewis, and Kepler against former Twin Ryan Pressly to save Minnesota’s season in the bottom of the ninth. Each of them worked full counts against Pressly, but he didn’t crack, and all three ended up being struck out.

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

      SAT SUN MON TUE WED TOT
    Maeda 43 0 0 25 0 68
    Paddack 19 0 0 0 29 48
    Ober 0 0 0 38 0 38
    Thielbar 18 0 0 0 17 35
    Stewart 0 22 0 0 12 34
    Durán 0 7 0 0 23 30
    Pagán 14 0 0 14 0 28
    Jax 0 0 0 9 18 27
    Varland 0 0 0 0 0 0
     

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    2 hours ago, specialiststeve said:

    Was at the game... Ryan had very good stuff . Thought maybe he was hurt. He should have been left in .... 

    Led eventually to Thielbar coming in and having Abreau hit the home run While Paddock was warmed up and ready to go. CAN'T HAPPEN!! 

    Baldelli's mismanagement of the pitching staff over the rear likely cost us minimum of 5 games and likely closer to 10.... 

    This one might have cost us a chance to go to game 5. 

    Argh!! 

     

    Ar

    The 20/20 hindsight is strong with this one.

    Watching the Atlanta Philadelphia game, and the announcer just stated that Atlanta’s hitters were the second highest strikeout team in the majors last year. This year they struck out fourth least in major league baseball. It would be interesting to see how they turned that around. Probably not just one thing, and I don’t know if it’s stemmed from an overall approach by their batting coaches, but maybe the Twins could effect the same change. I don’t think they’re gonna be able to get much better until they lower their strikeout rate.

    5 hours ago, specialiststeve said:

    Was at the game... Ryan had very good stuff . Thought maybe he was hurt. He should have been left in .... 

    Led eventually to Thielbar coming in and having Abreau hit the home run While Paddock was warmed up and ready to go. CAN'T HAPPEN!! 

    Baldelli's mismanagement of the pitching staff over the rear likely cost us minimum of 5 games and likely closer to 10.... 

    This one might have cost us a chance to go to game 5. 

    Argh!! 

     

    Ar

    It was 1-1 when Ryan was lifted in 3rd.  The game finished 3-2.  If the Twins had lost this game 8-6 and the bullpen got rocked you might have an argument, but the entire pen giving up 2 runs over 7 innings and losing because the offense couldn't muster more than 2 hits over the rest of the ballgame makes your point moot.

    3 hours ago, Sutter50 said:

    The 20/20 hindsight is strong with this one.

    Actually in the moment ... at the game when he allowed him to pitch to him I was cussing knowing.. and have NO idea how everyone with any baseball acumen doesn't realize that as hot as Abreau was/is you could not allow Thielbar to pitch to him. The matchup was TERRIBLE! So no.. it wasn't hindsight.. it was common sense. 

    50 minutes ago, SwainZag said:

    It was 1-1 when Ryan was lifted in 3rd.  The game finished 3-2.  If the Twins had lost this game 8-6 and the bullpen got rocked you might have an argument, but the entire pen giving up 2 runs over 7 innings and losing because the offense couldn't muTakster more than 2 hits over the rest of the ballgame makes your point moot.

    Partially correct... but taking out Ryan when throwing really well compounded by the bonehead move of leaving Thielbar in to pitch to Abreau.. changed the tone of the game...that is non debatable for those at the game. 

    Correct is that we reverted back to the 1st half of the season trying to hit everything out of the park instead of trying to get hits and putting pressure on the pitching and defense of the other team.. getting the same results as we did the first half of the season... poor. 

    3 minutes ago, specialiststeve said:

    Partially correct... but taking out Ryan when throwing really well compounded by the bonehead move of leaving Thielbar in to pitch to Abreau.. changed the tone of the game...that is non debatable for those at the game. 

    Correct is that we reverted back to the 1st half of the season trying to hit everything out of the park instead of trying to get hits and putting pressure on the pitching and defense of the other team.. getting the same results as we did the first half of the season... poor. 

    We have no idea what the plan for Ryan was.  It could have been once through the lineup all along.  Abreu was the 3rd batter Thielbar faced, he was facing him no matter what when he was brought into the game.  Thielbar was brought in to face Alvarez, Tucker, Abreu and Brantley.  3 lefties and a righty.  Unfortunately Abreu beat him.  




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