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    Brewers 7, Twins 3: Middle Relief Falls Short, Julien Plays First


    Ted Schwerzler

    The Twins traveled to Wisconsin for a quick two-game series with the Milwaukee Brewers. Matching production early, the Twins found themselves with a slight advantage halfway through Tuesday night's game. A bullpen blowup led to a highlight that saw Edouard Julien play first base.

    Image courtesy of © Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    SP: Bailey Ober 5.0 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 3 K
    Home Runs: Christian Vazquez (4)
    Top 3 WPA:  Christian Vazquez .126, Kyle Farmer .116, Bailey Ober .095
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

    chart(1).png.c5893ae1d35e5d7b6e2df6350934c966.png

    You see something new every day during a baseball game, and Jeff Nelson showed us something different in the first inning of Tuesday's Brewers and Twins matchup. After Jorge Polanco foul tipped a third strike into the glove of William Contreras, the Brewers backstop dropped the ball, but it was deemed to have happened on the transfer. That's not a play you ever see, but Rocco Baldelli got an explanation and moved on with the action.

    Bailey Ober has fallen off since the All-Star Break, and he continued a run of seven straight starts allowing a homer. In the first inning, Willy Adames stepped in and took Ober out to left center. After giving up just eight home runs in 82 2/3 innings before the break, he's allowed nine in 32 innings since.

    Christian Vazquez turned 33 on Monday, and while there were no fireworks on the Twins off day, he provided some with a blast scoring Kyle Farmer on a homer to left field. Immediately answering for Minnesota against Wade Miley, it was a new ballgame early.

    Ober largely nibbled in the third inning and struggled to put William Contreras away before nearly walking Carlos Santana. Instead, Jorge Polanco started a double play that Carlos Correa's howitzer attached to his right shoulder finished. Adames had a hit taken away by Kyle Famer, and the Twins could escape a daunting jam.

    The two previous games between Minnesota and Milwaukee this season were decided by two runs apiece, with the Twins walking off the first one. Entering the fourth inning with both teams having a pair of runs on a pair of hits only highlights how close both clubs are.

    Jordan Luplow, in against the lefty starter, kicked off the fourth inning with a double just down the line. After Correa worked a walk, Farmer grabbed his second hit of the game. Lofting a single to left fielder Christian Yelich, Luplow was fine testing the weak arm and came across the plate giving Minnesota their first lead. Despite a tough couple of innings to open up the game, Ober found a new gear and dominated, retiring eight straight Milwaukee hitters. While the Twins didn't crush Miley, they did force Milwaukee to the bullpen after five innings.

    Baldelli answered with Dylan Floro taking over for Ober in the sixth inning. At just 78 pitches, Ober had bounced back from a rough start to the outing. Having retired eight in a row, he rebounded well. Baldelli indicated that limiting innings for him down the stretch will be a thing, and tonight this was the spot. Milwaukee opened the frame with back-to-back singles before Floro got a strikeout. Mark Canha singled to right field, scoring Contreras, and the game was tied. Tyrone Taylor popped a jam-shot single to right, scoring Santana, and Milwaukee had their second lead. A Brice Turang single brought Canha home before Brian Anderson plated Taylor and Turang.

    Floro's sixth inning had entirely gone off the rails. Despite giving up weak contact, he surrendered six singles to Brewers batters. Trailing 7-3, Minnesota needed to find a late-inning comeback. Oliver Ortega took over in the seventh inning and brought the game to a crawl with an inability to find the strike zone. Following his 25th pitch, Ortega winced and was lifted due to injury. Cole Sands inherited a 3-0 count, issuing a walk, but got out of the inning on the next at-bat.

    Edouard Julien pinch hit for Donovan Solano in the top of the eighth inning, and Baldelli kept him in at first base to start the bottom half. With 420 defensive innings at the Major League level, this was the first time one came at first base. The last time Julien was used at first base was back in 2021 at Single-A Fort Myers. Interestingly, the Twins never previously got Julien innings at first base, but this certainly signifies they're open to that idea. Being an option there with Alex Kirilloff in the future opens more positions on the infield for Minnesota's youth.

    Royce Lewis singled to start the ninth inning, but an aggressive turn got him thrown out, retreating after attempting to stretch for a double. Max Kepler then watched a 101-mph fastball from former Twins reliever Trevor Megill for strike three. Vazquez popped out to end it and the end of this one felt like a whimper.

    Take a look at the game through a Brewers lens with a recap from Brewer Fanatic.

    Notes
    With the Brewers starting a lefty in Wade Miley, Matt Wallner was the lone lefty to start for Minnesota on Tuesday. Edouard Julien and Max Kepler found themselves on the bench for game one of the short series.

    Glen Perkins, who was on the broadcast tonight for Minnesota, talked of his struggles against Brewers' Carlos Santana. All of their matchups came when Santana was with the Guardians. Santana owned Perkins to the tune of four homers and a pair of doubles.

    Rocco Baldelli has said Joe Ryan's next start will come with Minnesota, not in a rehab outing for the Saints. The groin is healthy, and it remains to be seen how his effectiveness and ability to keep the ball in the yard respond.

    Perkins noted his first at-bat came against the Brewers. He faced Jeff Suppan and swung once, fouling the ball off. It was his lone swing in a major league game. Later in 2008, he faced Greg Maddux with the Padres.

    What's Next? 
    It's a quick two-game series for the Twins and Brewers. Minnesota will face Milwaukee ace Corbin Burnes Wednesday afternoon before returning home to welcome the Texas Rangers. The following two weeks represent Minnesota's last gauntlet of the season, and how they handle, it will likely determine their 2023 fate.

    Wednesday 8/22 Kenta Maeda vs Corbin Burnes 1:10pm

    Postgame Interviews

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

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    Marek Houston

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    The 22-year-old went 2-for-5 on Friday night, his fourth straight multi-hit game. Heading into the week, he was hitting .246/.328/.404 (.732). Four games later, he is hitting .303/.361/.447 (.808).

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    Rocco never has and never will have a clue on how to handle pitchers. It is sad that Twins fans will have to watch him be manager for many more years.  One of the worse days in history for Twins fans was when Rocco was hired as manager. There were certainly better choices for manager and our front office made the wrong pick.

    53 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    I think that's a pretty accurate description for a number of people. It's fascinating to watch the dynamics of fans who have the luxury of being emotional about/breaking down 1 game, 1 AB, 1 pitch sample sizes vs the team making decisions based off 162 games + postseason.

    Now I'm no Rocco lover. I'm not a hater either. I'm just neutral on him and the FO (I'd fire them all, but am not going to rant and rave about it yet). But I'm really interested in hearing the thoughts of the masses when it comes to Ober and what they'd do with a guy who threw 72.2 innings all of last year and has nearly doubled that already with 6 or 7 starts to go. He's already blown past where I thought they'd let him get to so I'm already intrigued by how they'll handle things. I most definitely am not advocating they shut him down like the Nats did with Strasburg back in the day, but he's in uncharted territory. Despite what many believe, the human body does breakdown when you throw too many baseballs in a set amount of time, and performance will suffer (yes, I know Nolan Ryan did crazy things, save me that speech, please). Just an interesting view into the minds of fans.

    Can you provide some solid evidence for limiting his innings?

    Yeah, I thought not.

     

    You don't want anyone mentioning Nolan Ryan (or literally thousands of others MLB starters) because they blow away the specious logic of today's pitching theories regarding injuries and/or fatigue. 

     

    Let him pitch. 

     

    Rocco pulled Ober after 5 with a 3-2 lead. 

    A move like that is not out of this world out of the ordinary. 

    He has a fresh bullpen and a healthy starter to manage through the rest of the season and playoffs. In my opinion, this is not something to get overly upset about. 

    In the other dugout... Counsell pulled Miley after 5 after 89 pitches. 

    The Big News in this game was Julien playing 1B!!! 

    The World is still spinning this morning. Let's see what today brings. 

     

    40 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    I think that's a pretty accurate description for a number of people. It's fascinating to watch the dynamics of fans who have the luxury of being emotional about/breaking down 1 game, 1 AB, 1 pitch sample sizes vs the team making decisions based off 162 games + postseason.

    Now I'm no Rocco lover. I'm not a hater either. I'm just neutral on him and the FO (I'd fire them all, but am not going to rant and rave about it yet). But I'm really interested in hearing the thoughts of the masses when it comes to Ober and what they'd do with a guy who threw 72.2 innings all of last year and has nearly doubled that already with 6 or 7 starts to go. He's already blown past where I thought they'd let him get to so I'm already intrigued by how they'll handle things. I most definitely am not advocating they shut him down like the Nats did with Strasburg back in the day, but he's in uncharted territory. Despite what many believe, the human body does breakdown when you throw too many baseballs in a set amount of time, and performance will suffer (yes, I know Nolan Ryan did crazy things, save me that speech, please). Just an interesting view into the minds of fans.

    Ober has pitched less than 120 innings this year. Hasn't pitched well in his last 4-5 starts. He's cruising through the last 4 innings, building some much needed confidence, and Rocco thinks this is a good time to pull him...  at 78 pitches? Listen to Ober speak after the game... just like last year these starting pitchers, this years' are beginning to show their frustration with this guy's decisions.  If you want to rest him, than push back or skip a start. Don't pull competitors from the game when they doing their job. 

    Ober does have an injury history... so does every other starter. I would think the goal with him would be 170-180 innings this year. He realistically has 6-7 more starts in the regular season. I just don't understand why you pick that moment to "save" his arm. 

    And to be clear.. this isn't one game where many of us are questioning his decisions. It has been on display for nearly 3 seasons.... and it doesn't end with only the pitching staff. The lack of fundamentals. revolving batting orders when they seem to have turned the corner, batting substations, the Joey Gallo lovefest this year, plate discipline or lack of possibly leading to a team record in strikeouts, sitting players in the final games of a series pretty much giving games away, are all IMO terrible managing decisions. 

    If he thinks this team is playoff ready, he is sadly mistaken. If we were in any other division, we wouldn't even be competing for a wild card spot. His approach and decisions have taken a team that should be 15-20 games over .500 to struggling to maintain that mark. I believe it falls squarely on him...

    Why is it that Rocco Baldelli didn’t get credit for the Bomba Squad in 2019?  “Oh, but the juiced ball. . . .”  Apparently no one else could do it as well as the Twins that year so all of those other managers must suck.  I’m pretty sure that Baldelli knows more than me. 

    Why is it that Rocco Baldelli doesn’t get credit for the starting pitching in 2023?  “Oh but he doesn’t know how to handle a pitching staff. . . .” He’s apparently doing pretty well at it considering how they rank, which must mean that all of the other managers suck.   I am perfectly willing to assume that he knows more than me. 

    I’ve said it before.  Way too much blame (and credit) goes to the manager.  If the team wins, he’s a genius and if the team loses, he’s a bum.  Sometimes we forget that all of the other teams and managers are also trying to win games and that gets in the way of the Twins going 162-0 on the season.  

    They lost last night.  It happens.  Get over it.  It’s a long season. The next day, we get up and we play another baseball game.  It will give everyone another chance to rail on the manager.  

    9 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    Rocco pulled Ober after 5 with a 3-2 lead. 

    A move like that is not out of this world out of the ordinary. 

    He has a fresh bullpen and a healthy starter to manage through the rest of the season and playoffs. In my opinion, this is not something to get overly upset about. 

    In the other dugout... Counsell pulled Miley after 5 after 89 pitches. 

    The Big News in this game was Julien playing 1B!!! 

    The World is still spinning this morning. Let's see what today brings. 

     

    As the spouse of a Brewer fan... this game ended when he pulled Ober. Their BP is superior to ours. We lose 8 out of 10 games if we want to play the BP game with them. in one run games...especially after the 5th. 

    And yes the world is still spinning... very thankful for that. 

    Ober is in new territory of innings pitched, it made total sense to try to limit Ober's innings to keep his arm fresh so we can keep getting good quality innings from him the rest of the way. Instead of trying to squeeze an extra inning from him & having less quality innings from him or or get hurt. The problem is with not having enough quality arms in the pen & how to use them.

    Twins should have kept Julien at  1B all along not trying to make him into something he's not. Hopefully they have woken up & keep him at 1B.

    19 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    Rocco pulled Ober after 5 with a 3-2 lead. 

    A move like that is not out of this world out of the ordinary. 

    As with a lot of sabermetric decisions, this omits the most important fact:  Rocco pulled Ober after 5 with a 3-2 lead AND REPLACED HIM WITH DYLAN FLORO.  Replacing a starter who is performing well with a low pitch count, with a bad reliever who seemingly hasn't had a clean inning since he arrived here, is quite out of the ordinary in my book.  

    Details matter.  

    21 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    Rocco pulled Ober after 5 with a 3-2 lead. 

    A move like that is not out of this world out of the ordinary. 

    He has a fresh bullpen and a healthy starter to manage through the rest of the season and playoffs. In my opinion, this is not something to get overly upset about. 

    In the other dugout... Counsell pulled Miley after 5 after 89 pitches. 

    The Big News in this game was Julien playing 1B!!! 

    The World is still spinning this morning. Let's see what today brings. 

     

    Agreed.  The idea that it was this awful idea to pull Ober is dumb.  The guy has never pitched close to this many innings in his career, and is obviously struggling as of late based on the significant increase in HR given up per innings pitched.  Yet people want to keep sending him out there when we had a pen which should have been able to hold the lead like they're paid to do.  

    If the pen was able to hold the lead would people still be complaining?  Probably not.

    Was nice to see Julien playing 1st, and while I hope we don't have to put him into that 1B/DH category that we seem to have an excessive number of players in - if it keeps his bat in the line up, great!

    14 minutes ago, Rod Carews Birthday said:

    Why is it that Rocco Baldelli didn’t get credit for the Bomba Squad in 2019?  “Oh, but the juiced ball. . . .”  Apparently no one else could do it as well as the Twins that year so all of those other managers must suck.  I’m pretty sure that Baldelli knows more than me. 

    Why is it that Rocco Baldelli doesn’t get credit for the starting pitching in 2023?  “Oh but he doesn’t know how to handle a pitching staff. . . .” He’s apparently doing pretty well at it considering how they rank, which must mean that all of the other managers suck.   I am perfectly willing to assume that he knows more than me. 

    I’ve said it before.  Way too much blame (and credit) goes to the manager.  If the team wins, he’s a genius and if the team loses, he’s a bum.  Sometimes we forget that all of the other teams and managers are also trying to win games and that gets in the way of the Twins going 162-0 on the season.  

    They lost last night.  It happens.  Get over it.  It’s a long season. The next day, we get up and we play another baseball game.  It will give everyone another chance to rail on the manager.  

    Well said - A tiny cynical part of me is glad they extended Rocco just so I can see people groan and complain without having any data to back up their claims (example - he pulls his pitchers too early when our starters lead the entire league in average innings pitched).

     

    1 hour ago, chpettit19 said:

    I get that watching Ober get pulled from that game with 78 pitches is frustrating, but, legitimate question, is there an inning limit total that people around here would put on Ober? For reference, the most innings he'd ever thrown in 1 season before this year was 108.1 in 2021. He threw 106.2 in college in 2014 when he was 18. He's never thrown more than 100 innings in a season in his life outside of those 2 instances. He's at 136.1 so far this year.

    So I'm legitimately curious if there's any limit fans around here would put on him, or would you all just let him throw an unlimited amount of innings?

    Well they pissed away 17/18 of his innings in AAA this year, so there is that. (which puts him at 136 for season)

    After the last two years my plan would have been for 24 or 25 major league starts for the year around 140-150 innings. With the playoffs looking like more of a for sure thing, I would probably give him extra rests between a few starts so he is closer to 23 to 24 starts plus the playoffs.

    I don't see why a 28 year old pitcher shouldn't be able to pitch 180 innings a year. Because the Twins messed up I think they think it is better to limit innings by keeping the starts short then messing up the days of rest routine.

    4 hours ago, Fezig said:

    Everything you said is God's honest truth. Might I add on the offensive side a philosophy of putting the ball in play and not swinging for the fences on every count has worked for over 100 years.

    Simply putting the ball in play was demonstrated with great aplomb by Milwaukee last night. In case 100 year was too much for the boys to fathom.

    36 minutes ago, farmerguychris said:

    Agreed.  The idea that it was this awful idea to pull Ober is dumb.  The guy has never pitched close to this many innings in his career, and is obviously struggling as of late based on the significant increase in HR given up per innings pitched. 

    So why did they even let him go 5 innings?  Wouldn't it have been even smarter to yank him after 4?  

    1 hour ago, DJL44 said:

    The season ends in October. I'd let him rest then. That should be about 8 more starts.

    That's a snarky response but I think way too much emphasis is placed on "innings" and not enough on current physical condition. If he's pitching through fatigue and soreness then he needs rest. If he's feeling good then he should pitch.

    There's some pretty solid data showing that large increases in innings pitched lead to injuries and significant decrease in performance. I don't know the right answer. And I'm not suggesting they shut him down or anything. But pretending that there's no future effect from him throwing 100 more innings this year is ignoring the realities of the human body. To me it's a question of weighing the now vs the future. Whether that's an inning a game here and there vs his playoff performance or his 2023 innings vs his 2024 performance. These are things organizations need to consider so I'm just interested to see what people think.

    1 hour ago, Woof Bronzer said:

    It's not like fans are clamoring for him to have pitched another 12 innings yesterday.  I'm positive his arm wouldn't have fallen off with ONE more inning yesterday.  I don't understand the argument that 5 innings last night falls within the realm of safe, responsible workload but 6 would have crossed the line.  Why not yank him after 4?  After 3?  Wouldn't that be more responsible?  For god's sake, he only pitched 70 innings last year!

    This is going to be a thing in the playoffs, folks.  Due to the terrible Central the Twins are going to have a long time to script out the playoffs.  Get prepared for 5 inning starts out of Gray and Lopez.  After all, the bullpen's gonna be fresh just like it was last night, right?  Listen to Rocco:  the decision to yank Ober had nothing to do with pitch count/innings limits.  It was because Rocco thought turning it over to Dylan Floro gave the team the best chance to win.  That should be the A topic today, not innings limits.

    It's not all about just yesterday. I would've had no problem with him going another inning. But pretending that there's no future effects of him doubling his inning total is simply ignoring the realities of the human body. Did that 1 inning save his career? Of course not. But their plan, believe it or not, isn't just about that 1 inning. I don't know what the right amount of innings for him is, but they've already gone above and beyond what most teams would do. That's not necessarily right or wrong, but it is interesting. To me at least.

    And Rocco stated before that game even started that they were going to start giving Ober extra rest here and there including pulling him earlier in games. So, yeah, listen to Rocco.

    2 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    That's a good question. I think it's pretty self-evident that bringing the IF in is the best way to cut the run off at the plate, but it would be interesting to see how often you get out of that inning without allowing the run after you bring the IF in. But, to be fair, that Turang "blooper" should have been a double play even with the infield in. That ball hit Correa right in the glove. You and I could've caught that ball.

    I have noticed several times this year where the IF is in and they have been able to cut the run off at the plate, but sometimes I am surprised they don't just concede the run by playing back.  It feels like if you bring in a middle reliever, you are acknowledging that you could give up a few runs the next few innings.  If you brought in Sands or a longer reliver, then you are hoping for innings with the potential for 0-4 runs scoring.  But by playing in, they had risk of missing outs and prolonging the inning.

    So why let the inning potentially go long because you can't get the easy outs at first?  This one always seems like a hindsight judgment call, so hard to know.

    But like you said, when I watched the replay and saw the ball go to Correa and the runner almost at 2nd, that really should have been inning over and down by just 1.

    11 hours ago, Baumer67 said:

    Why would you leave Floro on to give up 6 hits and 5 runs, Baldelli gave the game away. You could see it going bad pull him already.

    He did the same thing with JAX  , Jax didn't have his stuff  and Rocco left him in and again cost us a chance to keep the score close ...

    There is a 3 batter minimum  that Rocco seems to ignore  , he just wants 1 inning from a pitcher regardless of the outcome  ....

    1 hour ago, hitterscount said:

    Ober has pitched less than 120 innings this year. Hasn't pitched well in his last 4-5 starts. He's cruising through the last 4 innings, building some much needed confidence, and Rocco thinks this is a good time to pull him...  at 78 pitches? Listen to Ober speak after the game... just like last year these starting pitchers, this years' are beginning to show their frustration with this guy's decisions.  If you want to rest him, than push back or skip a start. Don't pull competitors from the game when they doing their job. 

    Ober does have an injury history... so does every other starter. I would think the goal with him would be 170-180 innings this year. He realistically has 6-7 more starts in the regular season. I just don't understand why you pick that moment to "save" his arm. 

    And to be clear.. this isn't one game where many of us are questioning his decisions. It has been on display for nearly 3 seasons.... and it doesn't end with only the pitching staff. The lack of fundamentals. revolving batting orders when they seem to have turned the corner, batting substations, the Joey Gallo lovefest this year, plate discipline or lack of possibly leading to a team record in strikeouts, sitting players in the final games of a series pretty much giving games away, are all IMO terrible managing decisions. 

    If he thinks this team is playoff ready, he is sadly mistaken. If we were in any other division, we wouldn't even be competing for a wild card spot. His approach and decisions have taken a team that should be 15-20 games over .500 to struggling to maintain that mark. I believe it falls squarely on him...

    Ober has thrown 136.2 innings this year. Those pesky minor league innings count, too.

    I would've been fine letting him go another inning. I haven't made any comments about whether taking Ober out was right or wrong. I was just curious as to how others would handle it. Good rant, though. I hope it helped ease your pain.

    20 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    There's some pretty solid data showing that large increases in innings pitched lead to injuries and significant decrease in performance.

    Leads to higher risk of injuries and decreased performance. Some pitchers who increase their innings get injured. Pitchers who have the same innings count get injured all the time too. Pitching has inherent injury risk.

    This is one of those places where taking a broad trend and applying it to an individual can be problematic. It assumes that all pitchers are equal outside of the innings pitched in games. They all trained the same amount in the offseason, they all had the same routine between starts and they all throw the same pitches with the same mechanics which have the same stresses on the body.

    Motion capture is probably a better indicator of Ober's injury risk. Are his mechanics falling apart? Is his fastball velocity down?

    1 hour ago, USAFChief said:

    Can you provide some solid evidence for limiting his innings?

    Yeah, I thought not.

     

    You don't want anyone mentioning Nolan Ryan (or literally thousands of others MLB starters) because they blow away the specious logic of today's pitching theories regarding injuries and/or fatigue. 

     

    Let him pitch. 

     

    Actually, teams have a ton of data showing evidence for limiting innings. So do places like Sports Info Solutions, Inside Edge, and other baseball data tracking companies. But I do always appreciate your snark.

    Just like mentioning Greg Maddux to suggest soft tossing control artists are clearly going to succeed, or comparing pinch hitting for Jordan Luplow to pinch hitting for Harmon Killebrew, are bad comps, using Nolan Ryan to prove arms can last forever is a bad comp. I'm sorry I'm not sold on Hall of Famers and once in a generation outliers as solid data points for the average player.

    I never said it was right to take him out. I've actually stated multiple times here I'd have been fine letting him go another inning. But let's not pretend there's no future effects when you push the human body well past what it's ever done before. As it turns out, that logic isn't specious, it's accurate.

    17 minutes ago, Craig Arko said:

    I get the feeling it was threads like this that inspired Souhan to write his infamous ‘snooty fan’ column.

    OMG... I just read that article.  Not a big Souhan fan, but boy did he hit that one on the head.

    Seth posted about it a week ago, I am not surprised it did not hit any traction on this website.  Too close to home for some methinks...

    3 minutes ago, DJL44 said:

    Leads to higher risk of injuries and decreased performance. Some pitchers who increase their innings get injured. Pitchers who have the same innings count get injured all the time too. Pitching has inherent injury risk.

    This is one of those places where taking a broad trend and applying it to an individual can be problematic. It assumes that all pitchers are equal outside of the innings pitched in games. They all trained the same amount in the offseason, they all had the same routine between starts and they all throw the same pitches with the same mechanics which have the same stresses on the body.

    Motion capture is probably a better indicator of Ober's injury risk. Are his mechanics falling apart? Is his fastball velocity down?

    Fair. But I wouldn't call a guy who's been able to stay healthy enough to throw 100 innings twice in his life somebody who has a low injury risk to start with. I've said over and over here that I don't know what the right answer is, and I would've been fine with him going another inning. It's the people acting like it was a travesty that he was removed when he was who are acting like there's a simple, obvious right answer. 

    The question is how do you balance future risk vs present performance. I don't know the right answer. But the people acting like there should be no concern paid to the future risk and they should just "let him pitch" have the luxury of acting from a fan perspective as opposed to a team employee perspective. We have these kinds of discussions all the time around here. The team absolutely needs to be concerned about the future of Ober and the rest of the guys they're relying on for future production. Not all fans like that answer. 

    And, yes, there are other data points outside of his inning totals and pitch counts that need to be factored into his injury risk. And the team is tracking those as well. Are those who are so confident that he should've kept going positive that they haven't seen any red flags in those indicators over his last few starts, or they weren't seeing them yesterday? Or is the only possible answer that Rocco is terrible and has no idea what he's doing?

    1 hour ago, TwinsDr2021 said:

    Well they pissed away 17/18 of his innings in AAA this year, so there is that. (which puts him at 136 for season)

    After the last two years my plan would have been for 24 or 25 major league starts for the year around 140-150 innings. With the playoffs looking like more of a for sure thing, I would probably give him extra rests between a few starts so he is closer to 23 to 24 starts plus the playoffs.

    I don't see why a 28 year old pitcher shouldn't be able to pitch 180 innings a year. Because the Twins messed up I think they think it is better to limit innings by keeping the starts short then messing up the days of rest routine.

    Don't disagree that those minor league innings are far less than ideal.

    That is about what my plan would've been as well. I would've found a couple times where they had extra off days to skip his start throughout the year.

    I think there's legitimate reason to worry about a 28 year old who's only been able to throw 100 innings twice in his life being able to throw 180 innings in a year after he threw fewer than 80. I don't know the right answer for how you weigh that extra risk from a 100+ inning increase vs his current performance, but there is absolutely extra risk that I think it'd be poor team management practice for them to ignore. I prefer the plan that would've limited his starts here and there throughout the year to the one that limits his innings in individual starts, but they don't ask me my opinion much these days.

    4 hours ago, AlwaysinModeration said:

    If Correa catches that soft liner with the runner going, that’s a double play and they are out of the inning down 4-3.  That  hurt.

    That missed catch just cost Correa any chance at a gold glove  ....

    Had he made the catch and completed the double play he would have catapulted  to the top of the list for gold glove  ...

    He took his eyes off the ball , with the runner running in front of him , got to follow the ball right into the glove ....

    12 minutes ago, Fire Dan Gladden said:

    OMG... I just read that article.  Not a big Souhan fan, but boy did he hit that one on the head.

    Seth posted about it a week ago, I am not surprised it did not hit any traction on this website.  Too close to home for some methinks...

    Telling fans how to feel is not "hitting it on the head," sorry.  If I told you that you shouldn't follow this team because of past failures I'm guessing you'd take issue with that.  

    4 hours ago, Whitey333 said:

    I believe it is at least 12 games Rocco has thrown away in game by all of a sudden deciding to not be competitive

    With 12 more wins this team is 77- 49 with the best record in the AL. The decision by Rocco didn't work out last night, but a different manager doesn't suddenly turn this team from average to excellent 

    Were there avoidable decisions that led directly to the loss? That is true in every loss.  Every. Single. Time.  What were the reasons that happened?

    Taking out Ober, who probably benefits from a bit less strenuous use?  Injuries tend to happen more when one is fatigued and since he has never sniffed this many innings in a season in his life, I'm going with the over on that one.

    Deciding to use a middle reliever, in the middle innings of a game? Should've brought in Duran.  He could pitch the next four innings for sure.  Then he won't be available tomorrow (or maybe ever if he pitches four innings) when we really need him because dumb dumb Rocco pitched him too much today. 

    Encouraging Correa to miss the DP ball?  I'm sure he definitely was trying to miss.  Former platinum glovers do that all the time just to be fancy. What a bum!

    Making sure to place his infielders in position where they happened to not be able to get to the ball?  Good call.  It enabled the Brewers to get lots of softly hit singles.  Any idiot could predict the future!

    What about having Julien play 1B?  What if he had made an error.  That's probably why they didn't hit anymore.  They were worrying about his fielding.

    I have no problem with questioning the players, the manager, or the organization in general.  However, I think that coming out of a game trying to figure out how to berate the manager is disingenuous at best.  Criticizing is stating your case with evidence and talking about how the outcome might have been different.  Rocco Sucks! Doesn't know how to handle a pitching staff! He's an idiot! Fire the manager! Can't get rid of him soon enough!  These are all over the top hyperbole that destroy your argument before you make it.  All of them imply a level of baseball knowledge that nobody on this page probably has.

     

     

     




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