Twins Video
Bullpen Blowout
Yep, that was a spectacular implosion from the Twins relief unit in front of the home crowd. Ryan Pressly, Craig Breslow, Matt Belisle and one-day call-up Drew Rucinski combined to remarkably allow 14 runs – all earned – on 13 hits and three walks while recording six outs. It came one day after a costly blown save from Brandon Kintzler.
Pressly, initially tabbed as the club's top setup man out of spring training, opened the floodgates by entering in the eighth inning, up 8-2, and allowing five of six batters to reach. He's been a perplexing case this season.
His elite velocity has been giving batters fits, as the righty owns a 31.8 percent K-rate that towers over his 18.3 percent career mark. At times he looks completely unhittable, including the stretch leading up to Monday's disaster. Over his previous five appearances, he allowed two knocks over 6 1/3 innings with 12(!) strikeouts. But on numerous occasions this season he has completely unraveled, and the latest is tough to forgive.
I think Pressly has at least one option left, and perhaps a demotion or DL stint is in order. But at least there is enough there to be worth keeping around. I'm not sure I can say the same for Belisle.
There have been no redeeming qualities in the veteran's performance. He was a contact-prone pitcher who relied on pinpoint command to get by, and now that's gone amiss. Through two months he has issued 13 walks, putting him on pace to more than double his career high as a reliever. In fact, his 15.5 percent BB rate ranks as one of the highest in the league.
Belisle was either hurting or lacking Paul Molitor's trust over the two-week stretch between May 12th and 26th, during which he made only one appearance. In three outings since re-entering the fold, he has allowed two homers.
It's time to move on, but to what?
Searching For Relief
They've made many good decisions since taking over, but the biggest blunder committed by Derek Falvey and Thad Levine as heads of the front office was their approach with the bullpen. Now, the team is hurting for it.
Minnesota's sole major-league signing to address the unit, Belisle has ruled himself out as a reliable option in the late innings. Now, the Twins need to find a superior option to replace him. While they have some candidates in the minors worth trying out, there's no one that can be thrown straight into a setup role with any kind of expectation.
For a more substantive fix, Falvey and Levine must look to the trade market, meaning they'll need to pay in talent rather than money. One wonders how quickly a move could come given the increasingly dire state of affairs.
On one hand, it's tougher to find sellers this early with fewer teams feeling out of contention. On the other hand, if you're going to give up a prospect for an impending free agent, you might as well maximize the return.
With Nick Burdi gone for the year, JT Chargois stuck in injury limbo, and Glen Perkins a poor bet to return and make an impact, the Twins can't afford to count on internal reinforcements to bail out this battered bullpen. They'll need to look outside.
Santana's Stolen Spotlight
The painful ending of Monday's game took away the headline from Ervin Santana, who should have cruised to his eighth victory by holding a potent Astros offense to two runs over seven innings (one of those runs owed to a head-scratching defensive gaffe by Eddie Rosario).
Dating back to the start of last year, Santana has a 2.90 ERA over 258 1/3 innings. He continues to defy luck on batted balls in astonishing fashion.
From Batting Cleanup to Clean Out Your Stuff
Eleven days ago, Kennys Vargas enjoyed perhaps his biggest moment in a Twins uniform, clutching victory from the jaws of defeat with a game-tying two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth against Kansas City. He followed by batting .429 over six games, lifting his OPS to .837 on the season. On Sunday, he was filling Miguel Sano's customary spot in the starting lineup, sandwiched between Joe Mauer and Max Kepler.
Then, he went 0-for-8 in a 15-inning affair, and found himself optioned to the minors following the game. Life comes at you fast, huh?
It's an unfortunate break for Vargas, the victim of circumstance as the Twins needed extra arms having gone through nine in the game. But his perceived expendability speaks to the thin margin for error his profile entails.
Vargas offers minimal defensive value and doesn't run well, so he needs to be carried by his power and patience combo. The former has been on display but he has fallen back into an old habit of chasing too often outside the zone, resulting in just three walks in 93 plate appearances. While the demotion surely had more to do with the roster crunch than his performance, the Twins are surely looking for Vargas to demonstrate better strike zone control in Rochester.
More May Magic For Mauer
The month of May has almost always treated Joe Mauer well, most notably in his MVP 2009 season when he put up a ridiculous .414/.500/.838 line with 11 homers. Now, he's wrapping up another great one: with June two days away, Mauer's line for the month sits at .351/.451/.545. He has gone hitless in a start only once since the end of April.
If he finishes strong in the next couple of days, Mauer could complete a month with a four-digit OPS for the first time since 2013, when he put up a 1.026 mark in – you guessed it – May. His strong showing over the past four weeks comes on the heels of a terrible April, and carries several indicators that the first baseman is on top of his game. He's back to drawing walks (14.3 percent BB rate) and spraying liners to all fields.
Say what you will about Mauer, but there's no denying this: the lineup is far more dangerous when he's going good. Lately he's looked like the vintage version and while time has told us that can be fleeting, I'll enjoy it as long as it lasts.







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