Twins Video
Box Score: Pirates 6, Twins 2
Matt Shoemaker: 5.1 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 2 K
Twins Home Runs: Nelson Cruz (7)
Pirates Home Runs: Gregory Polanco (3)
Bottom 3 WPA: Kirilloff -.160, Stashak -.149, Cruz, Garver -.106
Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs):
After his worst outing of the season against the A’s, Matt Shoemaker was stellar on Sunday against the Pirates. Despite some unlucky hiccups in the first, Shoemaker gave the Twins a quality outing, surrendering only three hits following the first inning.
Yet Sunday's game haunted the Twins with woes that have been no stranger to the club in the past few weeks. Quiet bats and a shaky bullpen.
https://twitter.com/CoryHepola/status/1386436568445984768
Bloop, There It Is
Looking to rebound from a rocky start in Oakland, Shoemaker used his split-finger fastball and four-seamer to nail the zone. The only problem? Pirate hitters Adam Fraizer, Phillip Evans, and Bryan Reynolds were all able to get wood on the ball, resulting in three hits and a run to kick off the game. Colin Moran followed with a sac-fly to CF to give the Bucs a 2-0 lead.
A 2-0 lead after the top of the first? Sounds like a bad start. Wrong. Shoemaker did an excellent job hitting the corner of the zone and was frankly just unlucky. Evans and Reynolds had exit velocities of 79 MPH and 74 MPH on their bloop hits, proving that Shoemaker was hitting his spots and that baseball is sometimes just a game of luck.
The Twins responded with their own hitting in the bottom of the inning, relying not on bloopers, but quality opposite-field hitting. Luis Arraez continued his rock-solid 2021 campaign by slashing a single to left field to kick off the game. Josh Donaldson followed up by slicing a single to right field on a 1-2 count, pushing Arraez to third.
Byron Buxton followed suit by roping a single to left, scoring Arraez to cut the lead in half. The single bumped Buxton’s slash line to .404/.446/.865, numbers that easily represent Buxton’s best start in his seven-year career.
Bullpen Woes
Despite Shoemaker’s solid start, the Twins bullpen was unable to keep the train on the tracks. After being recalled from the alternate site earlier in the day, RHP Cody Stashak had a rocky outing. Replacing Shoemaker in the sixth, Stashak recorded one out while facing five batters, giving up three runs on three hits.
LHP Caleb Thielbar returned from the COVID IL on Sunday and replaced Stashak in the seventh with runners on the corners. Despite striking out two, Thielbar gave up a single to Adam Fraizer and a double to Bryan Reynolds, bringing in two more runs for Pittsburgh (both credited to Stashak).
Jorge Alcala followed Thielbar, pitching the eighth and ninth innings. After giving up an eighth inning HR to Gregory Polanco, Alcala was perfect, striking out five.
Water is Wet, Bats are Dry
Given the potential of the Twins offense, surpassing six runs in a game doesn’t seem difficult. Yet as we’ve seen, the Twins offense has underperformed consistently and Sunday’s game was no exception.
The entire offense posted a meager six hits on Sunday against a lineup that featured a starter with an ERA of 3.86 who registered under 50 strikes (81 total pitches) in the rubber match. Not great.
And while an eighth inning Nelson Cruz homer (his seventh of the year) and two-hit showing from Luis Arraez demonstrate positives, the Twins will need to find some sort of consistency at the plate if they want to rid their losing ways.
Postgame Interview
Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet
Click here to see the bullpen usage over the past five days (link opens a Google Sheet).








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