Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins News & Analysis

    Guardians 5, Twins 2 (F/10): Gray's Gem Goes to Waste in Extras


    Thiéres Rabelo

    Sonny Gray looked like a Cy Young Award frontrunner, and the Twins were one out away from winning the game and taking one of the most important series of the season. But it’s 2023, after all, and the Guardians rallied to steal the game in extras.

    Image courtesy of Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    Starting Pitcher:
    Sonny Gray, 7.0 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 5 K (81 pitches, 56 strikes, 69.1%)
    Home Runs: none
    Bottom 3 WPA: Kody Funderburk (-.459), Jhoan Duran (-.207), Carlos Correa  (-.147)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)
    chart.png.b1e77fe2aea58d4358e13dd2f14b198e.png

    Gray and Bibee dominate their opposing lineups early
    Neither offense was able to accomplish much during the first portion of this game, with both lineups combining for only two hits during the three opening innings. Both Sonny Gray and rookie right-hander Tanner Bibee looked dialed in right out of the gate, and this game seemed destined to be a low-scoring affair.

    Gray, in fact, surrendered a leadoff double to Steven Kwan on the game’s second pitch, but not only did he retire the side to finish the inning, he also actually retired 13 consecutive batters. He needed only 43 pitches to complete four innings of scoreless ball while striking out four. Not only was Gray brilliant to start this game, but he also had some stellar defense behind him, with Carlos Correa making a pair of great stops at short and Max Kepler making a beautiful sliding catch in the third:

    Bibee was just as brilliant, no-hitting the Twins for two innings and piling up five strikeouts through three. But his second time through the Twins lineup was anything but pleasant. Jorge Polanco jumped on the very first pitch of the fourth for a leadoff double, and Correa, Kepler, and Royce Lewis, despite not reaching or moving up Polanco, managed to drive Bibee’s pitch count up. It took the Cleveland righty 21 pitches to retire the trio.

    Twins take advantage of their first big opportunity
    The quality of the at-bats didn’t change for Minnesota in the fifth, and the Twins created their first big offensive moment of the game. Matt Wallner drew a four-pitch walk to lead off the inning, and after Ryan Jeffers struck out on a seven-pitch at-bat, Donovan Solano singled to left on the first pitch he saw.

    Bibee struck out Jordan Luplow next, but not before throwing six pitches. Then, with Édouard Julien at the plate, he struggled with his command once more, giving up a bases-loading walk to the Twins rookie. That brought Polanco to the plate, and he lined a short single to center to drive in Wallner and Solano.

    Gray departs earlier than expected
    After throwing only seven pitches to get through the sixth, Gray’s pitch count was merely at 62. He looked poised to go deeper in this game than he’s gone in any other start this season, perhaps even shooting for his first complete game since 2015. But oddly enough, he struggled a bit during the seventh, and that ended up being his final inning of the game.

    His command seemed a little off to begin the seventh, causing him to give up a leadoff walk to Kole Calhoun – his first and only walk of the afternoon. He took some time to apparently remove one of his cleats, and when Ramón Laureano stepped up to the plate next, Gray's command looked even worse. He nearly plunked Laureano in the helmet and threw a wild (I mean wild!) pitch, allowing Calhoun to steal second.

    Fortunately, Gray was able to settle in and retire the next three batters to finish the seventh, but he was promptly removed from the game after that, even though his pitch count was still at only 81. Gray was able to deliver another excellent start, even though it was apparently cut short. This is the first time he has thrown seven innings or more in back-to-back starts since July 12, 2019, and his season ERA is now down to 2.94. It is shocking that ESPN currently doesn’t include him on their “Cy Young Predictor” top 10 rankings.

    Bullpen gives up the lead, game goes to extras
    Things did not look promising when the bullpen took over in the eighth. Griffin Jax gave up a leadoff double to Gabriel Arias, and despite retiring the next two batters, he was replaced by Caleb Thielbar before he could get the final out. With an inherited runner on third, Thielbar gave up a single to Kwan, and Cleveland got on the board. Then, when José Ramírez drew a walk, things got really scary, but Caleb managed to induce the forceout to end the threat.

    Jhoan Durán came in to get the save, but things didn’t go smoothly for him either. After a quick first out, the Twins’ star closer gave up a walk and a single. Both runners moved up on a groundout by Arias, but Durán was still one out away from ending the game. With Bo Naylor at the plate, Durán struggled mightly and needing only one strike to finish Naylor off, he threw a wild pitch that went behind him, allowing Andrés Giménez to score the tying run.

    Cleveland rally is complete in the 10th
    With the game on the line, Emilio Pagan and his 10.50 ERA in high leverage took the mound to pitch the top of the 10th. But despite his poor recent performances in high leverage, he had no trouble getting two outs on seven pitches. Before he could record the final out, though, an intentional walk was given to Ramírez, and Pagán was pulled, with Kody Funderburk being brought in to try to end the inning.

    But the plan went horribly wrong. The rookie was all over the place, throwing three balls nowhere near the strike zone. The only pitch he threw for a strike was obliterated by Calhoun for a soul-crushing three-run home run. The offense went down in order in the bottom of the 10th, and the Guardians’ season survives.

    Postgame interview

    What’s Next?
    The Twins have a day off on Thursday before they kick off a three-game set against the Rangers in Arlington over the weekend. Game one of the series is scheduled for Friday at 7:05 pm CDT, and Joe Ryan (9-8, 4.33 ERA) takes the mound for Minnesota, making his second start since returning from the Injured List. Max Scherzer (12-5, 3.71 ERA) is expected to start the game for Texas.

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

      SAT SUN MON TUE WED TOT
    Durán 12 9 0 0 20 41
    Pagán 14 11 0 14 0 39
    Thielbar 10 11 0 0 16 37
    Jax 28 0 0 0 8 36
    Funderburk 0 0 28 0 8 36
    Floro 12 19 0 0 0 31
    Sands 0 0 0 24 0 24
    Winder 0 0 24 0 0 24

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Marek Houston

    Cedar Rapids Kernels - A+, SS
    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).

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    5 hours ago, UK Twin said:

    TBH the title of this could be "Rocco Baldelli beats the Twins, 5-2" because he pretty much single handedly handed this game to Cleveland with some of the most inept game management I've ever seen. Sonny Gray should have pitched the 8th inning but I could at least see why he went to the bullpen. But Jax shouldn't have been taken out for Thielbar - Kwan hits righties and lefties pretty much equally well. But Thielbar managed to limit the damage to one run and OK, we're still in front. 

    The 9th inning is the only reason why Baldelli doesn't get ALL the blame - Duran deserves some with a simply wretched wild pitch with 2 strikes on the batter with 2 out. I think Naylor reaches even if the swinging strike had been spotted so the run would have scored anyway.

     

    And so to extras. Pagan comes in and does a solid job getting 2 outs without the ghost runner scoring. Naturally Ramirez is walked with first base open - no issue with that, obvious move. But what happened next had me shaking my head in disbelief. Not learning his lesson from the 8th inning, Baldelli is determined to have a lefty v lefty matchup. So much so he calls for Funderburk, a lefty who has only thrown a handful of pitches at MLB level. What happened next was inevitable. You cannot call for such an inexperienced rookie for a situation like that in any situation. You've got to trust your veteran to get the job done, even if it is Pagan. Pagan was actually in a nice groove, his fastball had good life on it. Trust him to do the job. Very unfair to expect Funderburk to do the job in that situation. This is Rocco's biggest flaw - trying so desperately hard to get, statistically, the ideal match up. He was so blinded by that today it cost us the game and gives Cleveland a huge boost. Let's just hope the 5 game lead doesn't get eroded over the next month. 

    If Baldelli had left Pagan in the game and the same result happened, you would be complaining that Baldelli never should have left Pagan in the game, especially with a left hander ready in the bullpen.  20/20 hindsight is pretty accurate, ain't it?

    I've defended Rocco more this year than in the past couple of years, but pulling Gray in a game where he's dealing, and has only thrown 85 pitches, is meant to do what? Piss Gray off? I'm sure that was achieved. 

    I wonder if the front office has the message yet that Gallo is of little use. Rocco certainly is having a hard time finding a use for him. He is pinch hit for by a right handed hitter that doesn’t hit right handed well. Baldelli probably assessed that Luplow had a better chance than Gallo in that spot. It is hard to disagree.

    If Baldelli doesn’t trust Gallo to hit in that spot where would he use him. This isn’t the first time that he pinch hit for Gallo reverse platoon though I think the other times it was Solano batting. Hopefully using Luplow there sent the message that he needs a better option. Choosing between Gallo and Luplow there is a no win situation.

    His options in the pen have been thin also. Funderburk was put in a high leverage situation and couldn’t command the ball today. I think he will better the next time but the Twins do need to find out if Funderburk is somebody that can be trusted in the playoffs. Brock Stewart was also used late game early in his tenure (3rd game?) and I think walked three White Sox. He settled down more after that,

     

    6 hours ago, Hubie29 said:

    To all the baseball doctors out there.  What is wrong with me? 62 y/o male. Grew up with Halsey Hall, and of course the best of all time Herb Carneal. I was ecstatic when the Twins won and it took me hours to get over a loss.  It was like this up until about 3 years ago. Slowly but surely, I am losing interest and affection for my partner, the Twins. I don't get excited with a win anymore, and don't really care if they lose.  Playoffs were the ultimate reward, couldn't get any better than that.  We have almost clinched the division by default this year, and I am not even excited about it.  Lost today, by typical means, and it doesn't bother me at all. Any other old timers have this disease? Have you gotten treated for it? Is there a cure? 

    Hubie, "

    "Love is not love 
    Which alters when it alteration finds, 
    Or bends with the remover to remove. 
    O no! it is an ever-fixed mark 
    That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
    ...Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, 
    But bears it out even to the edge of doom." 
                                                                              W.S.
     

    i don't claim to know the rules, but if they ask the 3rd base umpire, it was clear Naylor swung and did not get to first, (because of the umps).  I don't know how an inadvertent play stop is ruled, but Rocco should have had Jeffers throw to first and then ask the 3rd base umpire if he swung (he clearly did).  Now this probably gets both managers appealing the play and the ruling would be interesting.  Maybe the Twins get a do over be cause of inadvertent umpire error.  

    Maybe someone who knows better than me can weigh in. 

    7 hours ago, rickyriolo said:

    Cleveland may well win the division as the Twins continue to give away ball games. We need a closer now as Duran has lost it

    Duran is that closer. Today he didn't do his job, and unfortunately a closer not doing his job is often the biggest contributor to losing a game. Given a huge opportunity, Jhoan blinked. But that's our horse, and we ride him as long as he stays healthy. Hopefully he figures it out mechanically...and emotionally.

    5 hours ago, beckmt said:

    i don't claim to know the rules, but if they ask the 3rd base umpire, it was clear Naylor swung and did not get to first, (because of the umps).  I don't know how an inadvertent play stop is ruled, but Rocco should have had Jeffers throw to first and then ask the 3rd base umpire if he swung (he clearly did).  Now this probably gets both managers appealing the play and the ruling would be interesting.  Maybe the Twins get a do over be cause of inadvertent umpire error.  

    Maybe someone who knows better than me can weigh in. 

    Here is what I believe is the applicable rule. Good luck sorting out what the umps say what would have happened since the check swing wasn't initially questioned and the play naturally stopped. 

    8.02 Appeal of Umpire Decisions

    (a) Any umpire’s decision which involves judgment, such as, but

    not limited to, whether a batted ball is fair or foul, whether a

    pitch is a strike or a ball, or whether a runner is safe or out, is

    final. No player, manager, coach or substitute shall object to

    any such judgment decisions.

    Rule 8.02(a) Comment: Players leaving their position in the

    field or on base, or managers or coaches leaving the bench or

    coaches box, to argue on BALLS AND STRIKES will not be

    permitted. They should be warned if they start for the plate to

    protest the call. If they continue, they will be ejected from the

    game.

    (b) If there is reasonable doubt that any umpire’s decision may be

    in conflict with the rules, the manager may appeal the decision

    and ask that a correct ruling be made. Such appeal shall be

    made only to the umpire who made the protested decision.

    (c) If a decision is appealed, the umpire making the decision may

    ask another umpire for information before making a final deci-

    sion. No umpire shall criticize, seek to reverse or interfere

    with another umpire’s decision unless asked to do so by the

    umpire making it. If the umpires consult after a play and

    change a call that had been made, then they have the authority

    to take all steps that they may deem necessary, in their discretion, to eliminate the results and consequences of the earlier

    call that they are reversing, including placing runners where

    they think those runners would have been after the play, had

    the ultimate call been made as the initial call, disregarding

    interference or obstruction that may have occurred on the play;

    failures of runners to tag up based upon the initial call on the

    field; runners passing other runners or missing bases; etc., all

    in the discretion of the umpires. No player, manager or coach

    shall be permitted to argue the exercise of the umpires’ discretion in resolving the play and any person so arguing shall be

    subject to ejection. Notwithstanding the foregoing, correction

    of a missed ball-strike count shall not be permitted after a pitch

    is thrown to a subsequent batter, or in the case of the final bat-

    ter of an inning or game, after all infielders of the defensive

    team leave fair territory.

    Rule 8.02(c) Comment: A manager is permitted to ask the

    umpires for an explanation of the play and how the umpires

    have exercised their discretion to eliminate the results and con-

    sequences of the earlier call that the umpires are reversing.

    Once the umpires explain the result of the play, however, no

    one is permitted to argue that the umpires should have exercised their discretion in a different manner.

    The manager or the catcher may request the plate umpire to ask

    his partner for help on a half swing when the plate umpire calls

    the pitch a ball, but not when the pitch is called a strike. The

    manager may not complain that the umpire made an improper

    call, but only that he did not ask his partner for help. Field

    umpires must be alerted to the request from the plate umpire

    and quickly respond. Managers may not protest the call of a

    ball or strike on the pretense they are asking for information

    about a half swing.

    Appeals on a half swing may be made only on the call of ball

    and when asked to appeal, the home plate umpire must refer to

    a base umpire for his judgment on the half swing. Should the

    base umpire call the pitch a strike, the strike call shall prevail.

    Appeals on a half swing must be made before the next pitch, or

    any play or attempted play. If the half swing occurs during a

    play which ends a half-inning, the appeal must be made before

    all infielders of the defensive team leave fair territory.

    Baserunners must be alert to the possibility that the base

    umpire on appeal from the plate umpire may reverse the call of

    a ball to the call of a strike, in which event the runner is in

    jeopardy of being out by the catcher’s throw. Also, a catcher

    must be alert in a base stealing situation if a ball call is

    reversed to a strike by the base umpire upon appeal from the

    plate umpire.

    The ball is in play on appeal on a half swing.

    On a half swing, if the manager comes out to argue with first or

    third base umpire and if after being warned he persists in arguing,

    he can be ejected as he is now arguing over a called ball or strike.

    we can all justifiably moan about the bullpen in that game, but on the other side of the coin we only managed 4 hits. Not going to win many games with an offense like that. And oh yeah, Correa hit into another double play! At least he's leading the league in one category this year. 

    Mr. Baldelli, what a manager. He insists on the Jax - Duran combo and consistently we end with blown games that waste tremendous pitching. We will continue to be limited with the team's potential as long as this computer whiz guy is leading the club in the dugout. 

    Twins Geezer..........out!

    Go Twins!

    12 hours ago, Oldtimer said:

    Yes...I'm with you.

    I keep wishing I could quit caring, but when Carlos Correa swings and misses on a pitch 3 feet outside, I still scream, "Why do you swing at that"?  And then he looks at a called third strike right down the middle that Roy Smalley doesn't even bother the tell us, "He doesn't miss that very often", causes double the frustration.   Day game yesterday, still working so I had to miss game, and first thing I checked was the score and my heart sank when I read they lost.  Herb Carneal, Halsey Hall, (wasn't the third guy Ray Scott?) in the front seat of a Nash Rambler in the early 60s and I'm still cursed with a passion for the Twins - has lead to a most unsatisfying year, but still hoping.

     

    NO way in the world Gray comes back next year....He cant get away from this manager fast enough.......should have traded him at all star break for some young lottery tickets. Twins are NOT going anywhere in the playoffs and Grays gone 100% for sure.  He's missed out on about 10 wins in his time here with Baldellis game plans and our failures in the pen.  

    38 minutes ago, beterday said:

    I keep wishing I could quit caring, but when Carlos Correa swings and misses on a pitch 3 feet outside, I still scream, "Why do you swing at that"?  And then he looks at a called third strike right down the middle that Roy Smalley doesn't even bother the tell us, "He doesn't miss that very often", causes double the frustration.   Day game yesterday, still working so I had to miss game, and first thing I checked was the score and my heart sank when I read they lost.  Herb Carneal, Halsey Hall, (wasn't the third guy Ray Scott?) in the front seat of a Nash Rambler in the early 60s and I'm still cursed with a passion for the Twins - has lead to a most unsatisfying year, but still hoping.

     

    You are correct, it was Ray Scott. He was also excellent, but I only mentioned Halsey and Herb. Maybe it's nostalgia I long for, but this era and new wave decisions made from technological data drives me crazy. And a manager who has no clue is the nail in the coffin. I hope I can get over this 3 year sickness, cuz baseball is still the greatest game ever! (Coached our Jr. Legion team to the state tournament in Granite Falls this year. Nothing better than amateur baseball.)

    We only got 4 hits...that's not gonna cut it. There's just no consistency from game to game, and I believe the constant lineup changes affect that. I don't agree with that and never will. Gray certainly deserved better, but he's kind of had bad luck that way all season. Yes, this bullpen is really hurting us right now...every single one of them. I also don't like throwing Funderburk into that situation. There's still time for this team to blow their lead. I don't expect it, but it's happened before. This road trip is crucial! 

    Next 6 games they can't play dumb sloppy baseball like the last 2 games. Why Correa thought it was a good idea to let a pop up hit the ground was dumb. Why would you want to put the leading base stealer on. Duran throwing a pitch behind the batter to the backstop was dumb. I don't think anyone in the ballpark knew what happened or how to rule on it. MAT poor play turning a single into a double should of never happened. Rocco pulling Pagan for Funderburk was a dumb move. Its time for him to take some of the blame for the team's up and down play. This division is still not a sure thing. They could go 0-6 easily against Texas and Cleveland. Remember there is some bad blood with Texas. Hitters being hit by pitches,both benches getting warnings.

    11 hours ago, Aerodeliria said:

    I've defended Rocco more this year than in the past couple of years, but pulling Gray in a game where he's dealing, and has only thrown 85 pitches, is meant to do what? Piss Gray off? I'm sure that was achieved. 

    I get that people are now conditioned to think only about pitch count, but Gray hardly had a great 7th inning. he got through it, but walked the leadoff man, nearly beaned a guy, hucked a seriously wild pitch, and couldn't figure out what to do with the rock in his shoe until the trainer told him to take it out. 

    Gray got through 7, which was great. It should have been enough. the bullpen blew it when they only needed to get 2 innings. A rested Duran couldn't close the game, which really sucks...but on what planet is that Rocco's fault? He's the best reliever we have, has been one of the best in baseball until recently, has ridiculous, electric stuff...and couldn't close the game.

    I'm also really weary of the "Sonny Gray's mad!" nonsense and how we've guaranteed he's gone after this season because of how we've supposedly mismanaged him and treated him poorly and angered him by taking him out of games before he wanted to go, blah blah blah. Go back and take a look at Sonny Gray's career: he hasn't thrown 200 innings since he was 25. He hasn't been a guy who goes deep into games, and has been prone to the later inning blow-up once hitters have gotten dialed in against him. But despite all the complaints people are making about how he's being mistreated...he's having one of the best season of his career. He's on pace to throw more innings than in any season since he was 25. he's leading the league in ERA, ERA+, and FIP. He's never going to want to come out of a game: his arm could get ripped off by a combine harvester and he'd be all "give me a second with this staple gun and I can pitch", so you can't take his opinion at face value. They've handled him very well this season: he's on pace to hit 30+ starts, clear 175 IP (likely surpassing anything he's done since he was 25), has been effective and consistent, and is entering September healthy. If he leaves in the off-season it's because someone makes him a 4-5 year offer at $18-20M+ AAV, not because they've "pissed him off". (and if he or anyone else thinks that his next club is going to handle him much differently...dream on)

    It's a disappointing loss. The offense was poor again and really only Polanco and Solano had good days out there. (Wallner was ok) Jeffers was brutal (and has really cooled off over the last 2 weeks), but Kepler, Correa, Julien, and Lewis didn't do anything either. After a really nice run, the bats have gone quiet at the worst possible time. They need to pick it back up.

     




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...