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    Make it Official! Twins 3, Dodgers 2: Tacos for Julien, All Clear for Okert


    Ted Schwerzler

    Looking to avoid a sweep against the best team in baseball, the Twins sent Chris Paddack to the mound. After two very quiet nights, the bright sunshine of an afternoon contest woke up the bats. After a couple of big hits, the pitching continued to be nails and Minnesota heads out on the road with a momentum-shifting win in hand.

    Image courtesy of © Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    SP: Chris Paddack 4.2 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 5 K (86 pitches 55 strikes 10 whiffs)
    Home Runs: Edouard Julien 2(3)
    Top 3 WPA: Edouard Julien (.258), Steven Okert (.162), Griffin Jax (.120)

    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

    chart.png.939dcc99922d97e175fffe6da82aefd1.png

    Walks Will Haunt
    Chris Paddack took the ball today for the Twins and was tasked with getting through the monster that is this Los Angeles Dodgers lineup. Mookie Betts welcomed him to the game with a second-pitch single, and Paddack responded by walking Shohei Ohtani on four straight.

    With runners on first and second, Teoscar Hernández stepped in and put a ball in play at just 67.4 mph. With Carlos Santana playing well off the line, though, the dribbler went into right field for a double and allowed Betts to race home, scoring the game’s first run. Paddack was able to bear down and get out of the inning on just 17 pitches, but: damage done.

    It appears that the Twins wanted to make up for lost time as they donned the alternate “Twin Cities” uniforms for the second straight day. After being without them for the first eight games due to missing pants, the crisis has officially been averted.

    Julien Wants Tacos
    The Twins lineup has looked lost for most of their first nine games this season. Edouard Julien has been among the culprits, and with a player that has shown such a refined approach, he also seems to deviate from it a significant amount. Stepping in against the Dodgers Bobby Miller this afternoon, the second baseman put in an order for tacos.

    Lifting a ball the opposite way over the left field wall, Minnesota had shown their first early sign of life in this series. Tying the score in the bottom half of the inning in which they gave it up was a nice response to see. The dinger is Julien’s second of the year, and the hope would be that it can spark some momentum from his bat.

    Carlos Correa followed the blast with a hard-hit single of his own, but unfortunately, Alex Kirilloff grounded into a double play and Byron Buxton was frozen on a looking third strike.

    Sheriff Speaks Up
    After allowing the first-inning run, Paddack returned to the bump as a man on a mission. Facing James Outman, Miguel Rojas, and Austin Barnes, The Sheriff struck out the side on just 12 pitches.

    While not all Dodgers hitters are made the same as the top of their lineup, Outman has launched home runs against the Twins in both of the first two games of this series. After getting behind in counts during the first inning, Paddack responded by hitting 96 mph twice during the frame, and he was able to simply overpower the opposition.

    Miller didn’t make it through the second inning of his last start this, and the Twins came in making him work. After Manuel Margot drew a walk, Austin Martin escaped a questionable check swing strike to walk on his own. With no one out, Minnesota has speed on first and second. It was the first chance for the Twins with a runner in scoring position, of which they had gone 0-for-their-last-29 in those spots.

    Santana continued his futility with an infield fly to third base, and Christian Vázquez struck out on a pitch that might have taken the head off a left-handed hitter. Kyle Farmer then dribbled a first pitch back to Miller, and just as quickly as they worked to put the opposition in a bad spot, they obliged by giving it all away.

    The Top Does It Again
    Starting off the 3rd inning in a similar fashion to how they began the 2nd, Minnesota had runners on the basepaths. Julien came out with a single before Correa lined a single to right-center. This time Kirilloff stepped in with runners on the corners and an opportunity to end the 0-for-32 RISP drought. Miller reared back and blew 99 mph by Kirilloff to make it 0-for-33.

    Buxton, who if you missed Monday night’s game announced he’s back, lined a single to left field and ended the RISP drought. Driving in Julien from third base, the Twins had their first lead of the series. Margot’s lineout was lofted just a bit too strong in center and had Martin stepping in with two outs.

    After collecting a pair of doubles last night, one of which was his first major league hit, Martin had started off the matinee with a walk. His plate discipline is a key aspect of his game, and once again he showed that working the count full against Miller. He got jammed on an inside fastball, rolling a soft grounder to third base, but the Twins had momentum.


    Twins Daily's winning "Make It Official!" game recaps are sponsored by Official Fried Chicken, which you can find in center field of Target Field. With a name like "official," we know we have to be the best in the game every day, and from your first bite, you'll know that's a promise we make good on.


    Muncy Makes It Even
    On the third pitch of the 4th inning, Paddack served Muncy a right-on-right changeup that got way too much of the zone. The Dodgers infielder responded by sending it 400 feet to right-center, and all Martin could do was look up and watch it leave the year. Once again things were evened up, this time at two. Following a pair of dribblers for outs, Paddack punched out Austin Barnes for strike three and got his defense back into the dugout.

    Minnesota couldn’t make anything happen in their half of the frame either. Santana went down looking on a close strike three, and Farmer grounded into a double play that wiped out the walk by Vazquez.

    Throwing his 86th pitch, which was singled to center by Hernandez, Baldelli went out to grab Paddack. With Ohtani on third, two outs, and Muncy stepping up to the plate again, the lefty-lefty matchup play allowed Kody Funderburk an opportunity to close the frame scoreless. Despite getting behind 2-0, Funderburk worked back with a sinker and got whiffs on his fastball and slider to dispel the threat.

    Julien Jolts Again
    Last night the Dodgers went to Alex Vesia late and he was greeted by home runs from Correa and Kirilloff. The lefty-lefty matchup against Julien to start the 5th inning is a spot Baldelli could have opted for a pinch hitter, but he stuck by his starting second baseman and was rewarded.

    For the second time on the afternoon, Julien lifted a ball the opposite way and had his second dinger. The 386-foot blast put the Twins back on top 3-2, and for a guy that has been clamoring for more at-bats against southpaws, Julien certainly rewarded his manager’s faith in this spot. Now 3-for-3 on the afternoon, he also had the first multi-homer game of his career.

    Maybe looking to keep the same decision-making work, Baldelli left in Kirilloff to face the lefty Vesia after Correa struck out. Last season Kirilloff saw just 59 plate appearances against left-handed pitching and his .482 OPS was evidence as to why. Today he popped up a 2-2 pitch to short left field before Dave Roberts countered Byron Buxton with Michael Grove. Down on strikes for the second time today, Minnesota still took a 3-2 lead into the 6th inning.

    C4 and Vazquez Show Off
    All year long Vazquez has been telling runners they should stop attempting to steal bases under his watch. Having caught two of the first six attempts against him (and with two of those being entirely on the pitcher), he has brandished the cannon. In the 6th inning, Outman was the latest runner to test the Twins backstop, and another perfect throw and tag turned into a fist-pumping out.

    In the 7th inning, following another impressive showing by Jorge Alcala, it was Brock Stewart on against the Dodgers. After walking Bernes to start the inning, the base runner turned into Betts on a ground out, and then subsequently Ohtani on the same fate. Freddie Freeman ripped a double down the line into the left field corner, and the superstar DH was on his way to the plate.

    From there…we’ll let the video do the work.

    Baldelli Tweaks the Pen
    With no Jhoan Duran available during this early portion of the season, it remained to be seen how Baldelli would handle late-inning leverage spots for his bullpen. In a tight game against the Dodgers, Stewart got the 7th inning and was working for the second straight day. Griffin Jax then came in for the 8th inning and got the Dodgers 4-5-6 hitters on strikes. With both velocity and breaking pitchers, his stuff looked as nasty as ever.

    After using Stewart and Jax to face the most dangerous threats in the Los Angeles lineup, Baldelli turned to Steven Okert for the final three outs in the 9th inning. Lefty Outman was set to start the inning, but Roberts brought in Chris Roberts as a pinch hitter. Still, the Twins reliever was facing the 7-8-9 hitters as he looked to record the first save of his career. After sending Roberts down swinging, Will Smith was announced as the pinch hitter for Gavin Lux, and he singled through the hole at short and the Dodgers had life. Taylor Trammell took over at first base as a pinch runner, and Barnes stepped in.

    Okert got the double play ball on a bouncer from Barnes to Julien, but the Los Angeles catcher just beat it out as a replay review confirmed. With Jay Jackson up in the pen, Baldelli opted to stay with Okert against Betts, and a final out was needed to solidify the victory. Getting behind 2-0, and working to 3-1, Betts popped up a lazy infield fly to end it and the reliever acquired in the Nick Gordon trade officially announced his time with the Twins is here.

    Notes
    The Twins put a necessary pin in the 0-for-33 stretch with RISP. Although it was good to see the poor run come to an end, they still went 1-for-9 today and left five runners on base. The lineup will need to click at a higher clip to win on most days, but you'll take it against a juggernaut like the Dodgers.

    Julien's first career multi-homer game came in his 119th career appearance. The home runs were the 18th and 19th of his career, and he moved his OPS from .444 to .757 with today's game.

    2015 Twins first round pick, 6th overall Tyler Jay, is being called up by the Mets. They signed him out of the Frontier League. Truly an amazing story of determination.

    What’s Next? 
    The Minnesota Twins will head to Detroit and look for a series win in a four-game tilt against a team that is expected to contend for the AL Central Division title. A.J. Hinch has his Tigers squad rolling out of the gate, and Cy Young contender Tarik Skubal will be among the arms rolled out by the opposition. It will also be Rocco Baldelli’s first time seeing Kenta Maeda on the opposing side this season.

    At some point on the road trip, Caleb Thielbar and Josh Staumont could return to the Minnesota bullpen. With Michael Tonkin added from the Mets, the Twins need a good bout of injury luck to strike for the next few days.

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    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).

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    Featured Comments

    13 hours ago, ashbury said:

    Three runs, six hits?  LOL no.  Sounds like a fun game, which I had to miss due to other commitments, but let's tap the brakes a little on this offensive "outburst."

    6 Hits from 3 players total. This means that 6 players in the starting lineup yesterday have 151 games left to play.. 😉

    16 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    Correa came a long way to be the cut on that throw to the plate. 

    The cut system may have changed a bit since I was younger. However, normally on a ball into the RF corner like that. Correa would man the 2nd base bag and the 1st baseman would be the cut to the plate. 

    I'm not arguing Correa taking the cut because I've always designed my cut system a little bit different than what was standard or used to be standard.

    I always wanted my strongest arm guy to handle as many cuts as he can. My strongest arm guy was typically the SS so he would get to whatever he could within reason. 

    Anyway... Correa came a long way to be the cut on that wonderful throw to the plate. 

    Kudos.  

    I think the second baseman taking the cutoff for a play like that probably is still standard.  Correa was shifted behind second base for a lefty hitter, so it wasn't as far as it could have been.

    Julien's throwing mechanics seem to have been cleaned up a lot from when he first came up, but you still want Correa taking any cutoff he can get into position for.  I would be curious to see how the play developed away from the ball.  Was Correa the obvious cutoff man from the start or did he call an audible with Julien?

    Would've liked to see Kirilloff be a little more aggressive going after the ball in the corner, but he doesn't have much experience playing the caroms out there, and kudos to him too for making a good throw to Correa to set up the relay.

    7 minutes ago, 2wins87 said:

    I think the second baseman taking the cutoff for a play like that probably is still standard.  Correa was shifted behind second base for a lefty hitter, so it wasn't as far as it could have been.

    Julien's throwing mechanics seem to have been cleaned up a lot from when he first came up, but you still want Correa taking any cutoff he can get into position for.  I would be curious to see how the play developed away from the ball.  Was Correa the obvious cutoff man from the start or did he call an audible with Julien?

    Would've liked to see Kirilloff be a little more aggressive going after the ball in the corner, but he doesn't have much experience playing the caroms out there, and kudos to him too for making a good throw to Correa to set up the relay.

    I agree with you. 

    In that situation the lead runner is priority and the SS in that spot on the field for a cut 4 was either something they do in an effort for Correa to handle as many cuts as possible or a communication with Julien on the fly. I'm not 100% sure but most major league teams lineup a double cut with the 2b and 1b lined up in the shallow OF for a cut to direct and handle any type of throw. 

    The only video I've seen to review it doesn't show Julien's position at the time of the throw. It does show Julien drift toward first base when the ball has hit. There was certainly enough time for Correa and Julien to switch roles.

    The one thing that you can see is that there wasn't a double cut lined up because the video showed that Santana was just kinda hanging around the 1B area in no man's land and was certainly not lined up to be a part of what was about to happen. 

    It was Kirilloff to Correa and Correa to the plate. If either of those two blow the throw it's a tie game.  

    IMO... I think it's smart for Correa to handle as many cuts as he can because he is fantastic at it so if they are off script on this.

    Kudo's.   

    18 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    Correa came a long way to be the cut on that throw to the plate. 

    The cut system may have changed a bit since I was younger. However, normally on a ball into the RF corner like that. Correa would man the 2nd base bag and the 1st baseman would be the cut to the plate. 

    I'm not arguing Correa taking the cut because I've always designed my cut system a little bit different than what was standard or used to be standard.

    I always wanted my strongest arm guy to handle as many cuts as he can. My strongest arm guy was typically the SS so he would get to whatever he could within reason. 

    Anyway... Correa came a long way to be the cut on that wonderful throw to the plate. 

    Kudos.  

    The 1B might be the primary cutoff to home on a ball down the line and in the corner. The full field video shows Santana lining up for cut and then veers off with Correa in place. Julien heads to second right away.

    2 minutes ago, jorgenswest said:

    The 1B might be the primary cutoff to home on a ball down the line and in the corner. The full field video shows Santana lining up for cut and then veers off with Correa in place. Julien heads to second right away.

    Where did you get that? 

    That is fantastic. 

    I'd like my hands on something like that. 

     

    Yes finally a good win.  Let's see.  We only managed 6 hits, went 1 for 9 with RISP.  We did some good things, like winning.  It was. I believe, the only win on the homestead.  We still only have 2 more wins than the lowly White Sox.  I am glad we won.  But let's not get too carried away here.  Just as people say it's only one game no big deal when they lose, the same can be said of winning.  It was a nice win but only if we build on it.  Go Twins

    12 minutes ago, jorgenswest said:

    The 1B might be the primary cutoff to home on a ball down the line and in the corner. The full field video shows Santana lining up for cut and then veers off with Correa in place. Julien heads to second right away.

    Thanks for that.  It looks like Julien takes a step towards taking the cutoff before heading to 2B.  It's possible Correa calls him off but seems pretty clear that they both know that Correa is going to take any cutoff throw where he can get into position.  If it was a RHH Correa would not have been able to get there, but in the LHH shift this is probably a standard play for the Twins and Correa.

    I love all these little details to the game like this.

    5 minutes ago, jorgenswest said:

    Agree. I saw the clip from MLB Video in Do Young Park’s report on the game.

    Thanks for sharing. 

    That's why you are one of the best. 

    And of course Kudo's to Do Young Park!

    That is above and beyond reporting. 

    Just now, 2wins87 said:

    Thanks for that.  It looks like Julien takes a step towards taking the cutoff before heading to 2B.  It's possible Correa calls him off but seems pretty clear that they both know that Correa is going to take any cutoff throw where he can get into position.  If it was a RHH Correa would not have been able to get there, but in the LHH shift this is probably a standard play for the Twins and Correa.

    I love all these little details to the game like this.

    There was no one in position to cut the throw to third. That is probably where Correa (or Julien) should have been but Correa reacts immediately sprinting to the line. Amazing play.

    3 minutes ago, jorgenswest said:

    Agree. I saw the clip from MLB Video in Do Young Park’s report on the game.

    I know last year mlb introduced their 3D gameday view which used player and ball tracking to make a similar representation where you could watch from a lot of unique angles.  This looks pretty similar, but they seemed to have changed to a different overhead field view at least on mobile gameday this year.  Maybe it is still available in the browser version?  I haven't tried that yet.

    The 3D gameday didn't look great but I actually watched it instead of the broadcast at times last year since it was fun to be able to change the angle and watch plays develop from some unique angles.  I hope they keep developing the product and making it publicly available.

    11 hours ago, SwainZag said:

    He threw too many balls today, but to me it was a pretty positive outing for him.  Carrying that velocity that deep is huge and his stuff has that pop.  I am hopeful he can be a key contributor this year.

    Against LA you just can't keep throwing strikes. They are hitters. They will swing aggressively

     They hit. 

    From the credit where it is due dept, Morneau has grown on me lately. Cory P has much to do with that. Cory is very good, for example he nailed the play at the plate call yesterday. It is much more conversational in the booth with this duo and maybe Morneau has settled down a little because of it. He seems to let Cory paint the picture and even allows some silence. This is a very welcome development.

    I was at the game and it was fun and tense. The throw to nail Ohtani at the plate electrified the crowd! Correa’s tag on the caught stealing was also unbelievable.

    tiny nitpick - from where I was sitting (section 121) that game-ending pop up from Betts was anything but “lazy.” It was hit really hard and really high. Took forever to come down and get caught. Felt like we got lucky there - a little bit more bat on the ball and who knows?




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