Twins Video
Box Score
Starting Pitcher: Simeon Woods Richardson 5.0 IP 3 H 2 R 2 ER 2 BB 4 K (83 pitches 53 strikes 10 whiffs)
Home Runs: N/A
Top 3 WPA: Griffin Jax 0.120, Byron Buxton 0.105, Josh Staumont 0.095
Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)
Carlos Correa Crushes Cole Again
Cole Ragans was a nice get for the Kansas City Royals last season, and his performance earned him an Opening Day start against the Minnesota Twins. He pitched well in that tilt, but a third-inning double from the Twins' shortstop proved him human. Manuel Margot scored on the play, and Royce Lewis might have to, had he not come up lame rounding second. Lewis hasn’t played since. With the Royals scoring just a single run, that was the difference in the first contest of the year.
On Tuesday night at Target Field, the Twins threatened early again. After Margot made a nice defensive play in the top of the first inning, he opened the bottom half with a single. Correa crushed a Ragans pitch for another double, putting a pair of runners in scoring position. Following a Ryan Jeffers strikeout, José Miranda hit a ball sharply back up the middle and brought both runners in, giving Rocco Baldelli’s club a 2-0 lead.
Simeon Woods Richardson Settles In
Going up against a fireballer in Ragans, Simeon Woods Richardson was ready to show the Royals his own new stuff. After being a low-velocity starter last year amid a mechanical maladjustment, he's found a whole new vivacity this spring. While strikeouts still haven’t added up in a big way, and there is some cause for concern based on the underlying metrics, he continues to get the job done.
Through four innings against Kansas City Tuesday, facing them for the first time this season, Minnesota’s starter allowed just a single hit, while striking out four. The velocity uptick continues to play, as he struck out designated hitter Nelson Velázquez on his 65th pitch of the evening, and it registered 94.3 mph on the radar gun. Last season, across 97 total big-league pitches, Woods Richardson topped 92 mph just four times.
After a Garrett Hampson misplay on a routine fly ball from Christian Vázquez gave the Twins two free bases and an extra out, Margot doubled him home and made it a 3-0 game. Insupportably, Vázquez’s hit was ruled a double, and while it did have a .480 xBA, Hampson literally had it clank off his glove on a play that required little extra effort.
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The fifth inning was tough for Woods Richardson, as he walked Nick Loftin and gave up a double to Renfroe. Despite giving up a pair of runs, and after getting some defensive help from Correa, he capped off the inning by earning some confidence from Baldelli, who let him face Bobby Witt Jr. for a third time with the tying run 90 feet away. A lazy fly out to right ended the threat.
Bullpen Comes Out Blazing
The first reliever to swing the gate for Baldelli was the oft-jettisoned Jorge Alcalá. He came on and punched out a pair while pumping upper-90s stuff. As he has done most of the season, he looked like one of the best relievers in Minnesota’s bullpen. Then Josh Staumont got a shot to see his former employer for the first time. In the seventh game of his season for the Twins, he continued to throw up zeroes in the run column and has allowed just three hits in 7 ⅓ innings.
Griffin Jax got the eighth inning, despite recently added reliever Diego Castillo initially being up. Jax grabbed a pair of strikeouts, including the second of the night for Witt Jr., who was in major jeopardy of his ten-game hitting streak being snapped. Jhoan Duran warmed up to work the ninth inning, pitching in back-to-back days and for the fourth time in five days. Clearly Minnesota was intent on closing the gap with Kansas City.
After a Buxton walk, and a stolen base, he was at third base with just one out for Edouard Julien. Looking to grab insurance for his closer, and with the infield drawn in, Julien took a pair of hacks without anything to show for it. On a 3-2 count the Minnesota second baseman singled back up the middle, scoring Buxton, and providing a huge insurance run. It got scary on an immediate stolen base attempt that had Julien running into Witt Jr.’s butt and spike, but he remained in the game.
A ball by Royals reliever Sam Long advanced Julien and Carlos Santana to second and third base, but Christian Vazquez and his entirely worthless offensive profile wasn’t able to put a ball in play and struck out to waste the opportunity. Max Kepler grounded out and Minnesota was going with Duran in a two-run game.
Duran gave up a double to Salvador Perez and then Adam Frazier singled to put a pair of runners on. Vazquez threw out Frazier trying to steal, and then Duran gassed up M.J. Melendez. Loftin grounded out on a 103.1 mph heater and Minnesota made it two straight against Kansas City.
Notes
Not surprisingly, the move to clear space for Diego Castillo was putting Justin Topa on the 60-day injured list. Having received a platelet-rich plasma injection, he’s another month from throwing. The only hope is that the injection works and saves him from going under the knife otherwise Minnesota will have gotten nothing at the big league level from the Jorge Polanco trade in 2024.
Royce Lewis is continuing his rehab assignment with the St. Paul Saints, batting second and playing third base. He was 0-for-3 in Game 1 of the doubleheader, but played all six innings in the field. Brooks Lee moved up to the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels where he’ll play shortstop and bat second on Tuesday. Walker Jenkins was 1-for-3 with a run, two RBI, and a double in FCL action on Tuesday afternoon.
Angel Hernandez retired yesterday, and while that’s great news for baseball fans, here’s a Yankees take that can draw Twins ire. Aaron Boone is wrong, just wrong.
What’s Next?
Rolling on in a four-game set, Bailey Ober starts on Wednesday for the Twins. Minnesota will see Kansas City’s Seth Lugo for the second time this season, and he brings an MLB-best 1.74 ERA along with an 8-1 record.
Postgame Interviews
Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet







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