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    Make It Official! Twins 9, Reds 2: Flipping the Script


    Hans Birkeland

    In a game the Twins had to win, they certainly set things up to mirror their recent losses, with a short start from a rookie pitcher and a sleepy lineup for the first five innings. They turned it on from there, though, with a big RBI single from the struggling Brooks Lee and a huge home run from human security blanket Carlos Santana.

    Image courtesy of © Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

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    Box Score:
    Starting Pitcher:
    David Festa: 3 2/3 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 4 K (72 Pitches, 40 Strikes, 55.5%)
    Home Runs: Carlos Santana (22)
    Top 3 WPA: Santana (.252), Brooks Lee (.224), Ryan Jeffers (.162)
    Win Probability Chart (Via Fangraphs):

    image.png.c32ef06adad3d008056db88f148a86ee.png

    The Twins were teetering once again, following two rough losses to a mediocre Reds team. Their stars, Byron Buxton and Carlos Correa, returned over the weekend, but couldn't overcome major blowups from Jorge Alcalá and Louie Varland. Prime Barry Bonds wouldn't have helped, either. Today, both players were given the day off to get them as fresh as possible for Monday's pivotal series in Cleveland.

    Early on, it looked like David Festa was going to throw a gem. He was locating, and his stuff looked electric, aside from throwing the first pitch right off of a cyst on Jonathan India's elbow. India quickly pulled a Torii Hunter and stole second and advanced to third on a groundout from Elly De La Cruz. He tried to come home on the contact play, but was gunned down by Royce Lewis for the second out. Festa then struck out TJ Friedl on a nasty changeup to end the frame.

    He got three more easy grounders in the second, but then struck out Noelvi Marte, India and De La Cruz in convincing fashion in the third. The second time through the lineup, however, was not as crisp as far as location. He left a changeup up to Tyler Stephenson and a slider on a platter to Spencer Steer in the fourth. Stephenson lined a sharp single and Steer lined a triple hard off the scoreboard for the game's first run. Ty France then delivered a sacrifice fly to double the deficit.

    That looked tragically difficult to overcome, since this lineup has struggled against non-Angels pitching in recent weeks. Opposing Festa was the Reds' first-round pick from last year, Rhett Lowder. The rookie was selected two picks after the Twins took Walker Jenkins, so Reds fans are pretty jazzed about the guy, and he looked great. It is odd to see pitchability be a carrying trait for a young pitcher, but Lowder was as-advertised, pitching to all quadrants of the strike zone with a darting two-seamer, fading change and sweeping slider. The Twins made some hard contact in the first, including a Lewis 108-MPH single, and a Trevor Larnach 112-MPH lineout to end the inning.

    But that's how the script has been lately. They couldn't get anything going for a while following that promising first inning, and Festa didn't end up getting the final out in the fourth. Determined not to give up the big hit and big inning that has plagued the Twins lately, Festa tried to be too fine and walked his last two batters. He exited with the bases loaded, and ask Zebby Matthews or Simeon Woods Richardson how that has gone lately. Fortunately, in this case, Ronny Henriquez induced India to hit a grounder up the middle that Kyle Farmer made a nice play on, and that I would feel queasy imagining Edouard Julien attempting.

    The Twins quickly got things going in their half of the fourth. Lewis led off with another sharp single, and Carlos Santana got him to third with a single of his own. With no outs, the Twins could afford to be conservative with their baserunning, but Lewis had no interest in that- Larnach dribbled a ball up the first base line, and first baseman Ty France gloved it, stepped on first and then threw to home to get Lewis in a rundown, a crushing double play. Fortunately, Willi Castro flipped a single on the next pitch, scoring Santana and getting something out of the inning.


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    The Reds greeted Henriquez in the fifth with consecutive singles from De La Cruz and Stephenson. However, De La Cruz got greedy trying to stretch a bleeder up the middle into a double, and was thrown out by Castro, with an athletic, spinning tag from Brooks Lee securing the out. Henriquez was able to turn that good fortune into a scoreless inning, and the Twins were through five with only two runs allowed.

    The Twins finally chased Lowder in the sixth, as the young righty appeared to tire, allowing a sharp lineout to Lewis and a double to right from Santana, followed by a walk to Larnach. Tony Santillan came in, struck out Willi Castro and got ahead of Ryan Jeffers 0-2. Jeffers hung in against some tough pitches and eventually got hold of a hanging slider, roping it to left for a game-tying double.

    That brought up the struggling Lee, who looked bad on a couple of swings en route to a 2-2 count against the high-octane Santillan. He ended up getting on top of a high fastball, though, lacing it into center field for a game-breaking two-run single.

    Cole Sands had entered the game in the sixth and delivered a scoreless frame with two strikeouts. He returned for the seventh, and that inning started forebodingly, as De La Cruz walked and was looking for his 100th career stolen base (he has not played two full seasons yet). Sands did a decent job of varying his delivery and De La Cruz got a mediocre jump. Jeffers threw high, but Farmer tagged the speedy Reds shortstop on the backside, and the out was called after a coach's challenge. Sands then struck out Stephenson (who is a menace when healthy) on a fastball in on his hands, and Steer popped out to end the inning.

    Santana added some insurance in the seventh. After Lewis drew a two-out walk, the Twins first baseman lifted a Justin Wilson cutter off the facing of the second deck in left field.

    Larnach followed with a ringing double off the lefty, Castro was hit by a pitch, and Jeffers singled to load the bases back up for Lee, who now has only three hits in his last 28 at-bats. All three have produced multiple RBIs, as Lee cleared the bases from the left side with a line shot down the first base line that ended up a triple. Not since Brandon Inge was still hobbling around for Detroit has a less productive hitter produced so many big hits in such a short time.

    Jorge Alcalá threw two scoreless innings to seal the victory after bleaching his hair. He did look less tense, although the lead was established by the time he came in.

    Trends:

             
      Healthy Hurt    
    Performing        
    Contributing        
    Low Impact        
    IL/Minors        
             
    C Ryan Jeffers 📈 Christian Vazquez 📈    
    1B Carlos Santana 📈 Alex Kirilloff 📉 Jose Miranda 📉  
    2B Edouard Julien 📉 Kyle Farmer 📈'    
    3B Royce Lewis 📈      
    SS Carlos Correa 📈 Brooks Lee 📈    
    LF Matt Wallner 📈 Trevor Larnach 📈 Austin Martin 📉  
    CF Byron Buxton 📈 Manuel Margot 📉 DaShawn Keirsey Jr. 📈  
    RF Max Kepler 📉      
    UTIL Willi Castro 📉 Michael Helman 📈    
    SP Pablo Lopez 📈 Bailey Ober 📈 Joe Ryan 📉 Chris Paddack 📈
    RSP David Festa 📉 Zebby Matthews 📉 Simeon Woods Richardson 📉  
    CR Jhoan Duran 📉 Griffin Jax 📈    
    SR Brock Stewart 📉 Jorge Alcala 📉 Cole Sands 📈  
    MR Caleb Thielbar 📈 Scott Blewett 📈 Michael Tonkin 📈 Louie Varland 📉
    LR Josh Winder 📉 Ronny Henriquez 📈 Randy Dobnak 📉 Diego Castillo 📈
     

    Stray Notes:

    -Matt Wallner hit leadoff and had some excellent at-bats with nothing to show for it.
    -The Twins have suffered significant player injuries against the Reds in recent years. In 2020, Buxton was hit in the head by a Lucas Sims pitch and his presence in the postseason that year was depressing as a result. In 2021, Buxton was just returning from a hip injury and got hit on the hand by Tyler Mahle and missed two more months. In 2023, Correa sustained the rupture in his plantar fasciitis in Cincinnati, while Lewis strained his hamstring which put his postseason status in doubt.
    -Larnach was really laboring around the bases today, with his turf toe injury still lingering. He barely made it to second on his seventh inning double.

    What’s Next: Pablo Lopez (15-8, 3.88 ERA) faces off against the Guardians' Matthew Boyd (2-1, 2.18 ERA). Teams have thought they could "fix" Boyd for a decade now, and wouldn't you know it, the Guardians may have actually found something in him just in time to prop up their rotation for the stretch run. The Twins need a series win in the four game set in the worst way, not to catch Cleveland, but to maintain their tenuous hold on the sixth wild card spot.


    Postgame Interviews:
    (coming soon)
    Bullpen Usage Chart:

      WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT
    Alcalá 14 0 9 0 31 54
    Sands 16 0 0 0 36 52
    Thielbar 18 0 0 27 0 45
    Blewett 0 0 0 41 0 41
    Varland 0 0 0 29 0 29
    Tonkin 0 0 28 0 0 28
    Durán 22 0 0 0 0 22
    Jax 20 0 0 0 0 20
    Henríquez 0 0 0 0 17 17

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    Featured Comments

    15 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    4,5 games up on Red Sox with a 3 game series this week - up 2-1 in season series. 2 end in Cleveland and 2 in Boston would really lift us up!!!!

    Tigers & Mariners only 2.5 games back…….3 back in loss column - Twins own tiebreaker with both. Tigers headed to K.C. for 3 games. Mariners host Yankees for 3 games.

    Tigers vs. KC.  I suspect the Twins would be best served if KC takes that series.  Would like to see the Twins win 2 of 4 in Cleveland and then 2 of 3 in Boston.

    3 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    I don't think you can get much out of Sims either, it seems all our rookie SPs are running on fumes. But why blame ownership? Did they trade for worthless Desclavani & his salary? Did they tell FO not to make any meaningful trades for SPs? Were they involved in their management? I don't think so.

    It's been a total system failure  , ownership  and FO  for not adding depth  in 2024 , after the disaster season of injuries in 2022 they went out in the off season and added depth for 2023 and we managed to win division and break the losing streak in the playoffs ...

    Cutting payroll for 2024 was not a recipe for success  , it was back to the dumpster diving  with a prayer that they could contend  , they again went the wrong direction with acquiring injury prone players ( desclafini again and relying on stewart and paddock that are injury prone ) ...

    With all that and a coaching staff that can't seem to win with implementing small ball and fundamentals into the game along with the analytics  is also a total system failure ...

    I've watched almost all the games and other teams  beat us with the small ball and analytics  , why Rocco why can't you play small ball  ...

    It game starts with coaching and the players reflect it ...

    1 hour ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Again ownership shouldn't be blamed for the lack of ability from the FO for not doing so under their limitations.

    Agreed. The Pohlads signed off on record payrolls in 2022 to 2023. There was a 25% increase from 2021 to 2022. 

    1 hour ago, Doctor Gast said:

    It's foolhardy to expect to sign a big-name SP FA even if we had money to spend on them, but still people dream if only we had the money to sign them. They won't come to MN unless you throw ridiculous money at them or have a Lance Lynn situation where we lose either way. 

    I highlighted the "they won't come to MN" section of the quote. Why would Minnesota be undesirable for a starting pitcher? I have to think that a pitcher wants a chance to thrive and a competitive salary and I think both of those things can be had from the Twins.

    It's pretty sad that both Buxton and Correa needed the day off after only playing 4 innings on Saturday. If they are going to take up a roster spot then they need to be out there. Aside from Lopez and Ober, our starters have to find a way to go deeper than three innings. Having 3 of our SP basically throwing like openers completely wiped out our bullpen for the rest of the series. I really hope we put Paddack in the bullpen and sign a SP for next year. That puts Festa in AAA as first man up. Zebby needs more time in the minors clearly. He started the year in A ball. These guys were forced the the show because of ownerships lack of moves in both the off-season and deadline. Very important week, get hot and get into the playoffs where anything can happen. Don't just roll over and blow it!

    The Saturday and Sunday games are what we could expect to see from the third and fourth starter, when that starter pitches in a Game 3 wild card or in a five game series. Young guys running on fumes removed in the 4th or 5th inning.

    Guys like Sands or even yes Varland will be heavily relied on the bridge those middle to late innings to get to Jax and Duran. 

    1 hour ago, Hosken Bombo Disco said:

    Agreed. The Pohlads signed off on record payrolls in 2022 to 2023. There was a 25% increase from 2021 to 2022. 

    ‘24 though - back to ‘21 $$ total……..complete reversal. To have the same payroll as you did 3 seasons prior is embarrassing ……..particularly with the quantity of minimum salary guys on this current roster.

    18 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Lee seems like the choice at 2B along with Castro and maybe Farmer in October…….Julien would be out - non rostered. All of this group are marginal offensively but the Top 3 guys can all back up Correa at SS. Just can’t have a similar offensive guy that makes everyone anxious when he’s on defense, like Julien.

    Castro may not start in playoffs with Most Starts and AB’s on Team for the ‘24 season.

    Lewis - CC - Lee - Santana

    Miranda - Farmer - 2 Catchers

    Larnach - Castro - Buxton - Kepler - Wallner

    Frankly, SWR concerns me now more than Festa…….Festa is inexperienced but SWR seems gassed……..Seems Lopez - Matthews - Ober are all 3 lined up to pitch 3 more times……all 3 in last series v. Baltimore. We need 3 wins in the 7 games started between Matthews - SWR - Festa…..hope they can hold it together!!!

    Starting Lee over Castro in a playoff game would be quite the decision. I'd be incredibly surprised if that's your roster and they started Lee with Castro on the bench. I'd bet they also carry 1 more position player. Especially in the wild card round. If they need 13 arms to get through a 3 game series they're not coming out on the winning end of that series. The question would be Julien or Keirsey for the last spot. Keirsey as the defensive replacement and stolen base threat or Julien who wouldn't have many opportunities to get on the field. This all assumes Kepler is healthy by then.

    6 hours ago, stringer bell said:

    I highlighted the "they won't come to MN" section of the quote. Why would Minnesota be undesirable for a starting pitcher? I have to think that a pitcher wants a chance to thrive and a competitive salary and I think both of those things can be had from the Twins.

    I think once they get to know MN, they'd like it. But the cold, & small amount of marketing compared to NY & LA is my guess. If someone else has more to share, IDK. 




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