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    Mariners 7, Twins 1: A Game of Two Bullpens

    The Twins were looking to build off a great last game, but the offense was mostly non-existent and the bullpen had a tough night.

    Cory Moen
    Image courtesy of © Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    Starting Pitcher:
    Joe Ryan - 6 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 6 K (88 pitches, 62 strikes (70.5% strikes))
    Home Runs: Byron Buxton (7)
    Lowest WPA: Cole Sands (-0.21), Tristan Gray (-0.16), Victor Caratini (-0.13)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

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    Coming off a win in game one of the series, the Twins turned to Joe Ryan to face off with Logan Gilbert and the Mariners. Ryan was dominant early. He got into a little trouble in the third inning, giving up two hits and having runners on first and third with one out, but then struck Cal Raleigh out before getting Julio Rodríguez to ground out to end the inning. 

    In the bottom half of the inning, the Twins got singles from Royce Lewis and Byron Buxton, but were unable to push a run across. The game remained scoreless until Byron Buxton led off the bottom of the fifth inning with his seventh home run of the season—and second of the series. 

    Alas, the third turned out to be a better microcosm of the night than the fifth was. The Twins were only able to get one run while Logan Gilbert was in the game, but they did force him to throw more pitches than he would have liked. Gilbert lasted five innings and threw 92 pitches. That got the Twins into the Seattle bullpen, but the bullpen turned out to be up to that lengthy task.

    The Mariners got a couple of two-out hits in the top of the sixth, tying the game on a Josh Naylor single. They broke the tie after a leadoff double from Randy Arozarena in the top of the seventh, which chased Ryan from the game. Mariners second baseman Cole Young got the two-out single off Kody Funderburk that, as it turned out, opened the floodgates.

    The Twins bullpen had an unfortunate eighth inning, giving up three hits and three runs.

    Josh Naylor got his third hit of the night (a three-run home run off Cole Sands), giving the Mariners a four-run lead. Check out the bat flip. 

    Meanwhole, the Twins offense was virtually lifeless against the Mariners bullpen, mustering one hit over four innings against four separate Mariners relievers. Eduard Bazardo, Gabe Speier, Matt Brash and Cooper Criswell all threw a scoreless frame, without the traffic and sense of danger Gilbert seemed to deal with all night.

    Added to the roster before the game, righty Luis García made his Twins debut and gave up two runs in the top half of the ninth inning, on a two-out double by Rodríguez. Garrett Acton hit the injured list just minutes before the first pitch, with a shoulder strain, so García might be needed for a while. On the other hand, the team might swap him out for another fresh arm after his underwhelming team debut.

    What’s Next?

    The Twins will look to bounce back and win game three on Wednesday afternoon against the Mariners. Taj Bradley (3-1, 2.91 ERA) will face off against George Kirby (4-2, 2.97 ERA). 

    Bradley has been a bright spot for the Twins this year and will look to get back on track after giving up six runs against the Tampa Bay Rays in his last start. Kirby will look to continue his very good start to the year, most recently giving up two runs over six innings versus the St. Louis Cardinals. First pitch is scheduled for 12:40 PM CT.
     

     

    FRI

    SAT

    SUN

    MON

    TUES

    TOT

    Morris

    0

    0

    0

    40

    0

    40

    Orze

    10

    9

    0

    0

    0

    19

    Topa

    0

    0

    10

    0

    0

    10

    Rogers

    0

    15

    0

    14

    0

    29

    Banda

    7

    0

    9

    0

    0

    16

    Funderburk

    0

    0

    20

    0

    15

    35

    Garcia

    0

    0

    0

    0

    23

    23

    Sands

    0

    0

    7

    0

    13

    20

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    Featured Comments

    46 minutes ago, mickster said:

    I understand your point - but I still think it was a bad deal.  He is hitting almost .280 and playing SS for Houston.  Would have made Lee a utility player and maybe no Outman on the roster.

    How do you equate Outman and Correa.  They play two completely separate roles and money is not a consideration with Outman.

    9 minutes ago, karcherd said:

    How do you equate Outman and Correa.  They play two completely separate roles and money is not a consideration with Outman.

    meaning Lee would be a utility with Gray and Martin would be the OF for Outman.  Not a 1:1 change, just different roster construction.

    19 minutes ago, mickster said:

    meaning Lee would be a utility with Gray and Martin would be the OF for Outman.  Not a 1:1 change, just different roster construction.

    If Correa was still here, Gray never would have been on the opening day roster and let us get excited about a couple of good games.  Outman would still have been because he has no options left and the Twins are scared to DFA what they deem as an asset.  The real problem is that ERod is not up here for Outman.

    1 hour ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Why?

    Why does he NEED to & why is it best for him to make adjustments “in the majors”?

    If a guy plays 26 games a month and he has 3-4 “decent games”, he’s not getting it done anywhere near a needed level. His Slug% is like Team has a pitcher hitting in his spot.

    I like Luke - think he’s got a great future. Can’t help but like his attitude and style of play………..he’s got 7 stolen bases through April 28! There’s value for sure!! He needs a re-set over 2-3-4 weeks to get more comfortable. I realize he’s a wound up guy but he sure seems to be bringing an anxious (anxiety filled) look to the plate.

    The simple answer is the thing Luke needs to work on is adjusting to major league pitchers and they don’t have those in AAA. Sending him to AAA for a “reset” just delays that work until he gets back from AAA.

    ”So 4/5 not done and we may be at .500.”

    So what? This team should not spend any more time or talent chasing .500. There aren’t any third place trophies.

    2 hours ago, mickster said:

    The BP not being good was a pretty much known thing once it was blown up last year.   I was thinking back on all of the trades. and how I feel about them now:

    1.  Jax trade - do it again; yes

    2. Castro, Columbe - yes do them again as they were not resigning

    3.  Duran - I hated this one at the time and do miss him at the end of games.  However Abel and Tait have promise and I think I would do this one again.

    4. Varland - bad, bad, bad.   Him back now and I think we have a couple of more wins.

    5.  Correa trade - got rid of money: but how would we look with him having his 2026 year and playing SS for us.   Maybe another win or two.  The money dump didn't bring back anyone so we could have kept him.

     

    So 4/5 not done and we may be at .500.

     

    I doubt it.  #3 I'd do that trade again in a heart beat.  I think Abel and Tait are gonna be good but we'll have to wait and see on that one.  1-2 yep do them again.  #4 not so sure.  Roden was doing fine until the injury and Kendry Rojas hasn't really had a chance to show us anything yet. #5.  Absolutely the right move in my opinion.  The Correa trade topic has been discussed ad nauseum on these forums but I think it was 100% the right move to dump in back on the Stros.  WaYYYYYY to expensive for his offensive production.

    13 hours ago, knothole61 said:

    I'm increasingly disappointed by Caratini. There's a pretty big hole in the lineup when he spells Jeffers. I know one can't expect too much from a back-up catcher but I'm tired on watching him flail away at the plate, of late. 

    In his defense he is currently one of the unluckiest hitters in the MLB right now with a BABIP of .234, while his average and most of the league is around. 290-310. 

    Which also explains his gap of .211 BA and an expected BA of .255. Its not great but hes due positive regression. Hes a solid backup catcher/first basement 

    11 hours ago, Colbeh said:

    In his defense he is currently one of the unluckiest hitters in the MLB right now with a BABIP of .234, while his average and most of the league is around. 290-310. 

    Which also explains his gap of .211 BA and an expected BA of .255. Its not great but hes due positive regression. Hes a solid backup catcher/first basement 

    Fair enough...and he drove in a run tonight.




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