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    Rangers 6, Twins 5: Jorge Alcalá Implodes, Extra-Inning Miscues Cost Twins Sweep


    Hans Birkeland

    The Twins have not excelled on getaway days this year. Sadly, Sunday's tilt proved no exception, despite knocking former Twin Tyler Mahle out of the game after the third inning. Jorge Alcalá did not have it, and although Carlos Santana once again brought his team back with a late-inning home run, his misplay at first base allowed the Rangers to walk it off in the 10th.

    Image courtesy of © Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score:
    Starting Pitcher:
    Pablo López: 6 IP, 6 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 3 K (107 Pitches, 66.3%)
    Home Runs: Ryan Jeffers (19), Carlos Santana (18)
    Bottom 3 WPA: Jorge Alcalá (-.686), José Miranda (-.247), Matt Wallner (-.108)
    Win Probability Chart (Via Fangraphs):

    image.png

    Following a three-game span in which the Twins insisted on kicking the defending champs while they were down, they were greeted in the fourth game of the series by old friend (or perhaps nemesis?) Tyler Mahle, making his third start of the year since returning from a UCL tear suffered while pitching for the Twins. That part went well for the Twins, at least.

    Mahle only made nine starts for the Twins after being acquired at the 2022 trade deadline. I normally would never blame an individual for the injuries they suffer, especially pitchers. However, with Mahle, it was reported that he didn't do the shoulder strengthening exercises prescribed to him during the 2022 stretch run, and his insistence that he was "fine" despite throwing his fastball in the mid-80s (he sat in mid-90s at his healthy best) certainly rubbed me and many Twins fans the wrong way. Despite all that, he performed pretty well for the Twins, posting a 3.64 ERA.

    So it was a little cathartic to see Mahle throw quite a few fastballs at 88-89 MPH, while facing the Twins in a game that could vault Minnesota to within a game of Cleveland for the division lead. Rocco Baldelli stacked right-handers against Mahle, who has reverse splits for his career, and following a strikeout by leadoff man Willi Castro, José Miranda rifled an 89-MPH fastball just over left fielder Wyatt Langford's glove for a triple. He would score on a Trevor Larnach double, before Ryan Jeffers jumped on a 90-MPH fastball at the top of the zone and deposited it in the bullpen from a 21-degree launch angle (translation: he hit a 2-iron).

    The balls put in play in the first inning in terms of exit velocity: 105, 110, 105, 92, and 103 MPH. How was Mahle feeling? He'll never tell. Besides his fastball, his split-changeup had very little action, and he only threw his slider six times, all taken for balls.

    Meanwhile, Pablo López was sweating through multiple jerseys trying to keep the under-performing but powerful Rangers lineup off the board. Marcus Semien greeted López with a soft single, and all-world shortstop Corey Seager struck out on a perfectly placed sinker. A single, fly-out and a walk loaded the bases for one of the stars of last year's playoffs, Josh Jung. But Jung flew out weakly to end the threat. López threw 31 pitches in the first inning, all told.

    He issued a leadoff walk to Langford in the second, but stranded him at third base, with Semien popping out to end the frame. He entered the third inning with over 50 pitches thrown, and at that point almost largely abandoned his sweeper in favor of his curveball. He started allowing more contact, but none of it was damaging, and López got through the third and fourth innings efficiently. His fastball had good life and velocity all day, sitting at 95-96 and hitting 98 MPH on occasion.

    Mahle allowed an RBI single to Jeffers in the third, and following an inning-ending double play from the suddenly cold Matt Wallner, Mahle's afternoon was over, as Armando Garabito took over to start the fourth. The Twins had a hard time adjusting to the live arm of Garabito, who had previously started games for the Rangers, and went scoreless in the fourth and fifth innings.

    López usually struggles when hitters can eliminate his sweeper from consideration, and it looked like his luck might run out in the fifth, with Semien singling to start the frame, bringing up Seager, who rarely lets a pitcher get him out three times in a row. He took some prodigious hacks on Lopez's best velocity of the day, but ultimately got jammed on an inside fastball, softly lining a ball up the middle. López initially tried to snag it, but pulled his glove down just in time, allowing Castro to field the ball on the bounce, right at second base, and relay to first for an easy double play.

    I was thinking that Baldelli might pull López before the sixth, but with no off day until Thursday, they tried to squeeze another inning out of him. Adolis García greeted him with a screaming liner off the wall in left. He then hit Nathaniel Lowe on an 0-2 pitch. López was allowed to face Jung, who rapped into what was initially called a double play, but was overturned on review. Langford then flew out weakly, bringing up the hot-hitting Carson Kelly. With the count 2-2, the Twins' ace threw a 97-MPH fastball by Kelly on his 107th pitch, somehow completing six scoreless innings despite oodles of traffic and a 3/3 strikeout/walk ratio.

    It's a good thing the Rangers were scoreless to that point, because Jorge Alcalá's afternoon started with a single to the nine-hole hitter, Leody Taveras, then a ringing double off the bat of Semien, followed by another sharp double from Seager. After retiring Josh Smith on a fly ball, Alcalá tried to sneak a 2-0 fastball up and away to García, who pummeled it 389 feet to tie the game in the blink of an eye. After striking out Lowe on a nice changeup, Alcalá again got too much of the plate, this time to the always-hacking Jung, who smashed a 1-2 fastball 420 feet to give the Rangers the lead.

    It didn't look good, with the Rangers having the dominant David Robertson and Kirby Yates available to close the game out. Robertson, for his part, pitched a shutdown eighth inning, but Yates, after taking the loss in Thursday's game, gave up a mammoth home run to Carlos Santana to tie the game at five. It was the first blown save of the season for Yates, and approximately the 17th time this year Santana has brought his team back from the dead in the late innings.

    Griffin Jax came on to pitch the ninth. For a moment, it looked like Garcia hit a walk-off home run with two outs, but he was just a hair out front on a changeup, and flew out to the warning track in left.

    Facing lefty Andrew Chafin in the 10th, Castro advanced the zombie runner, Edouard Julien, to third, but Miranda grounded into the drawn in infield and Julien was retired at home plate. Christian Vázquez then pinch hit for Larnach and struck out, handing the Rangers a golden opportunity to walk it off.

    Jhoan Durán was called upon for the fourth time in five days, and predictably, he did not have his A stuff, sitting 98-99 MPH with his fastball. He did strike out Lowe swinging for the first out, but then Jung hit a tapper to Miranda that evoked some memories of the 2004 ALCS in which Alex Rodríguez swatted away a ball that was in pitcher Bronson Arroyo's glove as he covered first. In that case, the play was called an out, but today Santana caught the ball and made a swipe tag of Jung. Unlike A-Rod, Jung did not make any sort of swatting motion, but the ball was jarred loose by his body and the ball trickled away, allowing García to score the winning run.

    Trends:

      Healthy Hurt      
    Performing Great          
    Fine          
    Poor          
    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 📉      
    RF Max Kepler 📉        
    UTIL Willi Castro 📈        
    SP Pablo Lopez 📈 Bailey Ober 📈 Joe Ryan 📉 Chris Paddack 📉 Louie Varland 📈
    RSP David Festa 📈 Zebby Matthews 📈
    Simeon Woods Richardson 📈
       
    CR Jhoan Duran 📈 Griffin Jax 📈      
    SR Brock Stewart 📉 Jorge Alcala 📈 Cole Sands 📈    
    MR Trevor Richards 📈 Caleb Thielbar 📈 Steven Okert 📉    
    LR Josh Winder 📈 Ronny Henriquez 📈 Randy Dobnak 📉    

    Stray Notes:

    -Willi Castro has been dealing with some sort of back issue in recent weeks, and appeared to aggravate his injury beating out an infield single in the third. He was checked out by trainers in the dugout but remained in the game.

    -After stealing a crucial base against closer Kirby Yates in game one of the series, Wallner timed up Garabito and stole second again without a throw in the sixth. Wallner's sprint speed is decent (27.2 MPH) and I wonder if he has taken some pointers from Carlos Santana, who seems to really enjoy opportunistic base-stealing.

    What’s Next: Zebby Matthews (1-0, 3.60 ERA) faces Michael King (10-6, 3.19 ERA) as the Twins head to San Diego to take on the surging Padres. Those Padres have the game's best record since the All-Star break, and are putting a scare into the perennially great Dodgers in the NL West division. King is a converted reliever having a lot of success now that he has been given a chance to start, quite similar to the Royals' Seth Lugo. Matthews makes his second career start after delivering an impressive performance against the Royals last Tuesday.

    Postgame Interviews:

    (Coming soon)

    Bullpen Usage Chart:

      WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT
    Durán 22 18 13 0 6 59
    Alcalá 0 20 0 9 19 48
    Richards 33 0 0 0 13 46
    Jax 0 15 19 0 9 43
    Sands 0 0 18 9 0 27
    Henríquez 0 0 0 27 0 27
    Okert 15 0 8 0 0 23
    Thielbar 0 0 18 0 0 18

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    Featured Comments

    12 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Can’t believe that anybody would try to put ALCALA’s complete failure to do his job on Baldelli. After 4 pitches there were 2 runs in and a guy standing on 2nd.

    The 20/20 hindsight is out of control. What did your crystal ball tell you was to happen in the 8th & 9th after Jax pitched a perfect 7th?

    Just because there’s 6 other ways to approach a situation it doesn’t mean that what was done was in any way a mistake! The Manager did exactly what has been a formula for numerous wins……..Alcala was not focused, period.

    Jax is the most trusted high leverage setup guy who is routinely called upon - with success - to deal with the toughest parts of the opposing team’s order.  He was also the freshest.  And we know how dangerous the top of the Ranger’s lineup has been.  The seventh was a fairly standard situation for Jax.  As I said, the initial and bigger mistake was not using Jax to open the 7th.

    There is no 20/20 hindsight. It was just the wrong call given the personnel available and the situation.  And, yes, Alcala could have come out for the eighth with the less dangerous portion of the Rangers’ lineup would be batting.

    It’s ok to admit Rocco made a bad call.  We can’t win every game and sometimes the manager makes bad decisions just like the players.  Rocco’s made plenty of good calls too.  It happens.  

    I guess it's good that people care enough about every game to have a massive overreaction to losing one road game while still taking 3 out of 4 in a series?

    I like to remind myself on these days that some people despise everything about the way Rocco and Twins leadership manages a game and will jump on him immediately and excessively at every opportunity.

    Bullpen is getting ground down a bit right now; this happened to us earlier in the season when the Twins were on a good run because they were in every game, but also weren't blowing anyone out. It should be fine, but things are a bit trickier right now because it's hard to let off the gas when you're chasing the division while being chased in the WC.

    Good to see Lopez battle through on a day when he didn't have his best stuff and the other team was making him work. Too bad we couldn't hold it. Alcala has been really good lately, so seeing him implode like that was a surprise; he's had some bad outing this year but they were typically when we tried to have him go 2 innings rather than 1

    Man, I am usually the one ranting, but they took 3 of 4 on the road, All star reliever Yates had a loss and and blown save. This was a good series, Alcala blew is second save in 17 chances, blown saves happen, (jax has blown 4 of 32 and Duran 6 of 30)

    I can't remember, but when we were losing 90+ games in 5 of 6 seasons under Gardy, did he get a ton of flack? I don't think so. I don't get it. Baldelli has one of the best winning percentages in franchise history. Baldelli was the far superior ballplayer. It's got to be the quirky, Phish fan, hippy?, East Coast guy vs the Bud Light swilling Everyman from Ole Oklahoma phenomenon. 😂 

    Edit maybe one of those 90 loss seasons was under Molly, but I'm to lazy to look.

    When they show the BP you see two rubbers,and many times 2 RP warming up.As poorly as Lopez looked Rocco should of had pitchers up in the 2nd.Anyone defending him is wrong because managers can take a pitcher out after 3 hitters.He is right there watching his pitcher throw meatballs.It is one thing to give up a one run lead,but 4 is inexcusable.

    I like Baldelli overall, but calling me a "defender" doesn't sit well with me. At all. There are times I disagree with one of his moves, but I'm reluctant to post about it for 2 reasons. 

    1. I don't like to complain, maybe I'm a stoic, lol. 

    2. There is well more than enough Baldelli bashing around here so I don't want to add to it.

    Simple as that.

    58 minutes ago, wabene said:

    I can't remember, but when we were losing 90+ games in 5 of 6 seasons under Gardy, did he get a ton of flack? I don't think so. I don't get it. Baldelli has one of the best winning percentages in franchise history. Baldelli was the far superior ballplayer. It's got to be the quirky, Phish fan, hippy?, East Coast guy vs the Bud Light swilling Everyman from Ole Oklahoma phenomenon. 😂 

    Edit maybe one of those 90 loss seasons was under Molly, but I'm to lazy to look.

    Gardy got some stick from people like me for doing things like batting his 2B 2nd in the lineup, seemingly regardless of who the player was, and refusing to admit that Jacque Jones couldn't hit LHP. But overall, Gardy got picked on a lot less: the blame for the losing seasons was usually dumped on the Pohlads for being cheap, or Joe Mauer for being hurt and/or talking too many walks.

    13 hours ago, Blyleven2011 said:

    If acala was not focused  , then rocco should have removed him after 3 batters  and I don't care how many pitches were thrown , acala should have been  taken out ( he did this with richards about 10 days ago when richards couldn't find the strike zone and walks and runs were allowed  )  , the manager did what he always does to let a game get away  , he wants a pitcher to complete a whole inning and not bring in a relief pitcher to clean up his mess , ( if you believe Rocco's a capable manager , then i will disagree , I've said many times , Rocco will never bring us to a world series or win it  ) ,...

    it's rocco's MO not to change horses mid stream , he wants a relief pitcher to have a fresh inning  ,,, richards finally was brought in ( after 5 runs were scored off Alcala  when he wasn't focused )  and did get the out and pitched another inning ...

    In what world does anyone on TD support bringing in Richards for Alcala in the midst of a jam?

    You “don’t care how many pitches were thrown….” - then you’re not watching in reality. 4 pitches to 3 batters (impossible to replace him at that point, unless you have a Genie in a Bottle) - nice to say after the guy gives up 2 HR & 3 more runs from a couch.

    He got an out with Seager on 2nd ……..apparently gaining some composure and able to pitch to his capabilities……no reason to think otherwise. The guy has been lights out nearly all year!

    Players screw up - it happens.

    1 hour ago, David Maro said:

    When they show the BP you see two rubbers,and many times 2 RP warming up.As poorly as Lopez looked Rocco should of had pitchers up in the 2nd.Anyone defending him is wrong because managers can take a pitcher out after 3 hitters.He is right there watching his pitcher throw meatballs.It is one thing to give up a one run lead,but 4 is inexcusable.

    I think what’s inexcusable is when Baldelli pinch hit Lewis late in the game and then Lewis had the audacity to strike out - what terrible managing!

    2 hours ago, Nashvilletwin said:

    Jax is the most trusted high leverage setup guy who is routinely called upon - with success - to deal with the toughest parts of the opposing team’s order.  He was also the freshest.  And we know how dangerous the top of the Ranger’s lineup has been.  The seventh was a fairly standard situation for Jax.  As I said, the initial and bigger mistake was not using Jax to open the 7th.

    There is no 20/20 hindsight. It was just the wrong call given the personnel available and the situation.  And, yes, Alcala could have come out for the eighth with the less dangerous portion of the Rangers’ lineup would be batting.

    It’s ok to admit Rocco made a bad call.  We can’t win every game and sometimes the manager makes bad decisions just like the players.  Rocco’s made plenty of good calls too.  It happens.  

    My hindsight is that Alcala comes out and pitches to his capabilities and worst case gives up 2 runs - everybody is happy and there’s no debate. Much greater chance of a 2.15 ERA pitcher to have success v. not using him until the fantasy inning when he doesn’t screw up.

    2 hours ago, William K Johnson said:

    As well as he managed Saturday, yesterday's loss falls squarely on his shoulders.

    This.  With a four run lead put Richards, Okert or Thielbar out there with the thought that if it gets close you still have your best guys available. If they were down 1-0 it wouldn’t have been Alcala, seems to rigidly scripted at times.

    Tough loss, but I put this one on Rocco. Up four runs, Alcala shouldn't have even been out there after already pitching three times this series. Then, there was no reason to leave him in there when it was obvious it wasn't his night and he was getting crushed. Also, why on earth does Rocco pinch hit Vasquez for Larnach, just because Vasquez hits right handed. Larnach has a better chance of getting a hit off a lefty imo. These "getaway" days are getting pretty frustrating from a management pov. We need Buxton and Correa back ASAP. If Castro goes on the IL now we are truly screwed. We already have no true CF on the team because they refuse to call up Keirsey. If Castro is hurt we'd have to rely on Farmer as our everyday SS. A guy hitting under .200. Julien should never have been called up, he's not viable at this point. Not sure if Severino can play 2nd but maybe his switch hitting power would help the lineup more than Juliens strikeouts looking. What's up with Lee?

    Why not play Lewis at SS and move Castro to second.  This keeps Lewis and Miranda bats in the lineup.  I know Lewis has not been stellar on defense this year, but two years ago he came up and played short.  I can't believe he wouldn't be a better option than Castro and Farmer.  Then you could bring up Kiersey to play center.

    It's pretty  clear that many relievers just can't pitch on back to back days regardless of the number of pitches thrown the previous day.  The process of warming up on consecutive days takes too much out of them.  

    16 hours ago, Whitey333 said:

    Loss is definitely on Rocco today.  One of a handful of games the manager has lost this year.  Excuse the people backing Rocco for keeping Alcala in there while he is getting hammered.  There is no excuse for how he handled it.  Alcala may have made rotten pitches but Roccos continued lack of game management skills is astounding. People say how lucky the Guardians are because the Twins lost. It works both ways.  Maybe the Twins are lucky because Clevelanf lost. Very disappointing and needless loss.

    Explain in simple terms how Rocco could have managed that situation. 

    Texas gave us a couple wins, sounds like we gave one back. Thus goes the baseball season.

    I am also a believer in the back-to-back day phenomenon. Taylor Rogers was a big one who seemed to struggle with that. (Caveat: I don’t actually know what the results show.)

    If you are going to build in rest days for your position players, then it’s logical to build in rest days for your pitchers. 

    By the way, what does Gleeman say about using Duran in 4 out of 5 days? 

    Quote

    But it's not realistic to always warm up a second reliever. That burns out a bullpen.

     

    18 hours ago, thelanges5 said:

    Next three series:

    Twins - Padres, Cards, Braves

    Guardos - Yanks, Rangers, Royals

    Royals - Angels, Phils, Guardos

    LFG Twins!!!

    Twins won't get any help from the schedule.  

    Re:  Sunday loss.  Bullpen should have been active once Alcala entered the game w/ Jax and Richards/Thielbar throwing.  The contact play in 10th I don't like (w/ 2 outs ok).

     

    3 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    My hindsight is that Alcala comes out and pitches to his capabilities and worst case gives up 2 runs - everybody is happy and there’s no debate. Much greater chance of a 2.15 ERA pitcher to have success v. not using him until the fantasy inning when he doesn’t screw up.

    Fair point.  But I was sitting in my living room calling for Jax for the 7th as soon as Lopez finished the 6th. So I had no hindsight on this question.  Sitting there I was thinking (am I sure others were too), based on his performance this year, how Rocco has opted to deploy him, the Rangers he’d be facing, and his freshness, that it was a perfect Jax moment.  But I respect other opinions.  

    It took an unprecedented (for this season) Alcala meltdown and an error in extra innings for the Rangers to win 1 home game out of 4. Everything is going to be alright. 

    33 minutes ago, Vanimal46 said:

    It took an unprecedented (for this season) Alcala meltdown and an error in extra innings for the Rangers to win 1 home game out of 4. Everything is going to be alright. 

    How dare you!

    33 minutes ago, Nashvilletwin said:

    Fair point.  But I was sitting in my living room calling for Jax for the 7th as soon as Lopez finished the 6th. So I had no hindsight on this question.  Sitting there I was thinking (am I sure others were too), based on his performance this year, how Rocco has opted to deploy him, the Rangers he’d be facing, and his freshness, that it was a perfect Jax moment.  But I respect other opinions.  

    So, again, I get how everyone wanted to get a WIN and just happened to have a better idea than Baldelli. Human nature to think your own thoughts are correct…..especially after the outcome turns out to be not so good.

    However, with a 4-0 lead, the least pressure that could be put on Alcala getting his inning in on Sunday & contributing was to start the 7th. He had a clean situation and still had Jax & Duran behind him. A 4 run cushion is considerable and he was under no excessive pressure. Lopez had been working through the same line-up without great stuff nor great command for 6 innings. The Rangers have a solid line-up but Lopez proved (and was proved over first 3 games) that it’s not murderers row. Alcala wasn’t up to the task - in a big way. Hoping he shakes it off for next outing.

     

    33 minutes ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Just a suggestion, if Baldelli wants to utilize the PH role. IMO he should better prepare them.

    Do not understand???? - in what way? These guys know they could be called on. They are all professionals!! The Manager doesn’t prepare batters for AB’s…..it’s not Little League.

    24 minutes ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Just a suggestion, if Baldelli wants to utilize the PH role. IMO he should better prepare them.

    What would better preparing them look like? The Twins are 2nd in baseball in pinch hitting PAs at 142 (Boston is at 149 and 3rd place is San Fran at 129). The Twins have played 124 games. Everybody who didn't start is either getting a full day off and they know they aren't playing at all (because Rocco told them before the game), or they know the chances are somebody is getting a PH AB that day so they should be prepared. And it's not hard to figure out that Farmer and Julien are a platoon and Margot and the corner guys are. Farmer goes into every game he's not starting but Julien is knowing that he's hitting for Julien if a lefty comes in. And vice versa. Same for Margot and the lefty corner bats.

    They have more pinch hitting PAs than games played. They should all be doing the necessary work to be prepared to pinch hit as the game goes along. I'd bet a large sum of money that Rocco also tells them throughout the game that "if situation A plays out you're hitting so be prepared." Although, he may actually have his other coaches do the communicating, but the idea is the same. How would Rocco better prepare them?

    1 hour ago, mrcharlie said:

    Twins won't get any help from the schedule.  

    Twins getting TONS of help from the schedule. The winning teams they have left to play are either at home or teams that they need to beat. They've got more home games than road games. KC and CLE play 6 more times so either they both lose some ground or one team gets wiped out. 

    Quote

    Re:  Sunday loss.  Bullpen should have been active once Alcala entered the game w/ Jax and Richards/Thielbar throwing.

    Always have two relievers ready to pitch so no reliever thinks that they can do their job. 

    Quote

      The contact play in 10th I don't like (w/ 2 outs ok).

    You don't like it because Texas defended it. Two outs isn't the contact play. 

    The game sure elicited a lot of passion. Winning still seems to be job #1 here for the most part.

    Aside from the pitching and Rocco, Santana bailed them out quickly in the 9th but the hitters did nothing at all after that. The 10th inning was unfortunate both top and bottom. The contact play didn't work at all (it hasn't worked that much to begin with..Twins are now 4-5 in extras?) The strikeouts haven't helped. Both Lewis and Julien do whiff in key spots. I'd like to see Lewis cut down on the k's, especially with 2 strikes. Julien OTOH really can't hit MLB pitching and he probably shouldn't be up. He was a feel good story last season, for awhile, but this year has not been kind to him.

    The error that cost them the game was also unfortunate. Duran was pitching OK. Should have easily been runner on 3rd two out and take your chances. Odds in your favor.

    Santana has come up with some pretty clutch AB's 2nd half. Twins should consider whether it makes sense to re-sign him..guess the issue would be at his age, how much high octane is left in the tank?

    47 minutes ago, JD-TWINS said:

    So, again, I get how everyone wanted to get a WIN and just happened to have a better idea than Baldelli. Human nature to think your own thoughts are correct…..especially after the outcome turns out to be not so good.

    However, with a 4-0 lead, the least pressure that could be put on Alcala getting his inning in on Sunday & contributing was to start the 7th. He had a clean situation and still had Jax & Duran behind him. A 4 run cushion is considerable and he was under no excessive pressure. Lopez had been working through the same line-up without great stuff nor great command for 6 innings. The Rangers have a solid line-up but Lopez proved (and was proved over first 3 games) that it’s not murderers row. Alcala wasn’t up to the task - in a big way. Hoping he shakes it off for next outing.

     

    Could be.  But four runs is a big cushion until it isn’t.  And this was actually a big game with Cleveland losing and the chance for the extremely rare road four game sweep (especially ahead of a west coast trip to see the talented Padres).

    Question for you.  If Alcala gets out of the 7th with a clean inning, does Jax get the 8th or was Rocco taking the chance that he might be able to save Jax and/or Duran a day on the mound?  Maybe Rocco was getting a little greedy - and it’s understandable given how good Alcala has been.  I’ll bet Rocco wishes he had just stuck to his model and had Jax pitch the 7th.

    The win as a team, lose as a team is true. Alcala bad innining. Contact play with the Rangers infield in. Wallner missing a chance to drive in a big run with 1st and 3rd GBDP. Error on the final play. They lost a winnable game. On to San Diego.  Let's go.

    48 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    What would better preparing them look like? The Twins are 2nd in baseball in pinch hitting PAs at 142 (Boston is at 149 and 3rd place is San Fran at 129). The Twins have played 124 games. Everybody who didn't start is either getting a full day off and they know they aren't playing at all (because Rocco told them before the game), or they know the chances are somebody is getting a PH AB that day so they should be prepared. And it's not hard to figure out that Farmer and Julien are a platoon and Margot and the corner guys are. Farmer goes into every game he's not starting but Julien is knowing that he's hitting for Julien if a lefty comes in. And vice versa. Same for Margot and the lefty corner bats.

    They have more pinch hitting PAs than games played. They should all be doing the necessary work to be prepared to pinch hit as the game goes along. I'd bet a large sum of money that Rocco also tells them throughout the game that "if situation A plays out you're hitting so be prepared." Although, he may actually have his other coaches do the communicating, but the idea is the same. How would Rocco better prepare them?

    OK, thank you for that info. We all know Twins love to PH. What is the Twins' PH BA? How successful are they at PHing? Seems to me they aren't very good at it. To be frank, I know PHing is very difficult, I'm not trying to criticize Baldelli & I certainly don't have the answer as much as I'm looking for answers & like the Twins to be better at it. And if they aren't successful at it should they change their philosophy or approach? Should they PH less? I'm asking for your opinion,




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