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    Rangers 6, Twins 5: No Sweep in Texas as Twins Leave Victory on the Basepaths


    Steven Trefz

    The Minnesota Twins had every opportunity to defeat the Texas Rangers on Sunday afternoon. They didn't, and by the end of this week Twins fans should know whether or not it mattered.

    Image courtesy of Jerome Miron - USA Today

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    Starting Pitcher: Kenta Maeda - 5 IP, 9 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 3 K (80 Pitches, 50 Strikes, 62.5% Strikes)
    Home Runs: Royce Lewis (10)
    Bottom WPA: Josh Winder (-.361), Cole Sands (-.276), Christian Vazquez (-.258)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

    image.png.9dece5f5406582dbaf8c48e310e93ebd.png

    The Twins looked to sweep the Rangers in their final preview for round one of the playoffs. Jon Gray took the hill for Texas, and Kenta Maeda countered for Minnesota. The Sunday matinee saw former Twins and new Twins star in the action, but ultimately the former Twins outlasted the current squad, and the twelve Twins left on base and six arms left in the bullpen tell the story of the game.

    Maeda Doesn't Like Garv-Sauce
    Texas attacked the scoreboard first again on Sunday, with former Twins catcher Mitch Garver delicately placing a Maeda slider that didn't slide just far enough into the left field bleachers. To make matters worse, Garver did this mean-spirited thing with two runners on, making the score 3-0 Rangers before Twins fans were even warmed up.

    With nine pitchers getting used on Saturday, a short start wasn't an option for Maeda. Maeda continued to give up contact and walks, seven hits and two walks in only three innings of work to be specific. And yet, Maeda was able to elicit ground outs and weak contact to escape these threats, keeping the Twins within striking distance as the game headed into the middle innings.

    Twins Offense Doesn't Like Gray-Sauce
    Edouard Julien led off the game with a double off of the wall in left field. The Twins didn't generate another hit against Gray until the top of the fourth when Carlos Correa smacked a single to center. Gray continually fooled the batters, with four of his early strikeouts being on called third strikes. Andrew Stevenson tried to bounce one off of Gray's pitching hand, and reached when Gray couldn't corral it in. He got Christian Vazquez to swing and miss, however, ending the threat in the fourth on his seventh strikeout for the day. 

    Royce Lewis Needs a Sauce, and Twins Fans Would Buy All of It
    In the top of the fifth inning, Julien got his second hit of the game with one out. Jorge Polanco followed with a walk. Lewis followed by ripping a foul ball straight backward into the home plate umpire's face. After a short delay, everyone got back into their positions, and Lewis straightened it out this time to tie the game at 3-3.

    The Twins weren't done yet, Correa singled, Matt Wallner laced a 144 mph missile to right field (OK... 114 mph), and a jut-out in the foul territory fence saved a run by funneling the ball directly to the right fielder. After a Stevenson walk, the Twins were on the verge of breaking things wide open with the bases loaded and two outs. Christian Vazquez stepped up to the plate... and then sat back down after striking out as the Twins had to settle with the tie.

    Who's Left in the Bullpen?
    Not many relievers didn't see action Saturday night for both squads, so when Maeda and Gray exited after five innings each, the Twins and Rangers scrambled to find a way to complete the ballgame. The Rangers went to lefty Brock Burke in the top of the sixth, and struck out two more Twins for a quick inning. The Twins went to long-man Cole Sands, and he mowed through his first two opponents quickly as well. Then, Sands walked Marcus Semien, gave up a single to Corey Seager, walked Nathaniel Lowe, and chucked a baseball behind Adolis Garcia's back that allowed Semien to score to give the Rangers a 4-3 lead. 31 pitches later, Garcia struck out and the Twins turned to the last third of the game needing a comeback.

    Burke stayed in for the top of the seventh, and Lewis and Max Kepler greeted him with singles to knock him out of the game. Chris Stratton came in next and Correa hit a Metrodome classic to left to tie the game 4-4.

    The Twins once again failed to knock in the go-ahead run, as Stevenson and Vazquez both bounced out to first base to end yet another threat. 10 runners left on base through seven innings usually comes back to bite at team, and it didn't take long for that big bite to take place. Again, it tasted like Garv-sauce.

    Royce-sauce!
    The Twins' hopes for a comeback again rested on Lewis, who came up with one down and two on in the top of the eighth inning after Jordan Luplow and Polanco worked excellent patience into consecutive walks off of Jose Leclerc. Once again, Royce-sauce delivered a delicious swing to plate Luplow and knot the game 5-5. Will Smith then entered the game to neutralize Kepler, only to walk him to load the bases after a successful double steal to put the go ahead run at third with less than two outs. Correa was next man up, and he neutralized Kepler himself by bouncing into his 29th double play and leaving another couple of Twins on the pond.

    The bottom of the eighth saw lefty Kody Funderburk take the mound for the Twins, and things looked bleak after Leody Taveras ripped a lead-off double. Kody brought the Funder though, and stranded Taveras at third (after getting Semien, Seager and Lowe) to send the game to the ninth still tied. Willi Castro made his reappearance in the lineup by pinch-hitting for Wallner in the top of the ninth, and Kyle Farmer pinch-hit for Stevenson as well, and neither found a way to hit in a pinch en route to a no-run inning. 

    Josh Winder was called upon to get the Twins into extra innings again, but that hope didn't last long as Adolis Garcia wiped away his 0-4 day with one big swing to send Rangers fans home happy and Twins fans to their phones to check the Guardians score.

    Until We Meet Again...
    If the playoffs began today, the Rangers would travel to Target Field as a wild card participant. Between now and October 3rd will be much scoreboard watching and hand-wringing by both clubs. The Twins took five of seven from the Rangers during the regular season, and could have won them all. They also could have easily gone two and five, with many close games and bullpen issues all around. This potential matchup could be the best the Twins could hope for to beat their playoff curse, but the rest of this week will go a long ways towards determining if they get that chance at first place in the first place.

    Post-Game Interview

    What’s Next?
    The Twins open their last series against the Guardians on Tuesday, with RHP Pablo Lopez (9-7, 3.72 ERA) facing new Guardians waiver man RHP Lucas Giolito (7-11, 4.45 ERA). Giolito managed going 1-4 with a 7.24 ERA in August for the Angels, but when with the White Sox he faced the Twins three times and only surrendered two runs over 18 innings. Which version of Giolito will be standing on the mound Tuesday? First pitch at Cleveland is scheduled for 5:10pm CDT.

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

      WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT
    Durán 20 0 9 21 0 50
    Sands 0 0 0 0 50 50
    Funderburk 8 0 0 9 14 31
    Thielbar 16 0 8 6 0 30
    Jax 8 0 11 7 0 26
    Pagán 0 0 0 24 0 24
    Headrick 0 0 0 15 0 15
    Winder 0 0 0 6 5 11
    Floro 0 0 0 8 0 8
                 

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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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    14 hours ago, darwin22 said:

     A few thoughts after a frustrating loss today:

    1. Thinking back to consecutive road losses at MIL (8-22/23) with the prospect of 7 games against TX, I was HOPING for a home split and 1 road W.  Now that we've completed those 7 games, I would say like most fans, I'm extremely happy winning 5 of those 7 games.

    2.  What is the MLB record for most GIDP in 1 season?  Correa has to be getting close to that dubious achievement.

    3.   How long of a rope does Kuechel have moving forward as a member of rotation?

    I think he's earned another start despite getting lit up in his last start.  Keuchel has alternated very good starts (Game 1 vs. AZ and game 3 vs. PIT) with 2 horrible outings (starts at PHI and the other night vs. TX).  In between those starts, he entered in relief of a very ineffective Ober and tossed 5 shutout innings in a game the Twins came back to win.

    His upcoming start against the White Sox is make or break, imo, with Ober sitting ready at SP.  From what I've seen, Ober has NOT pitched at all for SP.  Hopefully the rest will get him the reset he needed.

    Finally...

    4.  Are there others that are sick and tired of seeing Vazquez continue to fail on a daily basis when he's in lineup?  I know he hit a key solo HR last night, but his performance today was BRUTAL.  It was really "Gallo-esque" in terms of futility. 0-5 this afternoon with 2 Ks--both in key spots--runners on 1st and 2nd in 4th and with bases loaded in 5th.

    At the time of his signing, I was "ok" with it, especially after watching Sanchez's mercurial performance last season.  I was surprised with the $$ amount (3yrs/ $30m), but understood it as management expected a rebound from him.  Furthermore, Jeffers had done nothing BEFORE this season to establish himself as the bona fide #1 catcher.  

    Now that Jeffers has done that, my question is---Does the front office have the guts to ADMIT THEIR MISTAKE and release him in the off season?  Considering our FO has failed to admit their OBVIOUS ERROR in signing Gallo, I doubt seeing ownership eating the remaining $20m owed to Vazquez.

    Saying that---should Vazquez get released, I believe 2 catchers in our system warrant the opportunity to serve as Jeffers backup next season:

    Prospect #1:  Jair Camargo/ Age 24. Acquired with Maeda in 2020 trade from Dodgers.  RH bat that, I believe has spent the entire season at SP with the following numbers:  AVG: .247, HR- 18, RBI-56, OBP- .315.  

    No idea of his defensive abilities--strengths or weaknesses.

    Prospect #2:   Alex Isola/ Age 25.  Rd. 29 pick in 2019 amateur draft.  RH bat.  Played all season at AA Wichita with the following offensive stats:  .271 avg, 18 HR, 54 RBI with a .361 OBP.

    I know my last point isn't a concern to many at this point in the year, but I'm beyond ready to jettison Vazquez off this team for 2024.

     

     

    Vazquez is a veteran, a career .270 BA guy, a winner, good chemistry guy & his high energy all matter. Solid defense - not supreme but solid. On the statistics side, Camargo’s .247 BA in St. Paul doesn’t translate to any better than Vazquez’ .226 BA in the Show. He’s overpaid at his current level of offense, no doubt, but he would be considered an excellent back-up/2nd catcher in the game. Other than Texas, I don’t know of any other team with two good offensive catchers? Can’t release a solid guy & pay him $10M a year at a position where depth is king. Knock on wood, we’re lucky neither catcher has been out more than a couple days this season!

    Gallo had a terrible history & we took a shot - a failure in the big picture - couple cool highlights, that’s it. Vazquez had a solid history and we were a bit desperate for depth so we grabbed a guy at the end of his productive years.

    Farmer - Vazquez - Solano - Taylor………all part of a plan to have experienced depth when needed. Been working - not perfect but effective.

    14 hours ago, Alex Wilde said:

    It’ll end up being around a 60/40 split next year between Jeffers and Vasquez. There is still plenty of value to have a solid veteran catcher on the roster even if he is being overpaid.

    Honest question, what makes you think based on the history of this front office that it will be a 60/40 split next year.  Why wouldn't they have done it already this year when Jeffers has earned the additional playing time.  This front office values veterans regardless of production over younger better producing players i.e. Gallo over Wallner earlier this year.  I believe this should be the split at a minimum but will believe it when I see it.

    1 hour ago, MMMordabito said:

    Cleveland has to play better than .600 baseball with a harder schedule while the Twins play worse than .440 baseball with an easier schedule for this to fall apart. 

    Yes the Twins have the easier schedule but this year's team has had a tendency to play down to their opponents.  Remember the KC sweep and losing 3 of 4 to Detroit.  So I don't think it's a given based on the schedule.  We need to put these teams away.

    18 hours ago, SotaSports said:

    Correa and his GIDPs have cost us multiple games at this point. That's aside from the fact that he basically just uses a whiffle ball bat at the plate whenever there are runners in scoring position. Dude just really doesn't have it together when it matters. How non-clutch can he be (I know, I know - he did drive in one earlier in the game...)??

    Winder served up a delicious meatball with imported Italian meat to Garcia. He falls behind in the count too often and then forces pitches (of course you can say that about many pitchers, though the Twins employ too many of them). Nonetheless, I think Winder is a much safer bet than Sands assuming we do make it to October.

    Ok, I'm going to leave my mini-rant at that. On the plus side, Gallo didn't strike out! Not even once!

    I'm seriously ready to have Correa bunt with two runners on, even with one out. This is getting ridiculous.

    14 hours ago, DJL44 said:

    You left out getting caught stealing twice as a pinch runner. His splits are interesting that he's hit much better in Twins wins (,880 OPS) than in losses (.564). I'd say that he's directly to blame for many of those losses because of his lack of production.

    His fault or Rocco for playing him?

    21 hours ago, darwin22 said:

    2.  What is the MLB record for most GIDP in 1 season?  Correa has to be getting close to that dubious achievement.

    I believe the Twins record was held by some guy named Killebrew.  Obviously his career didn't last long. . .

    6 hours ago, Swing Batter-Batter said:

    His fault or Rocco for playing him?

    Or his parents for having him? Or the asteroid for wiping out the dinosaurs and enabling mammals to eventually evolve into humans? Could be many possibilities.




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