Twins Video
Box Score:
Starting Pitcher: Connor Prielipp: 4 1/3 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 1 BB 7 K (77 Pitches, 51 Strikes, 66%)
Home Runs: Josh Bell (6)
Bottom 3 WPA: Andrew Morris (-0.36), Brooks Lee (-0.21), Luke Keaschall (-0.11)
Win Probability Chart (Via BaseballSavant):
The Royals came into the year with fairly high expectations, and with today's rubber match, they had a chance to take a series against the Twins—which would, uh, not do that much for their prospects this year, really. Their pitching has been hurt, and their perennially light-hitting offense hasn't done enough to make up for it. However, they did start lefty Noah Cameron, who is a solid young pitcher who has feasted on Minnesota's lineup in the past, including earlier this year.
Connor Prielipp took the mound for the Twins, hoping to bounce back after a series of rough starts. He did manage to pitch into the seventh inning his last time out, and looked good to start his outing today, showing good command of his slider-fastball combination. Through three innings, Prielipp had five strikeouts, one hit allowed, and finished the third by making Bobby Witt Jr. look foolish on a curveball below the zone for a weak-swing strike three.
By then, the Twins had taken the lead. Kody Clemens, now the Twins' best hitter when Byron Buxton sits, led off with a sharp single to right. He stole second during the at-bat of starting first baseman Royce Lewis, who would eventually dribble a grounder to Witt—who inexplicably booted the ball, allowing Lewis to reach and Clemens to get to third base. Ryan Kreidler battled Cameron and eventually grounded a ball to the 5.5-hole that Witt could only record one out on. Twins 1, Royals 0.
Prielipp's command wavered a bit in the fourth, perhaps due to the Twins lineup going down 1-2-3 in about 15 seconds in the bottom of the third. Maikel García rifled a liner right to Clemens in left field for a fortunate out, but Vinnie Pasquantino doubled on a fastball, and Nick Loftin doubled the opposite way on another heater to tie the game.
Prielipp allowed another hit to lefty Carter Jensen to begin the fifth, and after striking out pinch-runner extraordinaire Tyler Tolbert trying to bunt with two strikes, he was relieved in favor of Andrew Morris with the top of the order coming up. Although Morris was able to strike out Witt, that was sandwiched by singles to Lane Thomas and García, the latter bringing in Jensen for the go-ahead run. He then faced the shriveled husk of Starling Marte, who had struck out feebly against Prielipp twice, but this time, he got a sinker to his liking on the inner half and crushed it 441 feet, breaking the game wide open.
Cameron looked done after the fifth inning, but the Royals coaching staff coaxed another inning out of him while the Twins lineup offered no resistance—literally, since all three hitters struck out. The seventh and eighth innings were more of the same. Fourteen Twins hitters were retired in a row between the fourth and eighth innings.
That would end in the ninth, when Orlando Arcia led off with a walk, Clemens flipped a single to left, and Josh Bell yanked a three-run home run to offer a glimmer of hope against Royals rookie Beck Way. Trevor Larnach then blooped a double to left, which prompted the Royals to turn to their closer, Lucas Erceg.
It wouldn't end there. Victor Caratini pinch-hit for Jackson and singled to score Larnach, and Tristan Gray followed with a bloop single to bring up Brooks Lee. Leemade good contact, but flied out to the warning track in left field to end the game.
Stuff I'm Tracking:
- Lewis showed a little more fight in his at-bats. He was able to make contact on his first plate appearance, leading to Witt's error. In his second trip to the plate, Lewis fell behind 0-2, and although his takes looked pretty flinchy, he worked the count to 3-2 before lining a ball to left field for a sharp single (112 MPH). He lined out in the seventh, albeit with a .560 expected batting average.
- Morris just hasn't been able to string good outings together. You get the sense that if he threw just a little harder and had just a little more depth on his breaking stuff, he could carve out a career as an impact reliever, but as he is, there isn't enough swing-and-miss. Maybe he could carve out a career as a bulk pitcher for a team with a big ballpark, or a better defense.
- Teams are not afraid to throw Austin Martin strikes as his offensive numbers continue to plummet. With Matt Wallner heating up at Triple-A St. Paul (.896 OPS), you wonder if a switch could be coming.
- Witt struck out three times and made the error that led to the Twins' first run. Opponents should win when that happens, considering the dearth of talent surrounding the star shortstop. He was removed in the seventh with right knee soreness, which might explain the off day.
What’s Next: The Twins head to Detroit to face the struggling Tigers. Taj Bradley (5-2, 3.56 ERA) faces Troy Melton (2-0, 1.74 ERA) in the opener, as Bradley looks to prove his health and the Tigers try to escape the cellar of the AL Central.
Postgame Interviews:
Bullpen Usage Chart:
| WED | THU | FRI | SAT | SUN | TOT | |
| Morris | 0 | 48 | 0 | 0 | 41 | 89 |
| Laweryson | 26 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 36 | 62 |
| Orze | 26 | 16 | 0 | 17 | 0 | 59 |
| Lawrence | 19 | 24 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 55 |
| Paredes | 0 | 50 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 50 |
| Rogers | 12 | 11 | 0 | 15 | 0 | 38 |
| Gómez | 0 | 18 | 0 | 14 | 0 | 32 |
| Banda | 0 | 8 | 14 | 0 | 0 | 22 |
| Adams | 0 | 0 | 16 | 0 | 0 | 16 |







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