Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins News & Analysis

    Twins 11, Cubs 1: Twins Power Past Cubs


    Hans Birkeland

    After losing a late inning lead the night before, the Twins needed to get a lead early against second year starter Hayden Wesneski, a “quirky” pitcher with a lot of east-west in his game. They accomplished that and then some, hanging seven runs on Wesneski, including four home runs. Joe Ryan went six scoreless for the win.

    Image courtesy of Jordan Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    Starting Pitcher: Joe Ryan 6 IP 4 H 0 ER 1 BB 10 K (102 Pitches, 76 Strikes, 74.5%)
    Home Runs: Kirilloff, 2 (2), Gallo (8), Polanco (3), Correa (6)
    Top 3 WPA: Ryan (0.203), Kirilloff (0.149), Gallo (0.124) 

    Win Probability Chart (Via Fangraphs):

    image.png

    Joe Ryan navigates pesky Cubs lineup
    Coming off of two straight non-wins, Joe Ryan was in decent form, establishing his fastball early and showing his usual excellent command. He allowed the leadoff hitter to reach in the second, third and fourth, but pitched around trouble with some key strikeouts, most of them on the fastball. Ryan finished strong, including striking out Ian Happ, Cody Bellinger and Seiya Suzuki consecutively in his final inning. Maybe he’s really good?

    Toward the middle of Ryan’s outing, Cubs’ hitters were able to get on top of his fastball on a few occasions, with Eric Hosmer demolishing a high fastball for a foul ball in the second, Bellinger just missing a home run in the third and Christopher Morel flying out to deep left in the fourth. It may have seemed that a stiff breeze at Target Field was suppressing fly balls, but a couple of Twins surely disproved that theory.

    An atypical 1-2 punch
    With Max Kepler hitting the injured list, and Byron Buxton taking a much-needed day off, the Twins were left with an interesting decision on who would lead off the game. Joey Gallo ended up being the choice, with the resurgent Alex Kirilloff behind him. Gallo absolutely demolished a high fastball 110 MPH to lead off the game, but hit it way too high in the air, eventually settling in right fielder Suzuki’s glove.

    Kirilloff continued his run of quality at-bats while looking at his most vintage in the first inning, lacing an outside fastball to the opposite field for a 102 MPH home run to start the scoring. That would count for his first extra base hit of the year. Not to be outdone, Gallo made up for his near miss by crushing a three-run bomb in the third that apparently broke statcast, because no exit velocity was provided on Baseball Savant.

    Kirilloff made sure to get the last word by depositing a Wesneski slider over the center field wall for his second home run, this one at 101 MPH. He added a fifth-inning double for good measure to raise his slugging percentage to .875. He may not be 100% with his wrist, but he sure looks like a lineup savior at this point.

    Trevor Larnach makes his return
    You could have blinked and missed Trevor Larnach’s demotion to Triple-A St. Paul. Returning to the lineup, Larnach resumed his struggles identifying pitches. In the first, Hayden Wesneski went sweeper, slider, cutter, cutter to strike Larnach out. In the third, he fisted a Wesneski fastball over a drawn-in shortstop for a broken bat single. In the fifth he battled a tiring Wesneski for seven pitches and ended up striking out on a well-located cutter.

    Willi Castro starts rally by not being aggressive
    The Twins four run third inning was almost snuffed out before it started, as Willi Castro golfed a line drive down the right field line and was smelling a triple. With Suzuki picking the ball up quickly, his throw was almost to second base as Castro was rounding it. He smartly picked up Tommy Watkins' stop sign and retreated back for a leadoff double. Ryan Jeffers (now hitting .292 after going 2-2 with a walk and hit-by-pitch) then walked before Gallo broke the game open with his three-run bomb to right-center.

    What’s Next
    Louie Varland (0-0, 4.32 ERA) tries to get the Twins a series win facing veteran Marcus Stroman (2-3, 2.28 ERA). Varland is coming off his best outing of the year, holding the talented Padres lineup to one run over six innings on Tuesday.

    Postgame Interviews

    Bullpen Usage Chart:

      TUE WED THU FRI SAT TOT
    Jax 18 17 0 26 0 61
    Alcala 23 0 0 33 0 56
    Sands 0 0 0 0 54 54
    Pagán 24 0 12 0 0 36
    Stewart 0 9 25 0 0 34
    Morán 0 0 0 9 24 33
    Lopez 0 17 15 0 0 32
    Durán 0 17 0 0 0 17
     

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Gabriel Gonzalez

    St. Paul Saints - AAA, OF/1B
    On Friday night at CHS Field, Gabby went 2-for-3 in both ends of the Saints doubleheader. He played 1B in Game 1 and was in Right Field for the second game.

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    59 minutes ago, JDubs said:

    He currently has a .906 OPS, good for a 146 OPS+. One of the many reasons batting average is not a good stat to rely on is that it drastically undervalues power relative to contact. If you only get one hit every 5 at bats but that hit goes 500 feet, that's a lot more valuable than 2 singles in those 5 at bats.

    Right?

    Poor Joey and his 199 BA. If he keeps playing like this, he’ll be lucky to get a contract worth more than $60M this off-season.😉

    4 hours ago, Whitey333 said:

    Gallo hits a mammoth homerun and people forget he is hitting around 190 which is near his 199 CAREER.  I sure hope the offense can be more consistently good than bad.  Go Twins

    Gallo is who he is. He's never going to get a ton of hits, but as hard as he hits the ball he's going to get a high % of doubles and HRs. He's drawing walks, he's hitting for power, and he's got an OPS+ of 143 while playing gold-glove caliber defense. He doesn't need to hit .250 to be a plus for the offense; he just can't be down at .160 like he was in NY and LA, with a serious power outage. Despite the low BA, he's still got one of the best OBPs on the roster.

    5 hours ago, Bigfork Twins Guy said:

    Did you see the diving almost catch Gordon made yesterday?  I fear Buck would have attempted the same and maybe came up limping or like a few years back come up with a concussion.  Taylor also has made a few of those short diving catches.

    If Buxton can refrain from putting himself in danger of an injury (meaning playing less aggressive) then yeah, put him out there.  If he cannot refrain, then keep him in the DH spot (he's on track for over 500 AB's) and let our other competent CF's handle the field.

    Catches that other's dive for, Buck can catch on the run. 

    Buck in CF means someone better than Taylor (or Gordon) can hit in the lineup.

    There is always a risk for injury but he is worth FAAAAAAAAR less as a player being DH only. 




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...