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    Twins 13, Red Sox 6: This Team is Hot

    A relentless early barrage powered the Twins to their seventh win in eight games

    Matthew Taylor
    Image courtesy of © Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    Starting Pitcher:
    Bailey Ober 6 IP, 7 H, 4 ER, 7 SO, 1 BB (95 pitches, 68 strikes)
    Home Runs: Jeffers (2), Buxton (1), Kreidler (1), Caratini (1)
    Top 3 WPA: Brooks Lee 0.11, Ryan Jeffers 0.10, Bailey Ober 0.09
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs):

    image.png

    The Twins came into Monday night with a distinction few guessed they would hold at any point this season: They were the hottest team in baseball.

    After entering the season with low expectations, Minnesota returned home from a weekender in Toronto having won six of their last seven games. That stretch included a four-game sweep of the heavily favored Detroit Tigers and a series win on the road against the reigning American League champions. The competition wasn’t letting up, though, with one of the game’s premier left-handed pitchers waiting on the mound.

    Garrett Crochet entered the game as the reigning American League Cy Young runner-up, fresh off a strong outing against Milwaukee. On paper, it looked like a tough matchup for a Twins lineup that many questioned heading into the season, particularly against left-handed pitching. Through the first couple weeks, though, Minnesota has proved capable against top arms like Tarik Skubal and Framber Valdez.

    They did it again on Monday night, and then some. The Twins jumped on Crochet immediately in the first inning. Austin Martin and Luke Keaschall opened the game with back-to-back doubles, setting the tone. A couple of Red Sox miscues made things worse for them, and by the time it was over, the Twins had pushed four runs across the plate.

    They didn’t slow down in the second. Ryan Jeffers lined a bases-loaded RBI single. Josh Bell followed with a two-run double, and then the power surge arrived. Victor Caratini left the yard, and Ryan Kreidler delivered the loudest swing of the night—a 438-foot blast into the second deck. It was just the third home run of Kreidler’s career, in nearly 400 plate appearances, and it blew the game wide-open: 11-0, before some fans had even settled in.

    Crochet had no answers. The Twins tagged him for nine hits and 10 earned runs without a single strikeout in just an inning and two-thirds. It was one of the most impressive offensive showings against an elite pitcher in recent memory.

    The offense kept rolling even after Crochet exited. In the fifth inning, Byron Buxton launched his first home run of the season, becoming Target Field's home run leader in the process. Then Ryan Jeffers added another, giving him a three-hit, three-RBI night that pushed his early season OPS to .952.

    All that run support made for a relatively low-stress night for Bailey Ober. The right-hander has faced his share of questions early this season, particularly with a dip in velocity, but Monday offered some encouraging signs. Ober worked six innings, allowing four runs on seven hits while striking out seven. He generated 13 whiffs and saw his fastball tick up to 89.4 mph, a noticeable jump from his season average. It wasn’t dominant, but it was progress.

    The biggest damage against Ober came on a two-run home run from Jarren Duran in the third inning, but with the offense providing such a cushion, it never felt like the game was slipping.

    Eric Orze ran into some trouble in the seventh, allowing a pair of runs, but the outcome was never truly in doubt. Garrett Acton handled the final two innings, helping the Twins preserve the bullpen and close out a 13-6 win.

    The victory pushes Minnesota to 9-7 on the season and marks their seventh win in their last eight games. For a team that entered the year with modest expectations, the early stretch has been eye-opening.

    What's Next

    The Twins will look to keep it going Tuesday evening, as they aim for their third straight series win. Mick Abel is set to take the mound against an old friend, Sonny Gray, with first pitch scheduled for 6:40 PM CT.

    Postgame Interview

    Bullpen Usage Report

      THU FRI SAT SUN MON TOT
    Morris 0 0 0 67 0 67
    Banda 0 36 0 0 0 36
    Funderburk 0 0 17 0 0 17
    Acton 35 0 0 0 33 35
    Topa 0 12 0 12 0 24
    Sands 0 0 22 0 0 22
    Rogers 0 30 0 0 0 30
    Orze 14 0 0 0 23 14

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    Featured Comments

    3 hours ago, Coach Wheels said:

    The longest streak of healthy games for Lewis in his career is 35; according to Google. I'm not sure how he continues to be someone we count on.

    This 💯.  What is the 'tool' we keep  being patient for?  Byron... many.  Royce?  Unfortunately none.  I'm not sure his contract but let it ride or trade him.  (and I like the kid - it just didn't work out)

    2 minutes ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Spent a bunch of time in Brazil & married a Brazilian & lived there for over 30 years. I've tried to follow the Twins the best I can,

    This is interesting to me. I know we are not a political discussion platform, but I am curious to know what most Brazilians feel about the turmoil here in the "City on a Hill" as Ronald Reagan called the USA, and which originated in Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. I feel so disappointed in my country's leaders and those who voted for them. Maybe you could send me a private message, if you want to or reply to my email: cdbenbow4@gmail.com.

    3 hours ago, tarheeltwinsfan said:

    Welcome back from Brazil Doc. Were you able to escape, or did your sentence just time out?

    Doc, I did not intend for my post to read as if I were saying Brazil was a prison or not a wonderful place to be. I was just trying to be funny by implying that you had been locked up in jail for a crime. I have read my post again and I realized it really wasn't funny and may have insulted Brazil. I assure you that was not my intention. I  apologize for my  indiscretion. . 

    1 hour ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Seriously? If ANYONE on the staff is in the 5th - 6th - 7th innings without surrendering a run (in any season) nor having any dips in velocity, they aren’t getting pulled. This is the 2026 Taj Bradley profile.

    Bradley & Ryan’s actual RESULTS are what’s driving innings - Abel’s scoreless 6 last week - Ober’s last two outings with a bit of success - same with SWR when sharp.

    Not sure what you don’t get about having a MUCH, Much stronger PEN in ‘25, at least through July. If one has a strong PEN (strength of the Club) one uses it………regardless of the Manager’s name.

    After July deadline they had Bradley (mediocre) Festa - Matthews (both hurt off & on) - Abel a couple starts - ………….guys that are tender or not getting hitters out are going to get pulled, again, regardless of Team nor Manager’s name.

    You gotta substantiate the, “even with big leads Rocco had a quick hook” …….just saying things doesn’t make them true.

    When a manager has little choice with a fairly putrid PEN, he’s going to lean on starters for innings.

    SWR has entered the chat.  Here is an extreme example that Rocco likely pulled his starters too early.  Minnesota Twins vs Houston Astros Box Score: June 15, 2025 | Baseball-Reference.com

    SWR on the mound goes 5 innings, 58 pitches, 38 strikes, only faces 17 batters.  Not even twice through the order!  SWR has only given up 1 walk, 1 hit, and 4 K's and still gets pulled after 5 innings.  Most conventions would suggest, even in a 1-0 Twins lead at the time, that he gets to keep pitching until the Astros show some signs of life.  Twins went to the bullpen, and even with their studs in the bullpen coming in (Stewart, Varland, and Duran), still cough up the lead and eventually lose.  I would suggest that Rocco's lack of trust in his starters led to the overuse of the bullpen.  When you overuse anything in life, they are prone to being broken down eventually.  Shelton has worse starters, by comparison, and his trust in his starters have kept the bullpen as fresh as they can be considering they are nearing the end of a streak of 15 days without a day off.

    I use the late 2010's Cleveland teams as my example.  They had a great starting staff of Kluber, Bauer, Carrasco, and Tomlin.  They also had great relievers like Shaw, Allan, Miller, and McAllister.  The hype at the time was that all they had to do was get through the 6th inning with the lead and the game was essentially over.  A great starting staff that could go at least 6 innings in a game helped shorten the game for them and make the bullpen more efficient and effective. 

    The AB’s look more competitive overall. Not too many times do you see Twins hitters getting themselves out. It looks like they’re taking more pitches outside the zone, being patient, and making more contact during this winning streak. They look more confident at the plate instead of over their heads. I think that confidence comes from the success they’ve had. We’ll see if they can maintain the confidence when they go through a slump. 
    Love the aggressive baserunning. I’ve seen attempts at bunting and hit-run! I think Shelton keeps them focused on advancing runners and keeping the line moving. Fun to watch! 

    If they can keep winning despite the BP and poor defense remains to be seen….

    12 minutes ago, Western SD Fan said:

    SWR has entered the chat.  Here is an extreme example that Rocco likely pulled his starters too early.  Minnesota Twins vs Houston Astros Box Score: June 15, 2025 | Baseball-Reference.com

    SWR on the mound goes 5 innings, 58 pitches, 38 strikes, only faces 17 batters.  Not even twice through the order!  SWR has only given up 1 walk, 1 hit, and 4 K's and still gets pulled after 5 innings.  Most conventions would suggest, even in a 1-0 Twins lead at the time, that he gets to keep pitching until the Astros show some signs of life.  Twins went to the bullpen, and even with their studs in the bullpen coming in (Stewart, Varland, and Duran), still cough up the lead and eventually lose.  I would suggest that Rocco's lack of trust in his starters led to the overuse of the bullpen.  When you overuse anything in life, they are prone to being broken down eventually.  Shelton has worse starters, by comparison, and his trust in his starters have kept the bullpen as fresh as they can be considering they are nearing the end of a streak of 15 days without a day off.

    I use the late 2010's Cleveland teams as my example.  They had a great starting staff of Kluber, Bauer, Carrasco, and Tomlin.  They also had great relievers like Shaw, Allan, Miller, and McAllister.  The hype at the time was that all they had to do was get through the 6th inning with the lead and the game was essentially over.  A great starting staff that could go at least 6 innings in a game helped shorten the game for them and make the bullpen more efficient and effective. 

    Again, spot on. Plus there is the common sense notion that if your starter is dealing to bring in a reliever brings in the possibility that he just doesn’t have that day and coughs up a lead. They are human they aren’t always going to be good so ride the guy that’s having a good day (within reason). 

    49 minutes ago, tarheeltwinsfan said:

    This is interesting to me. I know we are not a political discussion platform, but I am curious to know what most Brazilians feel about the turmoil here in the "City on a Hill" as Ronald Reagan called the USA, and which originated in Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. I feel so disappointed in my country's leaders and those who voted for them. Maybe you could send me a private message, if you want to or reply to my email: cdbenbow4@gmail.com.

    We could also message on our TD account. I do that off & on with other members

    53 minutes ago, tarheeltwinsfan said:

    Doc, I did not intend for my post to read as if I were saying Brazil was a prison or not a wonderful place to be. I was just trying to be funny by implying that you had been locked up in jail for a crime. I have read my post again and I realized it really wasn't funny and may have insulted Brazil. I assure you that was not my intention. I  apologize for my  indiscretion. . 

    I know you, Tarheel. I thought it was funny & wasn't offended. 

    15 hours ago, Wedman13 said:

    Haha

    typical MN response (from me) "I know it's really early in the year" but is it possible Rocco was simply an awful manager?  I think most liked him, me included, but somewhere along the way it feels like he lost concept.  We can debate MW all day but if in the lineup, should Rocco had him as lead off hitter? Probably not fair to Matt.   The lineups changed every single day.  A starter couldn't go more than 4-5 innings.

    no idea where this ends, but as and old timer it's fun to watch baseball played again the way I was raised with.

    It's also possible there were some club house cancers traded away last deadline and the youngsters are happy to be playing for a different manager. Ducks.

    27 minutes ago, laloesch said:

    I agree.  Sign Jeffers and Ryan now.  If not they have to trade them.

    A catcher whose caught stealing average is almost 50 percent  below league average, does not get extended.

    He would be signed for a not extreme amount when the time comes.

    10 hours ago, Twins_Fan_in_NJ said:

    Hard to believe Buck makes 'only' $15M.

    He has incentives and he might of hit on some last year for games played and at bats , he just missed out on a MVP incentive by finishing 11th  , had they voted him 10th he would of made 1 million , if he was to finish first in mvp it is much more significant like 5 million plus ...

    8 hours ago, tarheeltwinsfan said:

    Great information. I imagine Shelton's allowing the starters to go deeper in the game, is a good confidence booster to the starters and also to the rest of the team too. The better you produce, the more you will play. Results driven rewards breed success. Noted psychologist, B.F. Skinner, would have agreed. Positive rewards, lead to positive achievements. Rewards can be money, compliments, or even more playing time.

    Tonight is another example. Abel had a 6-0 lead after 81 pitches through 6 innings. I am 95% certain Rocco would have called it a night for him. Instead, Shelton sent him back out and he had a 9 pitch 7th inning. 

    Keep in mind that Abel has been their 'weakest link' so far - why wouldn't you just call it a great night after 6 innings? I'm pretty sure that is what Rocco would have done. Instead, he gets the 7th and finishes it off in style with 10 Ks. It's great for his confidence.

    9 hours ago, arby58 said:

    Tonight is another example. Abel had a 6-0 lead after 81 pitches through 6 innings. I am 95% certain Rocco would have called it a night for him. Instead, Shelton sent him back out and he had a 9 pitch 7th inning. 

    Keep in mind that Abel has been their 'weakest link' so far - why wouldn't you just call it a great night after 6 innings? I'm pretty sure that is what Rocco would have done. Instead, he gets the 7th and finishes it off in style with 10 Ks. It's great for his confidence.

    I agree 100%.




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