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    Twins 4, Diamondbacks 2: Offense Wakes Up Just in Time, Bullpen Locks It Down, Twins Take Series

    The Twins couldn't score against a rookie making his MLB debut, but rallied against a tough Arizona bullpen in the seventh and ninth innings to take a lead they would not surrender. Mike Paredes and the bullpen kept the Diamondbacks scoreless over the last seven innings in the series winning victory.

    Hans Birkeland
    Image courtesy of © Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score:
    Starting Pitcher:
    Mike Paredes: 5 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 1 K (75 Pitches, 47 Strikes, 62.6%)
    Home Runs: None
    Top 3 WPA: Alex Jackson (0.42), Yoendrys Gómez (0.14), Josh Bell (0.12)
    Win Probability Chart (Via BaseballSavant):
    ,

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    The Twins are cooking offensively, and as a result, they have a 7-3 record in their past 10 games. Their 384 runs scored are second to the Yankees in the American League, and they are 1.5 games out of a Wild Card spot. Royce Lewis posting a .900 OPS since his return from a demotion has certainly helped, but Brooks Lee, Trevor Larnach, Luke Keaschall and Kody Clemens have also played out of their minds to support a pitching staff that has been neither healthy nor effective.

    On that note, Mike Paredes made his third career start today, against the Diamondbacks, and was in trouble from the jump, pitching behind in counts and unable to control his sweeper. He emerged from the first inning unscathed after walking Corbin Carroll and allowing a single to Geraldo Perdomo, but wasn't so lucky in the second. He walked Nolan Arenado to start the frame, then walked Ildemaro Vargas. After a sacrifice bunt (a charitable gesture from Arizona manager Torey Luvullo), Paredes struck out rookie Tommy Troy on a backup sweeper. One out away from escaping yet again, however, the unheralded rookie made one mistake too many. Ketel Marte struck a hanging sweeper pure out to the right-center field gap to score the game's first two runs.

    Meanwhile, the Twins were having all sorts of issues with Jose Cabrera, a right-handed starter making his major-league debut. He stayed in the zone and commanded a nice changeup and sweeper, spiced with a plethora of different fastball shapes. The first six Twins hitters went down easily, and it didn't get much better from there. A hit-by-pitch to Alex Jackson and a bloop double from Larnach put two on for Byron Buxton, but he flailed away at sweepers to keep the Twins scoreless.

    Paredes scuttled along, taking advantage of a weak back half to the Diamondbacks order. Facing Marte for the third time in the fifth, he allowed a laser single to lead off the inning. Perdomo then grounded sharply to Lewis at first, and Lewis made a great relay to second to start a key double play—especially key because Carroll and Gabriel Moreno both singled thereafter. Fortunately, Pavin Smith lined out to left field to end the threat. Somehow, Paredes ended up just giving up the two runs while completing five innings, something all of us would have signed up for.

    Cabrera was done after allowing a leadoff bunt single by Twins catcher Alex Jackson in the sixth. Facing lefty Brandyn Garcia, Larnach also attempted a bunt, a curious decision but one he almost beat out. After Buxton grounded out on the first pitch, Clemens struck out, and the Twins had nine outs to figure out something against the D-Backs bullpen, the strength of their team.

    These Twins aren't super talented, but they are gritty. Facing 100 MPH heat from reliever Juan Morillo, the Twins followed a Lewis single with two quick outs, with Lee striking out on a fastball at his eyes. Ryan Kreidler singled, though. Then Josh Bell pinch-hit for Kyler Fedko and singled to the gap, scoring Lewis. Jackson reached base for the third straight plate appearance, singling through the right side to score Kreidler. Bell tried for third base for some reason, and the throw from Carroll hit Bell's hand, kicking the ball out of play and allowing Bell to score the go-ahead run.

    Andrew Morris got the seventh against the top of the Arizona lineup. He allowed a rocket off the bat of Marte that Clemens made a leaping catch on in center, then walked Perdomo. But Perdomo was caught stealing on a great throw from Jackson, and Carroll struck out to end the inning.

    The Twins got Buxton and Lewis in scoring position in the eighth, but Keaschall was unable to capitalize with two outs, grounding out weakly to keep the lead at one run. This was, of course, no issue for Yoendrys Gómez, who pitched around a leadoff walk to retire the middle of the D-Backs order. He's beginning to look like a revelation.

    Kreidler led off the ninth with a single, followed by a failed Austin Martin pinch-hit bunt attempt in which Kreidler was cut down at second. No matter, as with two outs, Larnach roped a hanging slider into the right-center field gap to score Martin for a much-needed insurance run.

    Anthony Banda was given the save chance, sat 96-97 MPH, and threw strikes for the most part. He's looked a lot better since early May.

    Stuff I'm Tracking:

    • Larnach made such a good diving play to end the second inning, I wanted to mention that his defense isn't great but is serviceable, and he isn't a total butcher out there. Then he misplayed a liner in the sixth that almost led to a crucial third run. In any case, his OBP is .377, and his move to the leadoff spot has paid dividends.
    • Jackson is hitting .317 and contributed the biggest hit of the game. He also caught Perdomo stealing in the eighth, which may have been an even bigger play. Maybe he was worth the half-lavish contract he got, because he's turning out to be more than the emergency backup warm body that contract seemed to buy.
    • Keaschall made a number of diving stops at second base and converted most of them into outs. Hard to say whether he gets better as he gets more reps, or if he will lose range as he gets older. He has posted an OBP-heavy .790 OPS in both May and June, though, and that plays.
    • Kreidler had three more hits, lifting his OPS back above .900. You kinda have to start him every game at this point.
    • If Paredes' game plan was to not touch the zone with anything, he succeeded, and the Diamondbacks had no counter-punch. The only ball that really said "hit me" was the sweeper to Marte. Maybe Paredes has some guile to his game; he'll need it.

    What’s Next: The Twins welcome the World Series champion Dodgers to Target Field, as Zebby Matthews (3-4, 4.78 ERA) faces lefty Eric Lauer (2-5, 5.37 ERA). Lauer has been pretty good since being acquired by L.A. in May, after burning bridges on his way out of Toronto. Matthews has had some encouraging starts and some clunkers, typical of his career thus far, and he will have his work cut out for him facing the Dodgers, who have scored the second-most runs in all of baseball (The Nationals are first??).

    Postgame Interviews: Coming Soon

    Bullpen Usage Chart:

      WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT
    Paredes 0 0 0 0 75 75
    Lawrence 0 18 0 40 0 58
    Laweryson 20 17 5 0 14 56
    Adams 13 0 42 0 0 55
    Orze 0 12 0 24 0 36
    Gómez 0 0 0 7 20 27
    Morris 0 8 0 0 17 25
    Banda 0 0 0 12 10 22
    Rogers 0 15 0 0 0 15

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    Featured Comments

    5 hours ago, karcherd said:

    What recommendations are Zoll making to him.  I don't want Tom P. anywhere near judging what players can help this team. So is Zoll going to hold Tommy accountable for his words.

    I agree…but are you going to leave all of these player decisions to Zoll?  I just can’t trust him (and recent polls and his actions seem to agree).

    After all, it has been Zoll who has been dumpster diving  for all these washed up losers he keeps foisting on Shelton. Can’t we hold Zoll accountable?  Who does if it isn’t Tom?  

    6 hours ago, JADBP said:

    Ok. Here’s an on-site report from the desert:

    1) the food at the Twins field is far superior to Chase Field.  You are lucky, Twins fans!

    2) Other than food, they seem to do a better job of taking care of fans here.  They have free handouts almost every weekend and often more than one.  Yay. Their  “Advantage Fan” system is great—I don’t know of anything comparable in Twins country. And they have a swimming pool in the stadium!  Pricey but interesting. 

    3). Jumbotron is not viewable from large parts of the stadium!  Sucks! And they don’t add n some localized flat screens to make up for it. 
     

    4) The players are not better, they are just playing much better.  Last year the players played like they just don’t care.  This is a far more aggressive team!  I never saw a Rocco team play this hard.   The coaching is great.  
     

    5) the only coaching bumps that I saw in 2 games was leaving in (or letting in) Lawrence.  Sure we were up 16-0 but after 4 walks in a row to start an inning he should have DFA’ed him right then and there from the dugout.  I’m hoping he went straight to Zoll and said “I’ll never call his name again, never ever, so you might as well DFA him because he’s a wasted butt warming a bench from here on forever!”  Who knows?  On the other hand I was worried about Parades today but the coaches stick with him. Overall, I am far more impressed with the coaching now than over the last 10 years.  Not quite piranhas but getting there!!

    6). I thought Buxton had his best year last year but this could be even better!  And Clemons looks like the real deal 

     

    great Games!!

    Clemens is a gamer and a valuable, versatile player who flashed some serious leather in center at a crucial point in Sunday's game. Keep him around.

    2 hours ago, Bracky said:

    Definitely think Buck has been a leader this year. I also do think Shelton is doing a better job with the players than Rocco. 

    Take it for what you will but I have read that Bell has contributed leadership this season as well. Works well with Buck I believe. We do have a couple guys I think that are helping lead the team this year.

    Yeah, you can see Bell's positive interactions in the dugout, etc. He really seems to be a veteran leader, and man is he big: 6' 3" and close to 270, I think!

    5 hours ago, knothole61 said:

    Yeah, you can see Bell's positive interactions in the dugout, etc. He really seems to be a veteran leader, and man is he big: 6' 3" and close to 270, I think!

    Bell has bottom quartile sprint speed, but in the last two days he aggressively took the extra base, scoring on a ground ball single on Saturday and making third and advancing on the overthrow on Sunday. I was surprised he tried both advances and both worked out.

    Bell has to hit to help the team, but both his defense and base running have been better than I expected. Also, he's hit well with runners in scoring position. He's nearly on a 100 RBI pace. and the club hasn't had a 100 RBI guy since the Bamba Squad.

    Did Buck get his first hit this season with a RISP with two outs on that infield single (that didn't score a run)? 🤣

    The broadcasters didn't mention that Brooks broke his consecutive at-bats without a strikeout streak..And struck out again the next time. Funny game. 

    7 hours ago, JADBP said:

    I agree…but are you going to leave all of these player decisions to Zoll?  I just can’t trust him (and recent polls and his actions seem to agree).

    After all, it has been Zoll who has been dumpster diving  for all these washed up losers he keeps foisting on Shelton. Can’t we hold Zoll accountable?  Who does if it isn’t Tom?  

    Who else is there to leave the player decisions to right now.  Zoll is the top guy, this is where I blame the Pohlads, they have left the baseball side rudderless right when they need leadership at a crucial time.  I don't want Tom P. saying I want prospect x instead of prospect y in a trade, what expertise does he have for that.  

    How do we hold Zoll accountable any more than we could hold Falvey accountable.  I have been saying for a couple of weeks that I want them to bring in a senior advisor to guide Zoll thru this process and help the organization but I don't think it's going to happen.  I don't trust Zoll to change the toilet paper much less make any trades that are going to impact this organization short or long term.




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