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    Twins 5, Royals 1: Late Home Runs Back Taj Bradley’s Strong Outing

    The Twins snapped a three-game slide with a much-needed win in Kansas City on Thursday.

    Sam Caulder
    Image courtesy of © Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    SP: Taj Bradley
    - 6 IP, 5 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 3 K. 100 pitches, 65 strikes (65%)
    Home Runs: Matt Wallner, Kody Clemens, Royce Lewis
    Top 3 WPA: Taj Bradley (0.40), Kody Clemens (0.12), Kody Funderburk (0.11)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

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    The Twins wrapped up their series with the Royals on Thursday, playing a 1:10 PM finale after a late finish the night before. With a different-looking lineup and a quick turnaround, the focus was simple: get more length from Taj Bradley and find just enough offense.

    They got both.

    BRADLEY SETTLES IN
    After an inefficient first outing that saw his pitch count climb quickly, Taj Bradley looked much more in control this time around. He worked six scoreless innings, allowing five hits and just one walk while striking out three. More than the line, though, was how he got there.

    Bradley was far more efficient early, needing just 27 pitches to get through two innings. He mixed in his cutter effectively and did a better job getting ahead, even if his first-pitch strike rate still wasn’t perfect. When he ran into trouble, he adjusted. The fourth inning was his biggest test, as he loaded the bases with two outs. But he reached back and got a swing-and-miss on a cutter out of the zone to escape.

    It wasn’t as dominant as his first start from a pure stuff standpoint. He generated fewer whiffs and gave up plenty of hard contact. But this was a different kind of outing; one built on navigating traffic, limiting damage, and giving the Twins exactly what they needed after getting just four innings from Joe Ryan the day before.

    And this time, it held up.

    SCRATCHING EARLY, BREAKING THROUGH LATE
    The Twins didn’t exactly jump on Royals starter Cole Ragans, but they made him work. A 24-pitch first inning set the tone, and multiple long at-bats followed, even if the runs didn't pile up.

    Their first run came in an unusual way. In the second inning, Kody Clemens reached base and eventually scored on a failed pickoff attempt by Salvador Perez, who threw the ball into center field. It wasn’t pretty, but any runs in a game like this matter.

    From there, chances were limited. There was some traffic, but nothing consistent enough to break things open. It felt like a one-run game that could flip at any moment—until the endgame. A Josh Bell walk, a Royce Lewis double and a Byron Buxton sacrifice fly got a run home in the top of the eighth, and after the bullpen avoided letting the lead slip away in a nervous bottom of the eighth, the offense gave them some breathing room in the top of the ninth.

    Matt Wallner got things started with a missile to right-center, a 405-foot drive that came off the bat at 107 MPH. A few batters later, Clemens jumped on a backdoor slider and sent it into the bullpen in left. Then Bell made it three in the inning, launching a hanging slider into the seats in right field.

    Just like that, a tight game turned into a comfortable one.

    BULLPEN SLAMS THE DOOR
    With Bradley through six, the Twins turned it over to the bullpen, and they delivered.

    Kody Funderburk handled the seventh cleanly, working around a loud foul ball to post a zero. Cole Sands ran into some trouble in the eighth, allowing a run on a sacrifice fly, but limited the damage and avoided a bigger inning.

    Taylor Rogers came in to finish the frame, stranding a runner and picking up a key strikeout, and Justin Topa closed things out in the ninth. Even with a little traffic to start the inning, Topa induced a double play and ended the game with a strikeout.

    It wasn’t flawless, but the bullpen was effective. Despite some iffy defense, they held the lead.

    There were a few smaller moments that stood out along the way. Victor Caratini was active behind the plate, successfully challenging multiple calls early in the game. Luke Keaschall made one key, unorthodox defensive play, picking a low throw as he arrived at the keystone for a pivotal out in the eighth. And while the lineup wasn’t the usual group, it found a way to produce when it mattered most. That’s what this one came down to.

    What’s Next?
    The Twins head to Minneapolis for their home opener tomorrow, where they’ll open up a three-game series against the Tampa Bay Rays. Bailey Ober is set to make his second start of the year, and Joe Boyle will take the hill for the Rays, with the action getting going (after some season-opening pomp and circumstance) at 3:10 PM CT or so.

    Postgame Interviews
    Coming Soon!

    Bullpen Usage Chart

      SAT SUN MON TUE WED THU TOT
    Abel 0 81 0 0 0 0 81
    Kent 0 0 0 0 47 0 47
    Funderburk 13 0 26 0 0 15 54
    Laweryson 0 0 0 0 36 0 36
    Banda 15 3 0 0 12 0 30
    Topa 12 0 10 0 0 13 35
    Orze 21 0 0 0 0 0 21
    Sands 16 0 0 0 0 11 27
    Rogers 0 0 14 0 0 4 18

     

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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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    Featured Comments

    48 minutes ago, AceWrigley said:

    All Tarheeltwinsfan was saying is that he thought Rocco wouldn't have let Bradley pitch the 6th inning and he's probably right. He didn't say Rocco was a bad manager. And 6 games in with a new manager I think comparisons are and should be expected.

    No clear evidence on this one: Bradley had a clean 5th, with only 11 pitches. He's a starter who has gone deep in games before, but usually when he's been very efficient. But he's thrown over 100 pitches in a game before. If the Twins were coming off an off-day (or heading into one), Bradley might have gotten lifted after 5, but they wanted/needed the extra inning. I suspect the decision remains the same regardless of the manager, especially since Pete Maki is still here.

    Taj did well. It's been a good start to his season. The more he can avoid those innings where he really labors and throws 25-30 pitches, the better he'll do. Efficient Bradley is effective Bradley.

    Nice to see the late dingers for the Twins. Sure, it'd be nice to get them early, but you take them whenever you can. (and Cruz was a solid pitcher for KC last season, a reminder of just how fungible relievers can be year over year)

     

    1 hour ago, jmlease1 said:

    Nice to see the late dingers for the Twins. Sure, it'd be nice to get them early, but you take them whenever you can. (and Cruz was a solid pitcher for KC last season, a reminder of just how fungible relievers can be year over year)

     

    Agree 100% about relief pitchers. Right now, Jax for Bradley looks like an absolute steal for the Twins. A month from now, we might be singing a totally different song. 

    6 minutes ago, stringer bell said:

    Agree 100% about relief pitchers. Right now, Jax for Bradley looks like an absolute steal for the Twins. A month from now, we might be singing a totally different song. 

    I think people forget that Jax has had exactly one great season in relief. His other 3 seasons relieving (before this ugly start to 2026) he was a good reliever, not a great one. Reliever stats can vary wildly and there's simply not as many guys who are great year after year. I expect Jax to do far better than this in 2026, but I won't be shocked at all if he's not looked at as a potential closer ever again.

    Starters are easier to predict and project. Still too early to be sure Bradley has figured it out (and most pitchers need to continually evolve to sustain success anyways) but it's a good start. And trading relievers for starters is generally a very good idea.

    8 hours ago, knothole61 said:

    Old Hat, I'm not as pessimistic as some but I do agree that shortstop will be a black hole until management sees fit to bring up Kaelen Culpepper or makes a blockbuster trade which, of course, is not likely. I fear that Lee has hit the peak of his career already and is fading fast. He could end up as just a memory soon, like Miranda. And I certainly don't want to see him back at short. Caratini made a laughable base running blunder, but do we know if the new coach urged him on? If so he needs a talking to. Gray is, I feel, simply not ready for primetime. Clemens, on the other hand, has too much value as a gritty player with some power and a good attitude to forsake at this point.     

    Gray is supposed to be a back-up OR the platoon option v. RH pitching. After 3 starts, the regular SS is so bad that they started Gray v. Cole Ragans. Prior to yesterday (in 2 starts), he was hot. After yesterday he’s 3 for 9 with a 151 OPS+. His defense was always known to be average, at best. I’m certainly not ready to say he’s “not ready”.

    Pitching has been “decent” outside of the rain game Wednesday.

    Buxton - Keaschall - Wallner - Lee (Culpepper)  - Lewis - Jeffers need to get to average results and Team will be fine. Currently, .174 - .214 - .174 - .154 - .211 - .214 are the core’s batting averages. That’s not F.O. nor ownership - that’s professionals not getting it done.

    15 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Gray is supposed to be a back-up OR the platoon option v. RH pitching. After 3 starts, the regular SS is so bad that they started Gray v. Cole Ragans. Prior to yesterday (in 2 starts), he was hot. After yesterday he’s 3 for 9 with a 151 OPS+. His defense was always known to be average, at best. I’m certainly not ready to say he’s “not ready”.

    JD,

    Egg on my face after the grand slam! I'm old enough (God knows) to know better than to make such unqualified pronouncements early in a baseball season. Good for the kid...this team may give us more thrills this season than anyone expected.




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