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    Twins 6, Blue Jays 3: Patient Lineup, Stingy Bullpen Salvage Series

    Toronto was riding some epic momentum after Saturday's comeback win. However, thanks to a patient lineup and a bullpen that allowed just a single batter over the minimum, the Twins were able to avoid the sweep with a 6-3 victory.

    Hans Birkeland
    Image courtesy of © Jordan Johnson-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score:
    Starting Pitcher:
    Joe Ryan: 5 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 6 K (89 Pitches, 47 Strikes, 52.8%)
    Home Runs: Brooks Lee (5), Christian Vazquez (2)
    Bottom 3 WPA: Brooks Lee (.169), Christian Vazquez (.165), Willi Castro (.101)
    Win Probability Chart (Via Fangraphs):
    image.png.2a07cb4293cb4391379f5cdfe82c1797.png

    The Toronto Blue Jays are on a charmed streak right now, taking the first two games of the series at Target Field, with the second game particularly impressive as they scored against both Griffin Jax and Jhoan Duran in high-leverage moments en route to a 5-4 victory. To salvage the final game of the series, the Twins turned to Joe Ryan, their starter most prone to being bitten by "bad luck." As Twins fans, we know this to be partially self-inflicted, as the scouting report on Ryan is clearly to rattle him, with him having the tendency to lose focus after missed strike calls, infield hits and misplays.

    Ryan's stuff looked crisp to start, as he dotted the edges of the zone while sitting 95-96 MPH with his fastball, even striking out the extremely contact-oriented Alejandro Kirk to end the first.

    The Twins took a patient approach against scuffling Jays starter Bowden Francis. Francis was a revelation for the Jays down the stretch in 2024, taking multiple no-hitters into the ninth inning and looking like a building block for a team looking to synchronize the twilight of one core group of stars with the next generation.

    Byron Buxton led off with a walk, and Matt Wallner drew one as well later in the inning. Francis was having trouble locating his breaking ball for strikes, and the Twins did a pretty good job of forcing him into the zone with hard stuff, but were ultimately unable to capitalize in a scoreless first.

    The Jays looked to go quietly in the second, with second baseman Ernie Clement looking overmatched in the box against Ryan before slapping a two-out single the other way. Rookie Alan Roden then lifted a medium-depth fly ball that Wallner got a so-so break on, diving for a ball that scooted past and allowed Clement to score from first.

    The Twins would answer, though not to the extent they would have liked. Willi Castro led off with another walk, followed by singles from Ty France and Brooks Lee. Christian Vazquez got the run home with a ground out, and after another Buxton walk (you read that right) Trevor Larnach just missed his pitch and settled for a sacrifice fly to center. Wallner hit a liner ticketed for the right field corner, but Vladimir Guerrero Jr. made a leaping catch to end the threat.

    The third inning felt like a basketball game where a team shot 65% but gave up so many turnovers and rebounds they lost in a blowout. Bo Bichette drew a tough walk wherein Ryan was visibly frustrated with some of the calls. The home plate umpire even shouted out to Ryan, "You think everything is a strike!" Nevermind, Ryan then induced a grounder from Guerrero to Carlos Correa. What could go wrong? Well Correa's shovel pass to second base was way off the mark, and both runners were safe.

    No problem. Ryan retired the hot-hitting Addison Barger on a looper to left field. He then got a ground ball from Kirk, a catcher who can't outrun Willian Astudillo—an inning-ending double play was sure to follow. However, the ball found a hole just by the outstretched glove of Lee, allowing Bichette to tie the game. Feeling snakebit, Ryan decided to challenge George Springer, and that has just never been a good idea/ Springer lashed a double down the left field line. 3-2 Blue Jays.

    After throwing over 50 pitches over the first two innings, Francis got into trouble again in the third. Castro flipped a two-out single to left and France drew a walk. But Kirk, with a sterling defensive reputation, caught France napping off of first base to end the inning. France, who is so slow he was recently pinch-run for by Jonah Bride, probably didn't need to be straying that far off the bag as the trail runner. It was a TOOTBLAN.

    After an uneventful top of the fourth inning, the Twins decided to strike with the very bottom of their lineup, getting back to back home runs from Lee and Vazquez to retake the lead.

    The Twins looked to continue the momentum with Buxton hitting a hot shot down the third base line, but Barger made a great pick with even better "pop time" as his strong throw retired the speedy Buxton.

    The Twins would add on in the fifth. With one out, Royce Lewis pinch hit for Clemens against lefty Mason Fluharty, who has flashed pretty good stuff in this series. Lewis worked a hard-fought walk and Castro, who has shown more life against lefties lately, smacked a single. That prompted the Jays to insert righty Erik Swanson, whose elbow is hanging by a thread and just returned from the IL. France greeted him with a double the opposite way, scoring Lewis. Lee then continued his great day at the plate with a walk on 3-2 to load the bases. An out later Buxton drew his third walk of the game to buff the lead to three runs.

    Ryan was done after five innings, recovering from his rough third inning to post two scoreless frames, capping off his outing by inducing a double play from Kirk. Ryan threw only 53% of his pitches for strikes but his stuff was good and he spiraled less than he could have.

    Brock Stewart, Cole Sands and Jax spun uneventful, scoreless innings, all facing the minimum. Jhoan Duran pitched the ninth with a three-run lead, and while he did allow a baserunner, it didn't get dramatic. Game over.

    Stray Observations:

    -Lee reminds me a little of Larnach last year, never getting super hot, but also not slumping for extended periods of time. His process has been decent and as a fan you don't feel defeated when he comes to the plate in a clutch spot, despite middling offensive numbers.

    -Buxton is up to 17 walks on the year, after drawing a total of 20 walks in 2024. His chase rate is down about five percent in the early going, so it is fair to wonder if, in his age 30 season, Buxton is starting to develop an additional "old player skill."

    -Lewis looks playable these days (he went 2-2 with a walk today). He may never be the .900 OPS superstar he was in 2023, but if he can be a .775 OPS guy with a good feel for clutch moments and average defense, I think I would take that if he can play 120 games a year. However, after seeing the resurgence of Giancarlo Stanton in the playoffs, there is precedent for a guy who runs like the tin man turning himself back into an offensive force (and Lewis is ten years younger).

    -Castro is now sporting a .353 OBP after reaching four times today. This is the version of Castro that made the All-Star team last year while hitting a lot of leadoff. It is likely tempting to put him back there, but I kind of like the wild card element he brings to the bottom of the lineup.

    -The Blue Jays managed just one hit after the third inning, with the bullpen bouncing back after a rough day on Saturday.

    What’s Next: The likely starter on Tuesday will be Simeon Woods Richardson (2-2, 5.02 ERA), going against old friend Tyler Mahle (5-3, 2.02 ERA) as the Twins finish up the home stand against the Texas Rangers. Mahle has been resurgent in his first full season following Tommy John surgery in 2023 while still with the Twins. His fastball velocity has not fully returned, as he has averaged 92 MPH on the heater. However, the run value of both his fastball and changeup both exceed the 90th percentile, so his success has been legitimate so far. Wood Richardson has been decent in Triple A since his demotion, and will need to remain decent to help keep this starting rotation humming following the losses of Pablo Lopez and Zebby Matthews,

    Postgame Interviews:

    Bullpen Usage Chart:

      WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT
    Durán 12 0 0 20 16 48
    Jax 13 0 0 18 9 40
    Varland 22 0 0 17 0 39
    Stewart 15 0 0 0 14 29
    Alcalá 0 26 0 0 0 26
    Sands 0 0 9 0 17 26
    Topa 0 0 15 0 0 15
    Adams 0 0 0 0 0 0

     

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    Featured Comments

    12 hours ago, chinmusic said:

    Buxton with 3 walks!  Who would have thunk it.

    Must be a career first....

    Apparently it is...according to Gleeman

     

    Speaking of walks, according to what I read on ESPN today, this is what our pitchers have done:

    The Twins have walked 164 batters — fewest in the majors

    11 hours ago, Aerodeliria said:

    I'm never very worried when Ryan is on the hill. He had an off day but still perservered. 

    Yes, it seems like Ryan struggled more than usual and threw a lot of pitches, but as you suggested, he finds a way to keep the Twins in the game.

    12 hours ago, Blyleven2011 said:

    , I wouldn't mind resigning him again for 8 to 10 million depending on his season with the bat , but for his defense alone , sign him for 6 million or what ever Houston was paying that defensive catcher who I think is catching with white Sox  ( just cant think of his name right now ) ...

    What are we the Yanks or Dodgers? signing a back up catcher to that kind of contract. Signing him turned out to be a bad signing, don't make it worse by doubling down.

    35 minutes ago, Doctor Wu said:

    Yes, it seems like Ryan struggled more than usual and threw a lot of pitches, but as you suggested, he finds a way to keep the Twins in the game.

    Curious to see the Umpire scorecards for those two games. Might be a reason

     

    4 minutes ago, TwinsDr2021 said:

    What are we the Yanks or Dodgers? signing a back up catcher to that kind of contract. Signing him turned out to be a bad signing, don't make it worse by doubling down.

    May not be a backup if you aren't buying into Jeffers.. who ain't signed forever either.

    A good win, stopped the bleeding nicely. Got worried when France got picked off like that; felt like one of those moments where the momentum could shift and a wobbling pitcher got bailed out. Glad to see it didn't matter, but whoof, that was poor awareness by France.

    Great production from the bottom half of the lineup. Nice to see so many guys collecting hits and walks from the 6-9 slots. 

    Royce is starting to look like he's finally coming around. It's only been a week...but it's been a very good week. He'll need to show this isn't a fluke and not fall back into the hole, but he has looked good at the plate again, grinding out some ABs and getting some hits. 

    Nice to see Ryan grind one out when he was just a bit off. He's becoming one of those guys that you just feel like he's going to figure things out and get it done. Much like Pablo, his floor is pretty high these days, and the ceiling is awfully high as well. We'll need him to keep doing this with Zebby going down too,

    1 hour ago, Doctor Wu said:

    The Twins have walked 164 batters — fewest in the majors

    Impressive! I didn't know that.

    I maintain that the Twins have a great deal of potential. The pitching in particular could take them a long way.

    The winning streak gave them relevance. Let's hope they can weather this latest round of setbacks.

     

    1 hour ago, Patzky said:

    May not be a backup if you aren't buying into Jeffers.. who ain't signed forever either.

    My comment had nothing to do with Jeffers, but you are saying that he is good enough to be a starter at the age of 35 after being below replacement the last two years?

    remember the original comment was "8 to 10 million depending on his season with the bat , but for his defense alone , sign him for 6 million"

    That is a whole lot different than signing him to a minimal contract to a be a leader and a back up catcher, that I might be able to along with. The guy has two good seasons and a couple decent seasons and will be 35 in August. His career WAR is 6.5, Jeffers has basically put that since Vazquez got here.

    Kind of a sloppy game so to get the win is great. France getting picked off there is inexcusable. He’s going nowhere and he ends the inning with runners in scoring position. It makes you wonder if certain players even get the concept of risk / reward. 

    11 minutes ago, Linus said:

    Kind of a sloppy game so to get the win is great. France getting picked off there is inexcusable. He’s going nowhere and he ends the inning with runners in scoring position. It makes you wonder if certain players even get the concept of risk / reward. 

    For such important people to our success, France Willi and Correa suffer occasional brain farts. Hey beer man!

    After re-watching the video, I think it was a designed play. There were 2 outs. Lee, a LH batter with some pop was batting, France was the trailing runner, getting his secondary lead. Guerrero broke for the base as the P delivered home. Somebody on Toronto's bench saw something on one or both pitches of the PA to that point. Not to deflect blame off of France, he needs to be situationally alert, but Borrego, the first base coach, needs to be helping him when he see's Guerrero break to the base with the pitch.

    https://www.mlb.com/video/bowden-francis-ball-to-brooks-lee-jogbdn

    2 hours ago, mnfireman said:

    After re-watching the video, I think it was a designed play. There were 2 outs. Lee, a LH batter with some pop was batting, France was the trailing runner, getting his secondary lead. Guerrero broke for the base as the P delivered home. Somebody on Toronto's bench saw something on one or both pitches of the PA to that point. Not to deflect blame off of France, he needs to be situationally alert, but Borrego, the first base coach, needs to be helping him when he see's Guerrero break to the base with the pitch.

    https://www.mlb.com/video/bowden-francis-ball-to-brooks-lee-jogbdn

    For sure it was a called play but only because France was hanging out there. He got so far off my first thought was he misread the sign and thought there was a double steal called. 

    5 hours ago, TwinsDr2021 said:

    My comment had nothing to do with Jeffers, but you are saying that he is good enough to be a starter at the age of 35 after being below replacement the last two years?

    remember the original comment was "8 to 10 million depending on his season with the bat , but for his defense alone , sign him for 6 million"

    That is a whole lot different than signing him to a minimal contract to a be a leader and a back up catcher, that I might be able to along with. The guy has two good seasons and a couple decent seasons and will be 35 in August. His career WAR is 6.5, Jeffers has basically put that since Vazquez got here.

    Some are presenting Vázquez as some kind of defensive superstar and pitcher whisperer. I see a good defender with a weak bat and think that the club would be better if he played less. Yes, he homered yesterday and drove in another run with a grounder, but he did strike out another time with the bases loaded. If his grounder would have been a couple more steps toward second base it would have been a double play instead of an RBI groundout.

    As long as Baldelli is the mana.ger, the Twins will have a tandem at catcher (IMHO) and I would like to see Jeffers paired with a younger catcher next year, preferably a LH hitter. Investing serious money in guys over 35 seldom works especially when their career has been in decline for multiple years.

    I agree with the sentiment that it is time to get past the Vazquez contract. He slots between Mitch Garver and Gary Sanchez and I would take Vazquez over either. Garver spends more time at DH than catcher. Sanchez has been no help this year. Danny Jansen is in there also with the same AAV though he can opt out and may do so thinking he can get better than 12 million.

    It is deceptive to rank any veteran at a position by salary. I shouldn’t be comparing him to a pool of all catchers. Most catchers have not hit free agency and are getting a salary below the market they would get as a free agent. As for Vazquez I would prefer Jansen among his peers but glad to have him over Sanchez and Garver. I don’t know how to measure his value to the pitcher/catcher room but I believe it to be among the best in the game.

    Glad to have Vazquez. Nice game yesterday but nailing that runner at third earlier this year was even better. The Twins bought themselves three years to develop a cost controlled young catcher with his contract. The Twins have not made any progress developing that catcher. That is the real failure.




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