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    Twins 6, Guardians 3: Matt Wallner Conquers Apple TV+


    Matt Braun

    Earl Weaver lies pleased in his assessment of the sport. 

    Image courtesy of © Jordan Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

     

    Box Score
    Louie Varland4 ⅔ IP, 8 H, 3 ER, 0 BB 4 K
    Home Runs: Matt Wallner (7)
    Top 3 WPA: Matt Wallner (.346), Caleb Thielbar (.112), Cole Sands (.110)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

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    Hidden behind the almighty Apple TV+ paywall—I hope you know someone with a login—the Twins played their second game of the Most Important Series of the Year (™) against the Cleveland Guardians. Even the AL Central isn’t immune to the changing tides. 

    An earlier Twins victory was accentuated by a magnificent Bailey Ober start; the 6’9” righty dazzled and outwitted his opponent, whiffing nine over six shutout frames. A tough act for any pitcher to follow, Varland—the one recalled to fill the extra double-header roster spot—needed to match his teammate or at least come close. No pressure.

    He looked good early, though. The first four innings were breezy, efficient. A few runners reached base, but no threat seriously emerged; each rally ended in quiet, tepid fashion. 

    All the while, the 36-year-old veteran starting for Cleveland for the first time—Alex Cobb—scuffled. He was earning his typical healthy share of grounders, yes; but the Twins knew how to place them properly, earning sharp worm-burning hits early. With runners on the corners, Royce Lewis took a walk while Matt Wallner sped for 2nd. Austin Hedges, perhaps listening too much to his primal instincts, fired the ball to the basepaths, allowing Willi Castro to dash home safely just before the throw back could get him. An early stolen run.

     

     

    Minnesota soon stole another run, just in a slightly different way: a two-out infield single by Austin Martin with a runner on first appeared to portend a minor opportunity, but shortstop Brayan Rocchio’s impotent throw eluded Josh Naylor’s glove at first base. A whole 90 minutes passed, and Christian Vázquez finally concluded his adventure around the bases with a safe slide into home. 

    Those runs appeared well-set to support Varland as he placed the finishing touches on a respectable, five-shutout inning start, but Louie forgot to seal the deal, hanging a hit-me curve to Naylor, which landed nearly 400 feet and three runs away. 

    Well, two can play that game. Cobb had been so good at eliciting weak contact—forcing the Twins to hit directly into Guardian gloves—but he committed the same sin as Varland; the sinkerball gifted a cookie to Matt Wallner with two runners on, and the incinerating left fielder pounded the ball, landing it well into the overhang into right for a matching three-run homer. 

     

     

    So began the running of the pens. Minnesota dipped into the well early with Cole Sands’ appearance to end the 5th; Cleveland didn’t acquiesce to their relief corpse until after Wallner’s blast fractured space and time. Their typical array of Dudes You’ve Never Heard of Sporting a Sub-3 ERA spit out a couple of names, placed a man on third, and one of their anonymous hurlers balked in a run. With Vázquez running. Only the finest from man’s most elusive athlete.

     

     

    It appears Cleveland manager Stephen Vogt wasn’t a fan of the call. We’ll investigate further and announce when we know more.

    The Twins' bullpen was perfect. Sands delivered the game to the 7th, and Caleb Thielbar covered perhaps the two most critical frames of the night, handing the ball off to the eventual 9th innings after clocking in six easy outs. Trevor Richards concluded the inevitable. The Twins won.

    Notes:

    Matt Wallner has hit 23 major-league home runs, the 23rd-most by a player born in Minnesota. He is one away from tying Howie Schultz for 22nd place and is 442 away from reaching Dave Winfield. 

    Christian Vázquez is slashing .315/.362/.574 since the start of July.

    Caleb Thielbar holds a 2.81 ERA since June 20th.

    The Twins hit into five double plays on Friday night.

    Willi Castro's four steals of home are second in Twins history; Rod Carew leads the way with 16. 

     

    Post-Game Interview:

    What’s Next?
    The Twins and Guardians play again on Saturday, with first pitch coming at 6:10 PM. RHP Gavin Williams (1-4, 4.91 ERA) will face off against Simeon Woods Richardson (3-2, 3.87 ERA). 

     

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

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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

    45 minutes ago, JD-TWINS said:

    How about being obsessed with his results to date over parts of 3 seasons in MLB? …..was hitting .115 v. lefties in a post here by a contributor, no more than 10 days ago.

    Over 70 plate appearances spread out over 3 years, you are going to declare he can't become close to average against LH pitching.  I am not saying he can definitely be serviceable against LH pitching but you can't just declare that all LH hitters will never hit LH pitching without giving them a reasonable chance.  And that is exactly what the Twins are doing, they are declaring no LH hitter can hit LH pitching.  Will they do the same with Rodriquez and Jenkins, we will find out.

    On 8/10/2024 at 8:39 PM, tony&rodney said:

    Are you watching the same team as I am or just looking at stats?

    Obviously, I 'just quoted stats' but if the goal of the game is to score more runs than the other team, those are the two most impactful stats. Part of the issue at the moment is they are missing their most valuable offensive player. Getting him back should be a 'wake up call' for the offense. That said, they are scoring enough runs, statistically speaking - I don't know how you can argue with that given their league placement in that statistic.

    On 8/10/2024 at 7:45 PM, JD-TWINS said:

    Since June he’s hitting well over .320 v. LH pitchers. Going into the game he was hitting .319 v. LH pitching when leading off.

    I get the enthusiasm about Wallner - exciting to watch him in the box. His K rate since coming back is 36+ % …….this is while essentially only having him face RH pitching. The curiosity for what Wallner “might do” and suggesting you’ll wager on the OPS points is all great but it’s just supposition - it will remain supposition because try aren’t going to push Wallner out in front of LH pitching regularly. From memory, in his first 68 AB’s v. LH pitching over first 3 years he’s hit around .115. Wish thinking stuff or offering to bet on it doesn’t do anything for me personally.

    My bet is with Rocco. 




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