Twins Video
Box Score
SP: Connor Prielipp - 5 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 6 K (83 pitches, 49 strikes (72% strikes)
Home Runs: -0-
Top 3 WPA: Kody Clemens (0.38), Alan Roden (0.32), Luke Keaschall (0.27)
Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)
The Twins and Guardians got off to a slow start on Wednesday, with both pitchers looking locked-in early. It was a much-needed outing for rookie Connor Prielipp. Prielipp has been adjusting to the big leagues well, but he's taken his lumps, too. In June, he logged 28 1/3 innings and completed six frames in four of his five starts, but he still had a 4.76 ERA. Wednesday's outing was a huge test for the rookie.
It would also prove to be an important night for Alan Roden, who appeared in the majors for the first time this year. Roden didn't make the team out of spring training and spent a significant chunk of the early season on the injured list for the Triple-A St. Paul Saints. Then, he had to wait for an opportunity in the majors for some time, even as he hit well in St. Paul. When Byron Buxton went down with a hip strain this weekend, the door was finally opened for Roden's return to the team with whom he played briefly before going down for the season last August.
Prielipp ran into some trouble in the fourth inning, giving up a leadoff single to Chase DeLauter and two subsequent home runs by Brayan Rocchio and Rhys Hoskins. Thereby, the Guardians jumped out to a 3-0 lead. The rookie threw quite a few pitches in the inning, but after a mound visit, he settled down and retired the next three batters in order to limit the damage.
The Twins offense responded aggressively in the bottom of the fourth. Singles from Brooks Lee, Kody Clemens, and Josh Bell loaded the bases with nobody out. Royce Lewis followed with an RBI single to cut the deficit to 3-1. A deep sacrifice fly to center by Luke Keaschall brought Clemens home, making it 3-2 with one out. Roden lined a single into center field to score Bell and tie the game at 3-3. The Twins still had a chance to take the lead, but Cleveland made a pitching change that shut the door on the rally.
Prieplipp kept Cleveland off the board through the fifth. Travis Adams took over in the sixth and delivered a quick, scoreless inning in relief.
Not bringing Adams back out was an interesting choice, but with limited options available, Eric Orze entered to pitch the seventh. Orze labored through 16 pitches, only recording one out and leaving two runners on base without finishing the inning. Taylor Rogers came in to get the final two outs. But instead, he surrendered two runs, allowing Cleveland to reclaim the lead, 5-3.
Again, though, Minnesota responded, with lots of help from Guardians relievers. Cleveland walked five Twins batters (Keaschall, Ryan Kreidler, pinch-hitter Austin Martin, Lee and Clemens), forcing home the tying runs. It's been an incredibly sloppy series for the usually buttoned-up Guardians. The Twins couldn't blow the game open, but they'd re-tied the game again, thanks to their opponents.
Kody Funderburk worked a scoreless eighth. He surrendered two singles, but stayed in the zone and struck out the other three batters he faced, avoiding giving back the favors the visitors had just done for the hosts.
In what became an impromptu bullpen game for Cleveland, the Twins found lots of opposing hurlers easy to handle. Victor Caratini and Keaschall started the bottom of the eighth with a single and a double, respectively, and it looked like Minnesota would finally break through. But Cleveland turned to their relief ace, Cade Smith, who slammed the door on the rally: strikeout, strikeout, walk, flyout. The teams went to the final frame on level terms.
Yoendrys Gómez worked a relatively stress-free top of the ninth. He did walk a batter, but things didn't get terribly hairy. In the bottom half of the frame, Clemens reached on (officially) a single that was hit right at Rocchio, who inexplicably went to the ground and then threw from the seat of his pants. The result was a throw on an in-between hop to first baseman Rhys Hoskins, who let himself be handcuffed. Josh Bell struck out, though, and Royce Lewis hit what was nearly an inning-ending double play. Happily, he beat it out, setting the stage for Alex Jackson. The team's backup backstop hit a cue shot to the right side, but weird spin off the end of the bat led to a crazy hop that second baseman Travis Bazzana couldn't handle. Keaschall worked a tough at-bat and drew a key walk after that, loading the bases.
Up stepped Roden, who'd missed his last chance to win the game in the bottom of the eighth. He worked a full count and fouled off multiple pitches, but then: BANG. He came through with a gapper to right-center, scoring the winning tally and setting off the celebration.
How can you not be romantic about baseball?
What’s Next?
The Twins finish out the series against the Guardians Thursday at 12:40 pm CST. The Twins will send Mike Paredes to the mound (0-2, 4.60 ERA), facing Cleveland ace Gavin Williams (9-4, 3.89 ERA) during a day game.
Postgame Interviews
Coming soon.
Bullpen Availability Chart
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