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    Twins 9, Rangers 3: Larnach Stays Red-Hot, Joe Ryan Deals as Twins Secure Sweep

    The Twins couldn't have scripted a much better afternoon. They scored four runs before Joe Ryan threw a pitch, got another huge game from Trevor Larnach, and completed a convincing three-game sweep of the Rangers.

    Sam Caulder
    Image courtesy of © Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    SP:
    Joe Ryan - 5 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 7 K (97 pitches, 67 strikes (69% strikes))
    Home Runs: Brooks Lee, Trevor Larnach, Ryan Kreidler
    Top 3 WPA: Brooks Lee (0.20), Joe Ryan (0.15), Josh Bell (0.11)
    Win Probability Chart

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    The Twins entered Thursday afternoon’s series finale against the Rangers looking to complete a three-game sweep and make it four straight wins. With Joe Ryan on the mound and the offense swinging hot bats, the Twins delivered one of their more complete performances of the season, rolling to a 9-3 victory and securing the sweep in Texas.

    EARLY OFFENSIVE EXPLOSION PUT THE RANGERS IN A HOLE
    The Twins wasted no time jumping on Rangers starter Jack Leiter. Trevor Larnach opened the game by lining the very first pitch into center field for a single, and after Kody Clemens followed with a base hit of his own, Minnesota quickly put pressure on the young right-hander.

    Royce Lewis struck out swinging for the second out of the inning, but Josh Bell continued his torrid stretch by ripping a two-strike changeup into right field to score Larnach and give the Twins a 1-0 lead.

    The big blow came moments later. After Leiter used his changeup to punch out both Byron Buxton and Lewis earlier in the frame, Brooks Lee got a changeup that stayed over the plate and didn't miss it. Lee crushed it 104 MPH over the wall in right field for a three-run homer, extending Minnesota's lead to 4-0 before Joe Ryan even took the mound.

    The Twins sent eight hitters to the plate in the inning, forcing Leiter to throw 28 pitches and immediately placing the Rangers in catch-up mode.

    LARNACH STAYS RED HOT
    Minnesota's offense cooled briefly over the next couple innings, but Trevor Larnach made sure the lead continued to grow. After Luke Keaschall worked a two-out walk in the fourth inning and swiped second base, Larnach stepped in and capped off an eight-pitch at-bat by launching a two-run homer to center field. Initially, it looked like Alejandro Osuna might have a chance to bring it back, but the ball carried just over the wall, giving the Twins a commanding 6-0 advantage.

    An inning later, he added another RBI with a bloop single to left field that scored Victor Caratini and pushed the lead to 7-0.

    Larnach finished the afternoon with three hits, including the homer, continuing what has been one of the hottest stretches of his season.

    JOE RYAN BENDS BUT DOESN'T BREAK
    While the offense provided plenty of support, Joe Ryan had to work harder than usual to keep the Rangers off the board. Texas put multiple runners on base in both the second and third innings, forcing Ryan to navigate traffic throughout much of his outing. His pitch count climbed quickly, reaching 65 pitches through three innings and 83 through four.

    Still, whenever the Rangers threatened, Ryan found a way to make the big pitch.

    He struck out Joc Pederson three times, froze Kyle Higashioka with a front-door sweeper, and worked around several baserunners to complete five scoreless innings. It wasn't his most efficient start, as he needed 97 pitches to record 15 outs, but he generated 13 whiffs, threw 69% of his pitches for strikes, and most importantly, left the game without allowing a run.

    BULLPEN WEATHERS A BRIEF STORM
    The only real blemish on the afternoon came in the sixth inning. Justin Lawrence entered in relief and immediately surrendered a solo homer to Wyatt Langford on the first pitch he threw. Two batters later, Ezequiel Duran added another solo shot, trimming the lead to 7-2.

    Any thoughts of a Rangers comeback were short-lived. Taylor Rogers worked around trouble in the seventh before Andrew Morris entered and promptly induced a 6-4-3 double play to erase a potential rally.

    Eric Orze escaped a two-on situation in the eighth, and Cody Laweryson closed things out in the ninth despite allowing a late solo homer.

    TWINS ADD INSURANCE AND FINISH THE SWEEP
    The Twins made sure Texas never got any closer. Ryan Kreidler provided the biggest insurance of the day in the eighth inning, turning on a middle-middle cutter and driving a two-run homer. The blast extended the lead to 9-2 and effectively put the game out of reach.

    Caratini added three hits in the victory, Keaschall reached base four times, and Bell continued his impressive series with another multi-hit performance.

    Even with Royce Lewis enduring a difficult afternoon that included four strikeouts, the Twins' lineup produced 15 hits and consistently applied pressure throughout the game. By the time the final out settled into Keaschall’s glove at second base, Minnesota had completed the series sweep and continued its recent surge.

    After a pair of disappointing divisional series against the Royals and Tigers, the Twins responded exactly how they needed to, taking five of six games against the Cardinals and Rangers. At 36-40, Minnesota remains within striking distance in the American League Central and will carry some much-needed momentum into the weekend.

    What’s Next?
    The Twins travel to Phoenix, Arizona to take on the Diamondbacks in a three-game weekend series, starting Friday night. Connor Prielipp is set to throw for the good guys, and right-hander Mike Soroka is the probable starter for the Diamondbacks. First pitch is set for 8:45 PM on Apple TV.

    Postgame Interviews
    Coming Soon!

    Bullpen Availability Chart

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    Eduardo Tait

    Cedar Rapids Kernels - A+, C
    The 19-year-old backstop went 3-for-5 with a double, a homer, and six RBI. In his past four games, he is 9-for-23 with a double, four homers, and 13 RBI.

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    Featured Comments

    Yeah, trade Larnach. He's finally hitting the ball like expected when he was drafted. Can't have guys like that on this team. Get rid of him and grab another Outman type off the DFA pile or trade for one. If you want this team to ever be good again, you have to STOP trading away the players that are helping you win ball games and start paying them to stay. Isn't that why he was drafted in the first place? If you want to trade someone, make it a player like Wallner, who isn't helping you win. Seriously, it's the only way this team is ever going to get better. Gathering prospects, watching them develop, and then trading them away when they finally become successful only maintains the status quo of mediocrity for your team. You're only being a farm system for other teams who are willing and/or capable of spending money on the good players. My hope is that, when the CBA takes place in 2027, it will fix the uneven structure of the haves and the have-nots. A salary floor and cap needs to be implemented if they want MLB to be appealing to all fans again. Sorry, I'm tired of the same teams being able to buy their Championships on a yearly basis, while other teams get the opportunity from building within once every 20 years.

    7 hours ago, mnfireman said:

    Provus and Gladden both commented today on how much Sizemore has helped with OF defense (there have still been misplays, gonna happen when guys play new positions). Sometimes just getting the right guy to coach can make all the difference (see Arraez working with Washington in SF).

    This is the one thing I liked Shelton did, he brought in some coaches with major league experience.  I think that has been helpful and Sizemore is a great example.

    7 hours ago, DocBauer said:

    A 5-4 road trip would be very good. Could we steal a game in Arizona and go 2-1 and then 1-2 against the Dodgers? That would be a hell of a nice road trip. 

    They come home after Arizona and play the Dodgers at Target Field.

    I wonder if media members like Patrick Reusse still think this is the "most uninteresting" Twins team they've ever covered. I know we're a ways away from seriously contending, and the picture could look different this time next week (just like it did this time last week), but it's time to put some respect on their names! These guys are playing some really good baseball right now, period. I, for one, am entertained. 

    PS what a blast from my man Ryan Kreidler! I think he's pretty close to getting the starting slot at SS over Gray (who's struggling at the plate right now), even against righties. 

    1 hour ago, rv78 said:

    If you want to trade someone, make it a player like Wallner, who isn't helping you win. Seriously, it's the only way this team is ever going to get better.

    so sell low? :P

    I like seeing the twins get a sweep. It's nice.

    The trade talk is annoying; the deadline is still over a month away and we're not even at the all-star break yet. With the team being 1.5 games out of a wild card there's no point in getting too spun up about trades because they're not happening yet. 

    I'd think that with some guys playing well and other guys getting health there would be more interesting things to talk about than speculating on something that won't have any chance of happening for another month. (Also? Good for you Byron Buxton in shutting down trade speculation. I love the fact that he wants to be here.)

    9 hours ago, DocBauer said:

    And I can't wait to see Rojas back. While it's super intriguing to think of him as a SP with more development time, he reminds me a lot of Santana and Liriano as a POWERFUL arm who MIGHT transition back to the rotation at some point. Or he might just be the next Perkins. 

    Be patient. He looked terrible last night pitching for the Saints

    13 hours ago, Blyleven2011 said:

    Nice series , twins out scored the rangers 25 to 7 for a series sweep , team has a 4 game winning streak ...

    Offense has woken up , 1st inning runs are always appreciated especially to the starting pitcher ...

    Fun to watch when we have good Offense  , defense and pitching  ...

    5 relievers followed Ryan  , two were acceptable  ( Morris and Orze ) , Lawrence  , Roger's and Lawyerson not so much ...

    Good bet when they activate Abel for Arizona series that Lawrence is DFA'd  , if not the team FO personal are crazy ...

    The reality for TWINS & most Teams is they don’t go 8 deep in the PEN. ……. I wish they DFA’d Lawrence this afternoon but it’s not happening, yet. Him or anyone getting 2 quick outs and then giving up a couple solo shots & even two more hits ….. that’s what the low leverage guy does sometimes with a huge lead.

    They ALL have had issues for stretches……. morris is hardly bulletproof. Orze looks sharp 2 of 3 outings, generally speaking……..not a lot different than a middling starter might do.

    On 6/18/2026 at 9:59 PM, Mike Sixel said:

    No team is built without prospects. This team isn't good. He'll cost ten percent of the budget next year. He should be traded, given the context of the team. No one on this site wants to trade for the sake if trading, that straw man has to die. 

    Keaschall - Culpepper by August - Marek Houston at some point in ‘27 - Jenkins in ‘27 - Gonzales in ‘27 ……. there are plenty of prospects in play in the organization in the near term.

    Martin - Larnach - Buxton - Jenkins - Gonzales in OF …….. with Larnach used at DH in 70% of his starts ……… room for another young guy (Fedko or Rodriguez)

    Same 2 Catchers, assuming Jeffers is gone.

    Lewis - Keaschall - Culpepper - Lee - Clemens

    That’s a solid 13 for ‘27 with a half dozen prospects. Larnach taking Bell’s spot at DH, v. nearly 100% RH pitching….. Gonzales from the right side.

    Abel - Bradley - Lopez - Ryan - Prielipp/Matthews …….. Team may have a real basis for a 6 man rotation for chunks of the year …… this assumes Ober isn’t back & he may be.

    I can't have many years left Apple, so please stop the on-field interviews with players during play...for the love of God please wait until I'm gone. It is ridiculous: it's distracting to the viewer who has to watch the game on split-screen and also listen to the inane concomitant banter, and it must also be distracting, to some extent, to the player himself, and for what?

    I suppose the idea is to interest young people in the game, you know the generation that never had to sit patiently in the backseat of a car looking out the window fashioning their own thoughts and using their own imaginations to fill the time, rather than sticking their noses in a screen or having a video playing in the Dodge Odyssey. Buy hey, there's no way you are going to entice those with short-attention spans into the love of baseball anyway--baseball is largely a slow, unfolding process that takes patience to appreciate. Please stop... 




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