Twins Video
Box Score
SP: Taj Bradley - 4.2 IP, 7 H, 5 ER, 5 BB, 5 K (104 pitches, 63 strikes (72% strikes)
Home Runs: None
Bottom 3 WPA: Taj Bradley (-0.24); Austin Martin (-0.05); Byron Buxton (-0.05)
Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

Taj Bradley had his third appearance since returning from the injured list on Wednesday, and the first inning was an utter disaster. Bradley gave up two walks and two singles, allowing four runs and giving the White Sox a 4-0 head start in the game.
Bradley struggled through five innings in an exhausting pattern: loading the bases, walking players, but with the rest of his appearance scoreless, he was pulled as he just eclipsed the 100-pitch mark. The defense behind him was no help, from a key error by Tristan Gray at shortstop to a mistimed leap at the wall by Austin Martin.
Eric Orze replaced Bradley, followed by Taylor Rogers. Both pitchers gave up no runs and provided chances for the offense to close the 5-0 gap, but Cody Laweryson gave up three runs, sucking the life right out of the game as the White Sox extended their lead to 8-0.
The Twins offense struggled as much as the pitching. There was no type of movement until the bottom of the sixth for the Twins. The little bit of life came from Luke Keaschall, who delivered the Twins their first hit on a two-out single, followed by another single from Gray. But a groundout to short from Orlando Arcia forced an out, ending the small two-out rally.
The Twins tried to get a bite of the White Sox bullpen in the seventh, with a single from Josh Bell, but the lineup behind Bell just couldn’t get any production, leaving him stranded. Every rally was short-lived.
The More Things Change, The More They Stay The Same
The White Sox have exposed the Twins' new setup’s weaknesses on the field with their bats and their speed. The Twins have made a lot of adjustments, with Royce Lewis being sent down to Triple-A St. Paul, and everyone is slowly locking in. Gray committed three errors Wednesday. Plenty of other plays seemed to elude the team's gloves; they're no more rangy than they are sure-handed.
A Valiant Effort
The Twins did keep the game a bit more under control late than might have been the case. Though he wobbled, new arm Justin Lawrence showed the nastiness that made the team want to acquire him via trade in his late appearance. In a blowout, Derek Shelton put in better defenders (James Outman for the hampered Byron Buxton in center; Ryan Kreidler for Gray at short) and the team played respectably late. It was just too little to make the game feel remotely within reach.
Lawrence struck out his first hitter, but plunked the next two. Suddenly, he had two men on base. He got out of the inning with no damage, except a few bruises on the opposition. One last valiant rally gave the Twins a chance to avoid their first shutout defeat of 2026, but they couldn't break through. No matter. There are no moral victories, they say.
What’s Next?
The Royals come to town for a four-game weekender beginning Thursday. The Twins will send Andrew Morris to the mound at the front end of what is essentially a bullpen game; the Royals counter with eight-figure veteran signee Seth Lugo. First pitch is scheduled for 6:40 PM CT.
Postgame Interviews
Coming soon.
Bullpen Availability Chart







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