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    Yankees 6, Twins 1: German Hands Twins Loss in Suspicious Fashion


    Hans Birkeland

    The Twins winning streak came to an end on Saturday in New York. So did the Twins streak of starters completing five innings. And, there was plenty of controversy, and a Baldelli ejection to boot. 

    Image courtesy of Wendell Cruz, USA Today

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    SP: Tyler Mahle: 4.1 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 3 K, 90 pitches, 53 strikes (58.9%)
    Home Runs: None
    Top 3 WPA: Carlos Correa (-0.70), Eduoard Julien (-0.68) Jorge Alcalá  (-0.37)

    Win Probability Chart (via Fangraphs):

    1_upWZrXrfkTDC1WaXOYkFQDcfvBVgpN5S05cBfp

    Can the Twins run of quality starting pitching continue?
    Tyler Mahle took the mound for the Twins and his stuff was good throughout his start, generating numerous swings and misses on his split changeup and fourteen whiffs total. His control was a little off however, missing with his fastball in the zone. His error in the second, misplaying a dribbler that allowed Franchy Cordero to reach, put a runner on base for Kyle Higashioka who pulverized an elevated fastball to put the Twins behind two zero. He continued to fall behind hitters and give up hard contact and after giving up a blistered double to Aaron Judge, it became apparent he would be the first Twins starter to fall short of completing five innings this year. It was a good run.

    Domingo German dominant, but suspicious
    Thought to represent the soft underbelly of the Yankees pitching staff along with Clarke Schmidt, German instead was sharp with his command, throwing riding fastballs up in the zone and pairing it with a sharp slider and changeup. He was perfect the first time through the order, striking out six. 

    This aroused at least some suspicion from the umpires, who conferred before the start of the fourth regarding some sticky stuff on German's glove. German was allowed to stay after removing a substance, prompting Rocco Baldelli to protest and eventually be ejected from the game. Umpire James Hoye could be seen telling German, who previously was suspended for violating the league's domestic abuse policy, "I told you to wipe it off!" 

    The league was supposed to be cracking down harder on the foreign substance issue this year, following the crackdown mid-2021 and then a gradual relaxation following. Hoye’s exclamation would seem to indicate that German was told to remove a substance but did not comply. 

    His spin rate decreased significantly afterward. Conspiratorial baseball fans will note the Yankees being implicated for sign stealing during the Astros investigation, as well as sample balls from Yankees games being shown to have more bounce to them during the 2022 season, as compared to sample balls from other games.

    Boom or bust offense continues 
    Twins hitters swung over German’s changeup and underneath his fastball all day. The hitters that chose to be aggressive were rolling over pitches and grounding out quickly, while the hitters that tried to work the count fell behind and let German dictate the at-bat. Whether that was due to some unlawful pitching aid or not, the Twins hitters were not in command of the game. Trevor Larnach and Jose Miranda doubled in the seventh for the Twins’ first run, but Max Kepler grounded into an inning-ending double-play to end the threat.

    Morán shows improvement
    Taking over for Mahle in the fifth, Jovani Morán inherited runners on the corners and only one out. He induced a groundout to Cabrera, which Jose Miranda made a nice play on, nailing LeMahieu trying to score. Morán then got Cordero to tap out to end the threat. He then had a one two three sixth inning, although his control was wobbly, getting a few charitable strike three calls from the home plate umpire.

    Jorge Alcalá was a different story, however, following Morán for the seventh and hitting LeMahieu, walking Judge and allowing a sharp double on a middle-middle slider to Giancarlo Stanton which plated two more runs. He did settle down in his next inning outside of an Anthony Volpe single (and two stolen bases).

    What’s Next: 
    Pablo Lopez (1-0, 1.35 ERA) will look to continue his run of dominance, going up against Gerrit Cole (3-0, 1.40 ERA) in the series finale. Cole was very effective against the Twins last September, but they did pop five home runs against him at Target field last June.

    Postgame Interviews

    Bullpen Usage Chart

      TUE WED THU FRI SAT TOT
    Alcalá 0 15 0 0 44 59
    Durán 24 15 0 10 0 49
    López 0 12 0 15 0 27
    Morán 0 0 0 0 26 26
    Sands 0 0 23 0 0 23
    Jax 8 12 0 0 0 20
    Pagán 0 0 0 12 0 12
    Thielbar 4 0 0 0 0 4

     

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    On Sunday, Winokur went 2-for-5 with a homer and five RBI. After hitting .198 in April, the 21-year-old is hitting a robust .364/.453/.564 (1.017) with three homers in May.

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    7 hours ago, GKuehl said:

    Infuriating game all the way around. How German was allowed to remain in the game is just baffling (except for the fact that he plays for the Yankees so of course he was given a free pass). If a player on any other team is caught pitching with a foreign substance that is suspicious enough to merit a 5 minute discussion, they’d be tossed and MLB would investigate further. 

    Not the best day at the yard for Twins pitchers — none of the 3 (Mahle, Morán, and Alcalá) looked sharp. Hopefully we can win the series tomorrow! 

    P.S. Kepler feels like a bench player if everyone is healthy. I can’t see him starting over Larnach, Gallo, or Kirilloff in the corners on an everyday basis. 

    Kepler is not a good baseball player. But Gallo struck out 4 times today...in a AAA game.

    36 minutes ago, ashbury said:

    Any bets it won't be a Twins pitcher they suddenly take an interest in holding the hard line on?  :)

    BTW I would love to know what Rocco said that finally got him thrown out.  I'm thinking, "look, you have to throw me out, I can't go back to the dugout after this, just throw me out, please don't make me say a magic word or anything, just throw me out, I don't want to have to involve profanity or crude metaphors or anything, just throw me out, I will if I have to, but just throw me out, I ask this man to man but, just, please, throw me out."

    I guess if you think our pitchers are doing the same thing maybe they would but I haven’t seen any umpire take this much interest in a pitcher coming off the mound so far. Also if Twins pitchers are doing the same thing why complain? I don’t think they have  to  much to fear but who knows.

    3 hours ago, Eris said:

    Curious as to whether or not the Twins could have played the game under protest. It was no longer a judgment call as to if he had sticky stuff on his gloves. It was noticed by the umps who presumably deemed this incidental (this part is a judgment call) and asked him to remove it. He did not comply (perhaps this non-compliance is also considered an umpire judgment call). 
     

    I wonder why, when German said he had a rosin bag in the dugout where he sat, that the Umpire did not check out that rosin bag.

    The change in spin rates certainly is suspicious. Can't say I'm surprised to see pitchers still trying to push the limits and bend the rules. Rocco handled this pretty well, putting a spotlight on likely cheating by the Yankees but without crossing any lines on integrity. By couching his ejection based on a violation of procedure (from his perspective) he's standing up for his side without questioning the ump's ethics.

    Offense didn't get it done, Mahle struggled and it wasn't a great game for the Twins. But a win today washes it all away. And going in to the series I'm pretty sure most of us would have been perfectly ok with a split.

    13 hours ago, Dman said:

    I guess if you think our pitchers are doing the same thing maybe they would but I haven’t seen any umpire take this much interest in a pitcher coming off the mound so far. Also if Twins pitchers are doing the same thing why complain? I don’t think they have  to  much to fear but who knows.

    I wasn't thinking about rosin specifically so much as rules in general.  Maybe we see a couple of ticky tack balks called, for instance.  Pablo gets squeezed on a few borderline strikes.  "Rocco wants to play by the letter of the rules, huh?"  Umpires don't like to be shown up.

    16 hours ago, RpR said:

    His one K verses 4 for Buxton, so Buxton joins him on the bench?

    Bigger than one AB - he’s hitting .105 with an OBP of .150……..those numbers are around 1/2 of Joey Gallo’s career numbers……not MLB worthy for. ore than another 3 weeks at this pace.

    I thought when Rocco said "He was especially sharp in the first 3 innings...." it was a subtle jab.

    And Rocco did make a point of saying he wasn't pleased with having a "bunch of Yankees surrounding" the umps during the issue.  I think he made his point.  Pretty eloquently.

    Why does German have a rosin bag in the dugout that he's using between innings???  Isn't the rosin bag supposed to be on the back of the mound for use while he's pitching?  Ump has a problem with the stickiness....check the rosin bag.  




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