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    Yankees 9, Twins 1: Carlos Rodón, More Yankees Homers Crush Twins Underfoot

    The Twins tried a bullpen game at Yankee Stadium, in hopes of finally breaking through against the Bronx Bombers in 2025. What ensued was proof (if you needed it) that the trade deadline left the Twins without enough arms to compete this season.

    Steven Trefz
    Image courtesy of © Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Box Score
    SP: Travis Adams 2.1 IP, 4 H, 4 ER, 4 BB, 2 K (70 pitches, 36 strikes (51%))
    Home Runs: N/A
    Bottom 3 WPA: Adams (-.356), Luke Keaschall (-.101), Kody Clemens (-.061)

    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs
     image.png.200a3d53a272d1bef268808df166e59f.png

    Travis Adams took the mound at Yankee Stadium for his second career start, and he hoped to keep the homer-happy home lineup under control so that the Twins could even up the series. Big lefty Carlos Rodón opposed Adams, and the Twins hoped that Tuesday wouldn't be yet another failure against left-handed pitching in 2025. With the Wild Card window closing more completely by the day, a win on Empire sod was in order. Could such an unlikely outcome actually transpire?

    Opening Hope
    Austin Martin led off the game with a bloop to right, and he stole second base to immediately put a runner in scoring position for the visiting Twins. That would be the only hit the Twins got all night. Byron Buxton took a walk, and Ryan Jeffers took a pitch off his kneecap, and suddenly, the Twins had their worst possible run-scoring scenario: bases loaded and nobody out. Minnesota's newest Cooperstown enshrinee, Luke Keaschall, stood at the plate with a chance to immediately get his statue at Target Field with one swing of the bat. Rodón took the rookie to the cleaners, however, with a high fastball for strike three. Royce Lewis looked to have hit into a heart-wrenching double play, but he beat out the relay throw and Martin scampered home to set the Twins up with an early 1-0 advantage.

    That was all the Twins could muster, however, and Twins fans knew that it was an opportunity missed.

    Yankees Go Yard
    Adams successfully got Trent Grisham to fly out to start his efforts for the evening, but Aaron Judge quickly introduced himself as a bad, bad man. Judge took a middle-middle (for a giant) fastball deep to center field to tie things up. In the bottom of the second inning, Adams literally lost control of his outing. He walked Jazz Chisholm Jr. to start the inning, and then walked Ryan McMahon with one out. This put the much-maligned Anthony Volpe at the plate, and by the time his 3-run homer landed in the right-center seats, Yankees fans celebrated the return of their young phenom and a new 4-1 lead.

    Adams' control continued to unravel in the bottom of the third inning. After Cody Bellinger reached on an Edouard Julien fielding mishap at first, Adams walked Ben Rice and Chisholm again to end his night before he could finish three innings for the second straight outing. New Twins twirler Thomas Hatch entered to take on the bases loaded, one-out scenario. Hatch struck out Paul Goldschmidt and induced a ground out from McMahon to (surprisingly) escape the threat.

    The Twins Can't Hit Left-Handed Pitching
    After Rodón escaped the first inning with minimal damage done after 31 pitches, however, he took out the Twins in order in the second, third, fourth, and fifth, with only 39 more pitches required. By comparison, Adams hurled 70 pitches to get just seven outs. Weak contact ruled the evening against the crafty Rodón, who mixed pitches between 80 and 94 mph in the way that has consistently quieted Twins bats this season. (Granted, he was facing the likes of Mickey Gasper, Julien, and Ryan Fitzgerald, instead of Goldschmidt, McMahon, and Volpe at the bottom of the lineup.) The Twins entered the sixth inning without a hit since Martin's bloop to start the game.

    Hatch stayed out to start the bottom of the fifth, and Giancarlo Stanton was sure glad that he did. Stanton blasted a hanging slider 113.9 mph for yet another Yankees home run to make it 5-1. Hatch surrendered another hit and a walk in the inning, and with two outs and runners on the corners, Rocco Baldelli elected to keep him pitching past his 50th pitch with the newly dangerous Volpe at the plate. Volpe walked on what looked to be strike two, and now the bases were loaded for Grisham. With crickets chirping in the bullpen, Hatch buckled down and got Grisham to weakly ground out to the mound to end this threat on Hatch's 59th pitch. 

    More of the Same
    Rodón continued to obliterate Twins batters, surrendering only a walk to Jeffers on his way to completing seven innings of one-hit baseball. Meanwhile, the use of the pitching staff in Tuesday's game made it clear that winning wasn't really the concern, as Hatch was allowed to overcook and to walk most of the lineup while the bullpen stayed quiet. Hatch continued to throw pitch after pitch, regardless of results, escaping a threat in the sixth but walking in another run on his 99th pitch with a bases-loaded pass to Bellinger with two outs in the seventh. This was the 7th walk by Hatch tonight in 4 1/3 innings of work. With the bases still loaded, Kody Funderburk finally came on in relief to try to entice Stanton into a rare out in a seemingly unwinnable situation. It didn't work. Stanton ripped a full-count "single" off the wall in right to score two more Yankees runs and make the blowout official: 8-1. 

    The Twins offense, meanwhile, got a look at a new pitcher in Tim Hill. Unfortunately, Hill is also a lefty, so the Twins didn't do anything against him. Three up, three down. With the game out of reach, Byron Buxton took a seat on the bench and Martin took his place in center field. With Cole Sands now on the mound in the bottom of the eighth, Chisholm ripped a rocket out to deep center field that Buxton probably would have hauled in, but Martin's lunging dive came up short and Chisholm ended up with a triple instead of an out. A groundout scored him to push the ninth Yankee run across. The Yankees finally brought in a right-handed pitcher in Yerry De los Santos in the ninth, but the Twins fared no better. Alan Roden, newly returned papa Matt Wallner, and Keaschall went down in order to complete the one-hitter by the Yankees staff. 

    What’s Next?
    The Twins look to salvage the final game of this short road trip and to avoid going winless against the Yankees this season. They'll place their hopes in All-Star Joe Ryan (11-5, 2.79 ERA). The Yankees will send out rookie RHP Cam Schlittler (1-2, 4.38 ERA) for his sixth career start. First pitch is scheduled for 6:05 PM CDT.

    Postgame Interviews

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

      FRI SAT SUN MON TUE TOT
    Hatch 0 0 0 0 99 99
    Tonkin 0 18 38 0 0 56
    Kriske 17 0 17 19 0 53
    Ramírez 0 21 0 23 0 44
    Adams 43 0 0 0 0 43
    Ohl 0 0 36 0 0 36
    Topa 0 15 20 0 0 35
    Sands 9 0 9 0 16 34
    Funderburk 0 0 9 0 13 22

     

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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

    40 minutes ago, rv78 said:

    Say what you want about the current roster. They can't hit and they can't pitch. But even if they would have had the roster they had before the deadline sell-off they still would have lost. I tuned in to watch a couple innings and twice the camera man showed the players in the Yankee dugout looking out onto the field at the Twins and they were smiling and laughing. Watching the Twins try to compete was comical to them. They know this organization is a joke. You have owners who don't give a rats a$$, A Front Office that brings in guys like Gasper, Bride, Clemens, Hatch, Wentz, Kriske, and a Manager that doesn't even know how to set a lineup and play his best players regularly. 

    The former roster deserved to be blown-up. Now lets get rid of the Owners, Front Office, Manager and Coaches so we don't have to continue to throw-up when we watch 'em.

    The entirety of the roster wasn't that far from contending for a  playoff spot and even the AL Central. Had the starting rotation and a quality BP.

    The issue was the lineup. A lineup that couldn't make contact, run bases or field the ball. Then throw in a manager that just made things worse.

    There were select trades that needed to be made at the deadline. Those trades should have focused getting 8 guys on the field that understand fundamental and situational baseball. Speed, contact, defense and a manager that knows how to use them (and how to handle the starters and BP).

    As of today there are so many areas of needs it could be years of watching games like last night more times than not.

    Edited by hitterscount
    W

    Awful game by the Twins. might not have gotten shutout, somehow...but might have been the worst loss of the season. Absolutely dreadful. 11 free passes from Adams and Hatch? That's horrific. 

    1 hit? That's all we got, 1 goddamn hit? 

    I'm glad I had plans and missed this abomination. Rotten performance against the team I hate the most. Hells, bells it wasn't even over quickly with all those walks (2:52? Ew.)

    Hope the guys can throw it away and not completely suck in the last game of the series. 

    18 minutes ago, hitterscount said:

    Those trades should have focused getting 8 guys on the field that understand fundamental and situational baseball. Speed, contact, defense and a manager that knows how to use them (and how to handle the starters and BP).

    You are absolutely correct about this.  But why would you expect the front office to all of a sudden change their MO.  They have a roster of station to station players and they allow the manager to manage the team in a way that the players self police themselves on game preparation.

    This is why I want new ownership, an honest and objective analysis needs to be done of the organization  top to bottom.  And this current front office will not do it, they just keep doubling down on the same failed practices and strategies.

    Yanks started Aug. by being swept by MIA & lost every series since. They are reeling & panicking until now when facing the Twinkies (I hate that name). Now they are saying whew! good we are facing the Twins & they'll laydown & let us walk all over them so we can reset. !!!!!!!!!!!!

    Do the Twins care? NO!!! I don't care if we lose every series until the end if we win our series with NYY. This series is significant because if we win it, it'd give us some dignity. It's worth Baldelli preparing a rotation & lineup that's competitive. It's worthy for Baldelli put together a credible game plan, finally getting fired up & motivate his players. It's significant because we can be the ones help to spoil NYY's chances to make the playoffs & rub their noses in it & break this stupid curse. We had nothing to lose to throw everything at them. Putting together a make shift rotation, lineup, defense & no evident game plan made me sick.

    Yet I stayed up to follow the game. The Twins started out on a positive note. Martin got a hit, stole 2B, distrated Rodon, the basees were load before we knew it, with nobody out. We had the frantic Yanks on the ropes. A perfect opportunity to blow the game wide open, have Rodon rack up pitches for an early exit & send the Yanks further down spiraling. The other precending teams took advantage of the vunerable Yanks. but the Twins were flat thanks to Baldelli. Twins were able scrap a run across thanks to Lewis's hustle to 1B on a possible DP. They did force Rodon to throw 31 pitches in the 1st inning but Rodon only needed 39 pitches to get through the next 4. I went to bed.

     

      

    7 hours ago, glunn said:

    I am no longer watching any games -- it's not fun seeing this team play and how they are being managed.

    Maybe there is a chance that Ryan can spark a win tomorrow, but overall the future seems bleak.

     

    Re-tooling had to happen.  Should have started last year with firing Rocco before this year started.

    2 hours ago, TwinsDr2021 said:

    He is 27 and has a .796 OPS in AAA. No speed and limited defense. 

    His OPS is lower than Martin, Fitzgerald, Erod, Cardenas, Keirsey, Julien, Gasper.

    In other words he is a non-prospect (Like the whole Bullpen, so.....)

     

    I hate to quibble (really, I love to quibble), but:

    Fitzgerald is 31, Gasper 29, Keirsey 28, Julien, Martin 26.  (ERod 22, Cardenas 25)

    We've seen Keirsey and Julien at the big league level (Hitting?? Competitive??), Gasper as well.  Fitzgerald is in his "20 game" try-out. 

    Martin seems like a keeper. Why haven't we seen Cardenas and ERod (I know, Injury).

     

    McCusker strikes out a bit more, but hits Home Runs way more (RBIs).   His OPS was a lot higher earlier in the year.  Seems like his "call up" kind of messed with his confidence.  Why not try to get 5 years of the guy?

    I'm probably wrong, but this team needs a spark.......

    13 hours ago, thelanges5 said:

    Gleeman:

    Twins are now 44-125 (.260) vs. the Yankees since 2002, including 9 straight losses.

    Twins' winning percentage is .514 vs. all other teams since 2002.

    All three Twins managers since 2002 have a sub-.270 winning% vs. the Yankees.

    .269 — Ron Gardenhire
    .259 — Paul Molitor
    .237 — Rocco Baldelli

    The Gardenhire curse, AND a Gardenhire manages the Saints - we are doomed, doomed I say.

    21 minutes ago, PatG said:

    I hate to quibble (really, I love to quibble), but:

    Fitzgerald is 31, Gasper 29, Keirsey 28, Julien, Martin 26.  (ERod 22, Cardenas 25)

    We've seen Keirsey and Julien at the big league level (Hitting?? Competitive??), Gasper as well.  Fitzgerald is in his "20 game" try-out. 

    Martin seems like a keeper. Why haven't we seen Cardenas and ERod (I know, Injury).

     

    McCusker strikes out a bit more, but hits Home Runs way more (RBIs).   His OPS was a lot higher earlier in the year.  Seems like his "call up" kind of messed with his confidence.  Why not try to get 5 years of the guy?

    I'm probably wrong, but this team needs a spark.......

    I don't think Martin is a keeper, he's a terrible defender in the outfield and is essentially a DH who can hit .260 promised of mostly singles. Maybe he can get his walk rate close to what he did in the minors, but he's a sub-replacement level player as of now.

    This is the Nick Gordon situation again, a highly drafted 1st rounder who has no defensive home and didn't hit well enough in the minors to indicate that they could be more than a bench bat. 

    1 hour ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Yanks started Aug. by being swept by MIA & lost every series since. They are reeling & panicking until now when facing the Twinkies (I hate that name). Now they are saying whew! good we are facing the Twins & they'll laydown & let us walk all over them so we can reset. !!!!!!!!!!!!

    Do the Twins care? NO!!! I don't care if we lose every series until the end if we win our series with NYY. This series is significant because if we win it, it'd give us some dignity. It's worth Baldelli preparing a rotation & lineup that's competitive. It's worthy for Baldelli put together a credible game plan, finally getting fired up & motivate his players. It's significant because we can be the ones help to spoil NYY's chances to make the playoffs & rub their noses in it & break this stupid curse. We had nothing to lose to throw everything at them. Putting together a make shift rotation, lineup, defense & no evident game plan made me sick.

    Yet I stayed up to follow the game. The Twins started out on a positive note. Martin got a hit, stole 2B, distrated Rodon, the basees were load before we knew it, with nobody out. We had the frantic Yanks on the ropes. A perfect opportunity to blow the game wide open, have Rodon rack up pitches for an early exit & send the Yanks further down spiraling. The other precending teams took advantage of the vunerable Yanks. but the Twins were flat thanks to Baldelli. Twins were able scrap a run across thanks to Lewis's hustle to 1B on a possible DP. They did force Rodon to throw 31 pitches in the 1st inning but Rodon only needed 39 pitches to get through the next 4. I went to bed.

     

      

    But, but, its Gasper's fault , SO many here continually babble ITS GASPER'S fault.




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