MINNESOTA 3, DETROIT 2 IN MINNESOTA (11 INNINGS)
Date: Monday, August 30.
Batting stars: Don Mincher was 2-for-4 with a walk, scoring once and driving in one. Jimmie Hall was 1-for-1 with a walk. Sandy Valdespino was 1-for-2 with an RBI.
Pitching stars: Jim Kaat struck out six in six innings, giving up two runs on six hits and a walk. Al Worthington struck out six in three shutout innings, giving up three hits. Johnny Klippstein pitched two perfect innings with one strikeout.
Opposition stars: Hank Aguirre pitched 6.1 innings, allowing two runs (one earned) one two hits and five walks with four strikeouts. Willie Horton was 3-for-4 with two RBIs. Bill Freehan was 3-for-4.
The game: Horton singled in a run in the first to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead. The Twins tied in on Mincher's RBI single in the sixth. Each team scored once in the seventh to leave the score tied 2-2. The Tigers got a pair of two-out singles in the ninth and the Twins left two on in the tenth, but there was no more scoring until the eleventh. Mincher led off with a single and was pinch-run for by Mudcat Grant, who was bunted to second. Jerry Kindall grounded out, but Valdespino delivered a two-out single to right to end the game.
Of note: Zoilo Versalles was 1-for-5 with an RBI. Joe Nossek was 0-for-3 with a run. Rich Rollins was 0-for-5. Earl Battey was 0-for-4 with a walk.
Record: The Twins went to 84-49. Chicago was idle, so the Twins' lead over the White Sox increased to seven games.
Notes: Nossek started in place of Hall. Andy Kosco started in right...The first five batters in the Twins' starting lineup went a combined 1-for-21 with two walks...Battey threw out three attempted base stealers--Horton (twice) and Bill Freehan. Horton had his personal best in base stealing in 1965 with five, but was caught nine times. He was 20-for-58 in stealing bases for his career. Freehan stole four bases in 1965, one shy of his career best. For his career, he was 24-for-45 in stolen bases. The Tigers did have one successful stolen base in this game. It was by Jim Northrup, his only steal of the season. His career high was seven, and his career totals are 39-for-77.