MINNESOTA 6, TAMPA BAY 3 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Tuesday, April 30.
Batting stars: Torii Hunter was 2-for-4 with a two-run homer, his ninth. Bobby Kielty was 2-for-4 with a double. Brian Buchanan was 2-for-4.
Pitching stars: Kyle Lohse pitched six innings, giving up two runs on six hits and two walks with three strikeouts. Eddie Guardado pitched a perfect inning.
Opposition stars: Jason Conti was 2-for-3 with two doubles. Ben Grieve was 2-for-4 with a home run, his sixth. Chris Gomez was 1-for-3 with a double and a walk.
The game: The Twins scored three in each of the first two innings. That was all they got, but it was enough. In the first, Kielty had a leadoff double, went to third on a bunt, and scored on a sacrifice fly by Doug Mientkiewicz. Buchanan then singled and scored on Hunter's two-run homer to make it 2-0. In the second, Dustan Mohr doubled, A. J. Pierzynski singled, and Denny Hocking walked to load the bases. Kielty singled one home, another scored on a ground out, and a third came in on an error, making it 6-0 Twins. The Devil Rays got on the board in the fifth on a two-run double by Conti. Grieve homered with two out in the eighth to finish the scoring.
WP: Lohse (2-1). LP: Ryan Rupe (3-2). S: Guardado (10).
Notes: Kielty played left, giving Jacque Jones a day off. He batted leadoff...Jay Canizaro again played second, going 1-for-2 with a walk...Buchanan was the DH and raised his average to .321...Hunter raised his average to .371. He couldn't be expected to keep that up, of course, and he didn't, batting .270 the rest of the season...Mohr went 1-for-3 with a walk to make his average .366. He couldn't keep it up, either, batting .247 the rest of the way...Pierzynski was 1-for-4 and was batting .316...Denny Hocking played short, again replacing Cristian Guzman. He was 1-for-2 with a walk...Guardado's ERA dropped to 1.38...Steven Kent pitched two shutout innings for the Devil Rays. This was his only season in the majors. He was a Rule 5 player and Tampa Bay kept him all year. He started the season pretty well, and had a 3.77 ERA through June 19. He didn't do so well after that, though, finishing the season 0-2, 5.65. Oddly, after keeping him on the roster all season, the Devil Rays waived him in November and he went to Florida. He eventually went to the Colorado, Atlanta, and Houston organizations, never making it back to the majors. He had an excellent season in AA in 2004 for Atlanta and did well in AAA in 2006 for Houston, but didn't have much other success. He started playing independent ball in 2007 and continued to do so through 2012.
Record: Minnesota was 16-11, in second place, a half game behind Chicago.
Hunter us on pace for over 50 homers! I can see a Hall of Famer here, especially if he can lead the team in the playoffs.
4.7 rWAR in 2001 that was almost entirely from elite fielding. So far in April of 2002, he's added in great hitting: .371/.409/.676. His BABIP is .390 though. Conveniently that's the entire month of April so his April split shows an OPS+ of 188.
I'm looking at Eddie's save pace, myself.
Since it's the end of April, here's the standings for the division:
This seems like as good a time as any to say how much I've enjoyed the LTEs to this year's "Rewind". I understand that we're getting more this year because there are more people who actually remember the season (after all, I'm the only one here who can remember 1965 and my memories of it are pretty vague). Still, the LTEs have made it a lot more fun. Hope you'll keep them coming!
Yeah. I was 11 years old in 1991, but even then I only remember watching the World Series. Most games weren't on local TV and I mostly got updates through the newspaper.