MINNESOTA 4, TORONTO 1 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Wednesday, April 17.
Batting stars: Nelson Cruz was 2-for-3 with a double, a walk, and two RBIs. Jorge Polanco was 2-for-3 with a double, a walk, and two runs. Marwin Gonzalez was 2-for-3 with a walk.
Pitching stars: Jake Odorizzi struck out six in 5.2 innings, giving up one run on six hits and a walk. Adalberto Mejia pitched 1.1 scoreless innings, giving up a hit. Taylor Rogers struck out two in a scoreless inning, giving up one hit. Blake Parker struck out two in a perfect inning.
Opposition stars: Freddy Galvis was 2-for-4. Javy Guerra pitched two shutout innings, giving up two hits and striking out one.
The game: The Blue Jays got on the board in the first inning, as Galvis hit a one-out single, took second on a fly out, and scored on Justin Smoak's two-out single. The Twins came right back with two in the bottom of the first. Max Kepler led off with a double, Polanco walked, and Cruz singled, tying the score and putting men on first and third with none out. It looked like it could be a big inning for the Twins, but Eddie Rosario hit into a double play, taking them out of the inning but still producing the go-ahead run.
The Twins added a run in the third. Polanco and Cruz started the frame with back-to-back doubles, making it 3-1 Minnesota. They got one more in the fifth. Walks to Cruz and C. J. Cron put men on first and second with two out and Marwin Gonzalez delivered an RBI single, giving the Twins a 4-1 lead.
Meanwhile, Odorizzi was in control. He gave up some singles, but did not allow a man past first base after the first inning. He was still in control in the sixth, but his pitch count got up to 101, so he was removed from the game with two out. Three relievers, listed above, came on and kept things in control, similarly not allowing a man past first base. The Twins went on to take an uneventful (in a good way) 4-1 win.
WP: Odorizzi (1-2). LP: Trent Thornton (0-2). S: Parker (4).
Notes: Polanco raised his average to .429 with an OPS of 1.215. He's obviously not going to keep that up all season, but he really has had a remarkable fifteen game stretch. Cruz is batting .313 with an OPS of .976. He probably won't keep that up, either, but the fall-off most likely will not be as great. Rogers has an ERA of 1.04. Parker has an ERA of 1.42.
This was Odorizzi's second solid start out of four, and one of the others was good until it suddenly wasn't. He's not going to be an ace, but if he's just be a dependable pitcher who keeps the team in the game he's a valuable man for the Twins. And looking at his record, there's no obvious reason he shouldn't be able to be that.
From the play-by-play (and from the game log), this looks like just a nice, comfortable win for the Twins. It was only a three-run margin, but at the same time there does not appear to have been any point at which the lead was in serious jeopardy. It seems to me that having games like this might be one of the hallmarks of a good team. Dramatic wins are fun, pummeling the other team is fun, but just being comfortably in control all the way, even when you don't have a huge lead, strikes me as the type of game a good team has quite a number of. Let's hope we see more of them with the Twins.
Record: The Twins are 9-6, in second place in the American League Central, a half game behind Cleveland. They are currently in position for a wild card spot, leading Texas by percentage points.
Projected record: We're still on track for 156-6!
Was glad this game did not end up following the framework of the last few.