HOUSTON 10, MINNESOTA 4 IN HOUSTON
Date: Tuesday, April 23.
Batting stars: Jonathan Schoop was 2-for-4 with two doubles. Eddie Rosario was 1-for-4 with a three-run homer, his tenth.
Pitching star: Ryne Harper retired both batters he faced.
Opposition stars: Tyler White was 2-for-2 with a walk and two runs. George Springer was 2-for-3 with two walks, scoring twice and driving in two. Carlos Correa was 2-for-4 with a double. Josh Reddick was 2-for-4 with a double and two runs. Jose Altuve was 1-for-4 with a three-run homer (his ninth) and a walk. Wade Miley struck out seven in six innings, giving up three runs on three hits and a walk.
The game: It looked good early. Mitch Garver led off the game with a single, Nelson Cruz drew a one-out walk, and Rosario followed with a three-run homer, putting the Twins up 3-0. The Astros got on the board in the third, as White walked, Max Stassi singled, and Springer had an RBI single, but a double play got the inning back under control and the Twins still led 3-1. It was just a temporary reprieve, however. In the fifth, Reddick doubled and White singled, putting men on first and third with none out. Stassi flied out, but Springer had a run-scoring double and Alex Bregman delivered a two-out two-run single to put Houston ahead 4-3.
Meanwhile, the Twins had not had a baserunner since Schoop led off the second with a double. They hit some balls hard--it's not like there were helpless up there--but still, Miley closed out his evening with fifteen consecutive batters retired. Hector Rondon came in to start the seventh and retired the first two men he faced. Then, however, Schoop doubled and Max Kepler came through with a single to tie the score 4-4. The Twins got men to second and third with two out, but Garver's fly to deep left ended the inning.
And then things fell apart. Trevor Hildenberger came in to start the seventh. A single and two walks loaded the bases with one out. Bregman's sacrifice fly gave the Astros a 5-4 lead. Adalberto Mejia came in to give up a run-scoring single to Michael Brantley, making the score 6-4.
It didn't get better in the eighth. Tyler Duffey had come on to get the last out of the seventh and remained in the game. An error and a single put men on first and third, and another error scored a run. A passed ball put men on second and third, still with none out. Stassi and Springer struck out, giving hope that the Twins might at least have a small chance to come back in the ninth. That hope was dashed as Altuve hit a three-run homer to put the game out of reach at 10-4. The Twins went down in order in the ninth.
WP: Rondon (2-0). LP: Hildenberger (2-1). S: None.
Notes: With a lefty starting for Houston, Garver was moved to the leadoff spot, with Max Kepler batting eighth.
Garver was 1-for-4 and is batting .405. Jorge Polanco was 0-for-4 and is batting .372. Harper lowered his ERA to 2.70. Hildenberger was charged with two runs on one hit and two walks in two-thirds of an inning, but his ERA is still 2.16. All four runs off Duffey in 1.1 innings were unearned, so his ERA drops to 1.69.
Rosario's homer made him the first Twin to ever reach ten homers before May 1. Of course, back in the day, the season didn't start until the middle of April. Still, it's an achievement, and he deserves credit for it.
I feel like the Twins' bullpen has done fairly well overall, but when it goes south it seems to go clear to Antarctica. Last night the relief pitchers combined to allow six runs in 2.2 innings. Four of the runs were unearned, but that's still not good. They walked three in that span, which obviously contributed to the troubles, especially in the seventh inning.
Twins batters did not have a lot of luck last night. The play-by-play at b-r.com indicates five deep fly balls for outs, plus one line drive out. That's not to say that the Twins deserved to win, but had just a couple of those hard-hit balls been hits, things might have gone differently.
It sounds like Kohl Stewart is coming up to make the start tonight against Justin Verlander. That does not seem like a favorable matchup for the Twins, to put it mildly. Still, it's baseball. One never knows what might happen.
Record: The Twins are 13-8, in first place in the American League Central, 1.5 games ahead of Cleveland and Detroit.
Projected record: We'll just have to settle for 154-8!
And of course, a play you might not ever see again.
Thank you--I hadn't actually seen that yet and Kris and Dazzle didn't do a stellar job of describing it. For it still being April, we've sure had our share of unusual plays.
I'm hoping a Verlander start can end like a deGrom start.