I'll admit that I'm a geek and one reason I want the Twins to win today is so they'll be 26-13, with as many wins over .500 as total losses on the year. I'm not sure what you can say about this team anymore. The funny thing is, as good as the team is right now, it's pretty easy to see opportunities for improvement. We need more starting pitching depth. We could get that through acquisition or staff improvement. I think Gibson has the chance to be a very solid middle rotation pitcher and has plenty of room to grow as a player. I'm less enthused about Pineda, who did manage to turn in a quality start yesterday in a losing effort, but it it still kind of early. Too early to talk about Jose Berrios (6-1, 2.53 ERA, .919 WHIP), and/or Jake Odorizzi (5-2, 2.32 ERA, .938 WHIP) in the same breath as Cy Young, maybe, for the season is long and full of errors. Still, right now the Twins have a pretty solid starting rotation pitching as well as any in baseball. Berrios and Odorizzi are worth 1.5 and 1.4 WAR respectively. They tend to overshadow a fine run by Perez checking in at 1.1 WAR. Showing the most room for improvement, Gibson charts a 0.6 WAR and Pineda a meager 0.1. So, Gibson needs to step up to the next level, and Pineda at least needs to stabilize and take on some ballast at the back of the rotation. The bullpen continues to impress, especially when it's not being overused, although you can see some obvious depth issues there as well. Still, we have 7 relievers with an ERA+ above 100, and 5 of them above 200, and that's a nice thing to see. Fangraphs gives the Twins a 64% chance of winning today and taking the 4-game series with Perez on the mound going up against Daniel Norris (1-1, 3.81 ERA) for the Tigers. I'd say that sounds about right. Play ball!
Monthly Archives: May 2019
Happy Birthday–May 12
Due to personal time constraints, this is a reprint from last year which has not been updated. This situation will continue for at least a few more days.
Chicken Wolf (1862)
Lave Cross (1866)
Jumping Joe Dugan (1897)
Hank Borowy (1916)
Ed Runge (1918)
Yogi Berra (1925)
Felipe Alou (1935)
Ted Kubiak (1942)
Vic Albury (1947)
Bob Heise (1947)
Joe Nolan (1951)
Lou Whitaker (1957)
Kevin Bass (1959)
Willie Lozado (1959)
Mark Clark (1968)
Wes Helms (1976)
Felipe Lopez (1980)
Evan Meek (1983)
Lance Lynn (1987)
Ed Runge was an American League umpire from 1954-1970. His son Paul and his grandson Brian have also been major league umpires.
Infielder Willie Lozado was drafted by Minnesota in the third round of the January Secondary draft in 1978, but did not sign.
We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to MagUidhir’s sister.
May 12, 2019: Night Moves
Stewart, Duffy, and Romero down, Pérez returning from paternity leave, and La Tortuga is popping back out of his shell.
Kris Kristofferson – For the Good Times
I've never actually heard KK's version of this.
1981
Game 37 (and 38!): Tigers @ Twins – Let’s Play (Another) Two!
At the risk of extreme repetition...
This team is FUN.
Great pitching, great hitting... Byron Buxton not completely sucking. It's been a delight.
You know what would be even more delightful? Another doubleheader sweep.
Pineda and Stewart haven't exactly been aces, but if you're going to toss them out there, you may as well do it against the Tigers.
May 11, 2019: Garage Sailin’
About that time of year again. We have a little inside information on when they'll be good ones around here.
Y'all like to run the circuits?
Minor Details: Games of May 10
A bad night for Twins affiliates.
2019 Recap: Game Thirty-six
MINNESOTA 6, DETROIT 0 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Friday, May 10.
Batting stars: Mitch Garver was 1-for-1 with a two-run homer (his eighth) and three walks, scoring twice. Max Kepler was 1-for-4 with a home run, his eighth. Jorge Polanco was 1-for-4 with a walk and three RBIs.
Pitching stars: Jake Odorizzi pitched seven shutout innings, giving up one hit and no walks and striking out five. Matt Magill struck out two in a perfect inning. Fernando Romero pitched a scoreless inning, giving up two hits and striking out one.
Opposition stars: None.
The game: Christin Stewart doubled with one out in the first, but did not get past third base. That was the only baserunner the Tigers would get off Odorizzi, and the only runner they would get until the ninth.
Meanwhile, the first six Twins also went out. After that, though, things got better. In the third, Garver walked and Jonathan Schoop singled. With one out, Kepler walked to load the bases and Polanco delivered a two-run double to put the Twins up 2-0.
In the fourth, Marwin Gonzalez was hit by a pitch and Garver followed with a home run, making the score 4-0. Kepler led off the fifth with a home run to make it 5-0. In the sixth, Gonzalez got an infield single and walks to Garver, Byron Buxton, and Polanco forced home a run to bring the score to 6-0.
The Tigers opened the ninth with singles by Grayson Greiner and JaCoby Jones, their first baserunners since the first inning. A strikeout, a force out, and a lineout ended the inning and preserved the shutout.
WP: Odorizzi (5-2). LP: Tyson Ross (1-5). S: None.
Notes: Garver is batting .364 with an OPS of 1.228. Polanco is batting .341 with an OPS of 1.056.
Odorizzi has an ERA of 2.32. If you could throw out the game against Philadelphia, his ERA would be 1.50. He has not given up a run in his last three starts (twenty innings) and has struck out twenty over that span, allowing just seven hits and five walks. Over his last five starts (31.1 innings) he has allowed three runs on twenty-one hits and six walks. I think you could say he's on a roll. He's obviously not going to keep that up all season--he'd win the Cy Young award unanimously if he did--but he's sure pitching well right now.
Fernando Romero is now unscored upon in his last five games. Granted, it's only four innings, and he's allowed four hits and three walks. Still, his ERA has come down from 11.25 to 5.62. It's improvement.
Matt Magill is also unscored upon in his last three games (three innings). He has struck out four and has allowed just one hit and no walks, dropping his ERA from 6.75 to 3.18.
There was a scary moment in the sixth inning when, on a play at first base, Gonzalez' head collided with the knee of Niko Goodrum. Reports this morning are that Gonzalez has cleared the concussion protocol and is day-to-day, which is certainly good news. I expect he won't play today, and maybe not tomorrow, but if the reports are correct and nothing else happens, he should be good to go soon.
The Twins have a record of 24-12. That means they have won exactly two-thirds of their first thirty-six games. Granted that it's still May, and thirty-six games represents just two-ninths of the schedule. Granted, as well, that the Twins haven't always played the toughest schedule. But even granting all that, winning two-thirds of your games over a thirty-six game span is an achievement. It would be unusual for a bad team to be able to do that, even against weak competition. Again, lots of things (injuries, slumps, etc.) can happen. But it certainly appears that the Twins are a good baseball team this season.
Record: The Twins are 24-12, first in the American League Central, 4.5 games ahead of Cleveland.
Projected record: We're still on track for 150-12!
Happy Birthday–May 11
Due to personal time constraints, this is a reprint from last year which has not been updated. This situation will continue for the next several days.
Charlie Gehringer (1903)
Rip Sewell (1907)
Eddie Chiles (1910)
Jack Lang (1921)
Nestor Chylak (1922)
Milt Pappas (1939)
Frank Quilici (1939)
Jerry Martin (1949)
Dane Iorg (1950)
Mark Huismann (1958)
Walt Terrell (1958)
Trent Hubbard (1964)
Bobby Witt (1964)
Kerry Ligtenberg (1971)
Francisco Cordero (1975)
Miguel Sano (1993)
Eddie Chiles was the owner of the Texas Rangers from 1980-1989.
Jack Lang was a long-time sportswriter in New York and was the secretary-treasurer of the Baseball Writers Association of America from 1966-1988.
Nestor Chylak was an American League umpire from 1954-1978.