Huh. We've played a lot less Sleater-Kinney than I would have thought.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xrSuIqrhRU
Huh. We've played a lot less Sleater-Kinney than I would have thought.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xrSuIqrhRU
Finally got a new computer after many months without. Can finally add new music on the phone.
A big day for Cole Sands. Elizabethton has a pitcher named Dylan Thomas. The GCL season starts today!
since the djs are sleeping I'll toss one more on the bar-b-q
Date: Sunday, June 23.
Batting stars: Luis Arraez was 4-for-4 with a double. Max Kepler was 2-for-5 with a double. Jorge Polanco was 2-for-5. Eddie Rosario was 1-for-4 with a home run, his twentieth.
Pitching stars: Zack Littell pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit. Matt Magill pitched a perfect inning.
Opposition stars: Homer Bailey pitched 5.1 innings, giving up one run on five hits and a walk and striking out five. Billy Hamilton was 2-for-3 with two stolen bases, his fifteenth and sixteenth. Hunter Dozier was 2-for-4 with a three-run homer (his twelfth) and a double. Alex Gordon was 2-for-4 with two doubles and two RBIs. Whit Merrifield was 2-for-4. Kevin McCarthy pitched 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up two hits and striking out two.
The game: It was basically decided in the third inning. With one out, singles by Hamilton and Merrifield put men on first and third. Nicky Lopez' bunt single scored the first run, Gordon doubled home a second, and Dozier hit a three-run homer. That quickly, the Royals were ahead 5-0 and they would stay ahead the rest of the game.
Rosario got the Twins on the board leading off the fourth. Arraez had a one-out double and Miguel Sano walked, but Jason Castro was caught looking and Jake Cave grounded out, so the score stayed 5-1. Facing some mediocre Kansas City pitchers, the Twins only got one other threat going. That came in the seventh, when Cave was hit by a pitch, Polanco had a two-out infield single, and Nelson Cruz was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Rosario hit into a force out, however, and the Twins would not threaten again. Gordon's RBI double in the bottom of the seventh completed the scoring.
WP: Bailey (7-6). LP: Michael Pineda (4-4). S: McCarthy (1).
Notes: Arraez was at second base in place of Jonathan Schoop. Kepler remained in center, with Cave in right and Byron Buxton still on the IL.
Arraez is batting .436. Polanco is batting .326. Mike Morin gave up a run in one inning and now has an ERA of 2.08.
Pineda had been pitching fairly well lately, by his standards. He pitched well in this game if you take out the third inning, which unfortunately you can't.
The Twins had nine hits, a walk, and two hit batsmen, but could score just one run. The hits were concentrated in a very few players. As you can see above, Arraez had four of them. The top two men in the Twins order, Kepler and Polanco, went 4-for-10. The three through five batters were 1-for-12, with Rosario's solo homer being the lone hit. The bottom three batters were 0-for-10. That led to eleven men being left on base.
The Twins are 5-5 over their last ten games. A year ago, we'd have looked at that as a hopeful sign, thinking that maybe the Twins were starting to build on something. This year, we're all disappointed and wondering what the Twins will do to right the ship. One thing I've noticed abut Rocco, though, is that he does not get into panic mode easily. He has faith in his players and has faith in his own decision-making ability. If he believes he has a good reason for doing something, he's not going to change his mind just because it doesn't work right away. That's a good thing, I think, as long as you don't carry it too far. It's possible for that attitude to become stubbornness, where you insist on doing things your way despite evidence that your way doesn't work. I've not noticed that in Rocco, but he's only been a manager for half a season, so I guess time will tell.
The Twins signed Cody Allen to a minor league contract the other day. He was a really good relief pitcher until a couple of years ago, when he suddenly wasn't any more. It's a low-risk move that really can only hurt you if you allow it to. What I mean is that it can hurt you if you allow him to take playing time from a more deserving player, or if you convince yourself that you don't need to do anything else, or if you bring him to the majors even though he hasn't proven he belongs there, just because of who he is. I have confidence in the current front office that they won't let those things happen. And who knows? Maybe the Twins can help him get back to being a useful reliever again. The Twins could certainly use one of those.
Record: The Twins are 50-27, first in the American League Central, eight games ahead of Cleveland.
Projected record: We'll just have to settle for 135-27!
Billy Nash (1865)
George Harper (1892)
Rollie Hemsley (1907)
Jim Mills (1919)
Wally Yonamine (1925)
Don Mincher (1938)
Ken Reitz (1951)
Doug Jones (1957)
Tom Klawitter (1958)
Doug Bernier (1980)
Phil Hughes (1986)
Jim Mills spent almost his entire adult life involved in baseball in the Carolinas. He played college ball at North Carolina State, played minor league ball for nine seasons in the Carolinas, managed in Carolina minor leagues for six seasons, umpired in the Carolina League for two seasons, was in minor league front offices in the Carolinas from 1956-1971, and was president of the Carolina League for seven years.
Born in Hawaii, Wally Yonamine was a star in Japan from 1951-1962, stealing home eleven times.
Yesterday the Twins became the first American League team this season to win 50 games. Despite the recent rough patch the team has been going through, they've managed to maintain their status as the best team in the league and the distinction of not losing more than two games at a stretch. And it's not like we didn't all feel some regression to the mean creeping up on us. Odorizzi wasn't going to keep throwing endless shutout innings. The lineup couldn't keep scoring more than six runs with a couple of dingers every game. The bullpen has only so much smoke and so many mirrors. Guys are going to get banged up and go on the IL, sometimes when they've been riding a hot streak. That's the nature of a six month long season, ebbs and flows, high and lows, strikes and gutters. So yes, some ass-bats have been sneaking into the bat rack. Some gloves and arms have been temporarily cursed. There's been a higher than normal level of cerebral flatulence. But I think the Twins have shown remarkable resilience all year and will continue to do so, and we've seen a big enough sample now to know this is a good team with a good chance to make some postseason noise.
The Twins send Michael Pineda to the hill today to try to nail down the series win in this four-game set. He has not been horrible lately. In his last two starts he's thrown 11.2 innings and given up just two runs on seven hits. Homer Bailey will try to salvage a series split for the Royals. He's been a hot arm recently, throwing 13.2 shutout innings while giving up just seven hits in his last two outings. I feel like Polanco is due, so he's my stick to click pick today. Play ball!
George Weiss (1894)
Jack Smith (1895)
Karl Spooner (1931)
Dave Bristol (1933)
Tom Haller (1937)
Dave Goltz (1949)
Marty Barrett (1958)
Jim Deshaies (1960)
Hensley Meulens (1967)
Josh Byrnes (1970)
Mark Hendrickson (1974)
George Weiss was the general manager of the New York Yankees from 1948-1960.
Karl Spooner set the record, later tied by J. R. Richard, for strikeouts in a major league debut with fifteen.
Dave Bristol managed four different teams from 1966-1980.
Josh Byrnes has been the general manager of Arizona and San Diego and is currently the senior vice president of baseball operations for the Dodgers.
I mentioned listening to that Duff podcast awhile back which lead me to dusting off some G’n’R. I accidentally got the boy into “November Rain” and now every time he requests it, it gets stuck in my head for three days at a clip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUNZMiYo_4s
Performed in 1977, but released in 1974
I've been looking back at the Nixon administration for a variety of reasons (most of which are forbidden zone, obvi), but some of those reasons are to understand the environment my folks lived in better. Anywho, thanks for watching, and as always, please remember to like this post on social media.