2019 Recap: Game Ninety-four

NEW YORK 14, MINNESOTA 4 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, July 17.

Batting stars:  Mitch Garver was 2-for-3 with a home run (his fifteenth) and a walk.  Nelson Cruz was 1-for-4 with a home run, his eighteenth.

Pitching star:  Martin Perez pitched six innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on five hits and a walk and striking out four.

Opposition stars:  Amed Rosario was 4-for-4 with a home run (his tenth), a triple, a walk, four runs, and three RBIs.  Adeiny Hechevarria was 3-for-5 with two doubles and two runs.  Dominic Smith was 2-for-3 with a home run (his ninth), two runs, and four RBIs.  Todd Frazier was 2-for-5.  Pete Alonso was 1-for-6 with a two-run homer (his thirty-first) and two runs.  Jason Vargas pitched six innings, giving up three runs on five hits and a walk and striking out four.  Jeurys Familia pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit and striking out one.

The game:  It was a good game until suddenly it wasn't.  The Twins took a 1-0 lead in the second when Max Kepler hit a one-out double and Miguel Sano came through with a two-out single.  The lead did not survive the next half-inning, as Rosario homered with one out in the third to tie it 1-1.  Cruz put the Twins in front 2-1 with a one-out homer of his own in the bottom of the third, but the lead again did not survive the next half-inning.  The Mets loaded the bases with none out on an error, a single, and a hit batsman.  A double play scored the tying run, although it also enabled the Twins to escape without further damage.  The Twins got the lead back in the fifth when Garver hit a one-out home run.

This time the lead lasted an inning and a half.  In the seventh, Rosario singled, Hechevarria doubled, and Smith hit a three-run homer to give New York a 5-3 advantage.  Then, in the eighth, the roof fell in, or it would have it Target Field had a roof.  The Mets had two on with two out and Hechevarria hit a fly ball to Eddie Rosario in left.  Rosario somehow did not catch it, allowing two runs to score.  The error was followed by a double, a single, and a home run, and the score was 11-3.  The Twins got one back in the bottom of the eighth, but as they are currently strapped with only a seven-man bullpen, Rocco had Ehire Adrianza pitch the ninth.  He allowed three more runs, leading to a final of 14-4.

WP:  Vargas (4-5).  LP:  Trevor May (3-3).  S:  None.

Notes:  Max Kepler was in center and Marwin Gonzalez in right in the absence of Byron Buxton.  Luis Arraez was at second base in the absence of Jonathan Schoop.

Jorge Polanco was 1-for-4 to hold his average at .307.  Arraez was 1-for-4 and is batting .380.

Swept.  By the Mets.  By the Mets.  A team that can barely get out of its own way.  And we got swept by them.

Yes, I know all the excuses.  These things happen in baseball, it was only a two-game series, we were using the back end of our rotation, every team goes through slumps, we've had injuries, we didn't get the breaks, blah blah blah blah blah.  The bottom line is that we still got swept by the Mets.  By the Mets.

Meanwhile, Cleveland was on the up end of a sweep.  Yes, they were only playing the Tigers.  And we were only playing the Mets.  The Mets.

Good teams take care of business and win the games they're supposed to win.  Also-rans make excuses.  The Twins have been looking an awful lot like also-rans lately.  I know, it's a long season.  But it's slipping away, and so is the Twins' lead.  I don't know what they need to do to turn things around, but they'd better figure something out, and they'd better do it soon.

Record:  The Twins are 58-36, in first place in the American League Central, four games ahead of Cleveland.

Projected record:  We'll just have to settle for 126-36!

13 thoughts on “2019 Recap: Game Ninety-four”

  1. One thing that I'm trying to hold on to during this bad stretch is that they do have a better record than the Astros and a similar division lead.

    They gotta pull their heads outta their asses, though.

    1. Starting on July 30, the Indians have a stretch where they play Houston, Anaheim, Texas, Minnesota, Boston, New York

      1. Still not worried about the Indians (for this reason and others); I'm worried about NYY and Houston and home field advantage.

        For the record, I don't know that I've heard this team make excuses. Maybe others have made excuses for them...

        1. I have, but they haven't been couched as excuses so much as denial, that everything's fine and it's going to turn around any time and we don't need to do anything about it. Again, I'm not saying they should panic, but everything's not fine and they do need to do something about it.

          To me, the biggest failure is not so much the batting--players and teams go into slumps. But the number of errors and misplays, especially on routine balls, tells me there's a lack of focus and concentration. In my opinion, that's what needs to change.

          1. There was a quote from Rocco after the game to the effect of "That didn't look like us." Well, for the last month or more than is what you've looked like. And you're going to keep looking like that until something is done about it.

          2. yeah, there have been several stupid errors, not just the typical rushed throws etc.

            Everything is fine, they just need to get Bux back on the battlefield

      2. I just want the Twins to figure it out by Saturday so I can get a good show (and I also want the forecasted rain to go find somewhere else to be).

    2. They actually don't have a better record than the Astros anymore. Houston is 60-37 (.619). The twins are 58-36 (.617).

  2. I was at the game with work and AJR. (My first time bringing only her to a ballgame.)
    I don't eat at Target Field (three food poisonings is enough), and I couldn't find an agreeable food truck option, but AJR was quite satisfied with Jimmy John's. When she said she was hungry a bit later, I got her a dollar dog.
    It was hot, the rain delay without ran was weird.
    It was my first game under the new "No useful bags" rule, and I had AJR leave her book at my office (Percy Jackson, book 1).
    I did show AJR a bit about scoring a game.
    Our tickets were in 102: Nearly the last section down the 1st base line. HPR would have liked being there with his glove, we were behind the screen earlier this year. Only a few balls came anywhere near us.
    HPR would not have like Rosario's horrible error (Eddie is his favorite player).
    We left after the 8th. I gave AJR permission to leave after the top of the 8th. She elected to stay through the bottom of the inning.
    She said she had a fun time.

    Next ticket I get, I've got to bring LBR. I am very glad she wasn't at this game... she would have wilted.

    Stadium notes: I've never realized how far apart the water fountains are on the lower level. AJR forgot her bottle, so we made three treks to the fountain during the game. Maybe there's one closer to 102 around the outfield sections.

Comments are closed.