Harry Howell (1876)
Jim Piersall (1929)
Jim Brewer (1937)
Willie Hernandez (1954)
Curt Schilling (1966)
Kent Bottenfield (1968)
Ruben Rivera (1973)
Xavier Nady (1978)
Clete Thomas (1983)
Monthly Archives: November 2019
1991 Rewind: Game Thirty-six
MINNESOTA 4, DETROIT 1 IN DETROIT
Date: Saturday, May 18.
Batting stars: Kirby Puckett was 2-for-4 with a home run, his fourth. Greg Gagne was 2-for-4. Shane Mack was 1-for-3 with a three-run homer, his third.
Pitching stars: Mark Guthrie pitched six innings, giving up one run on five hits and four walks. He struck out three. Rick Aguilera pitched two shutout innings, giving up three walks and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Milt Cuyler was 2-for-3 with a stolen base, his tenth. Frank Tanana pitched eight innings, giving up four runs on seven hits and four walks and striking out two. He threw 127 pitches.
The game: All the scoring came early. With two out and none on in the first Puckett hit a home run to give the Twins a 1-0 lead. With two out and none on in the bottom of the first, Guthrie walked three in a row to load the bases, but struck out Travis Fryman to get out of the inning.
Brian Harper led off the second with a single. Kent Hrbek walked, and Mack hit a three-run homer to put the Twins up 4-0. The Tigers got one back in the bottom of the second when Andy Allenson doubled, took third on Cuyler's single, and scored on a sacrifice fly.
And that was all the scoring. Detroit got a man to second in the fourth, when Fryman walked and stole second; in the sixth, on singles by Rob Deer and Pete Incaviglia, and in the seventh, when Cuyler singled and stole second. They had a major threat in the ninth. With one out, Dave Bergman walked. With two out, Aguilera walked Tony Phillips and Lou Whiteaker, loading the bases and bringing the potential winning run up to bat. Alan Trammell hit a fly to deep left, but it stayed in the park and the Twins won the game.
WP: Guthrie (3-2). LP: Tanana (2-3). S: Aguilera (7).
Notes: Mack started in right field in this game, but he was not yet the full-time starter. Other than that, it was the regular lineup.
Harper was 1-for-4 and was batting .385. Chuck Knoblauch was 1-for-4 and was batting .313. Puckett raised his average to .312. Gagne went up to .307. Chili Davis was 0-for-3 with a walk and was batting .300. As you can see, that makes five starters batting .300 or better. It's still only mid-May, but that's pretty good.
Terry Leach pitched a third of an inning, giving up no runs on one hit. His ERA was 2.70. Aguilera's ERA was 1.62.
Scott Leius was 1-for-3 to raise his average to .171.
There were eleven walks in the game, seven given by Twins pitchers. Who knows, but one suspects plate umpire Dale Scott might have had a small strike zone. Oddly, six of the seven walks Twins pitchers gave up came in two innings, the first and last. In both of those innings, Twins pitchers walked the bases full but did not allow a run.
Frank Tanana was a fine pitcher, but for some reason the Twins usually did fairly well against him. For his career he was 240-236, 3.66, 1.27 WHIP. Against the Twins, he was 19-20, 4.49, 1.37 WHIP. He only faced the Twins one other time in 1991, though, in late July, and did quite well in that game.
Record: The Twins were 19-17, tied for fourth with California, three games behind first-place Seattle. The Twins were a half game behind Texas for third place.
Albert King – Blues Power
November 13, 2019: Rocco’s Modern Manager Of The Year Award
Congrats, Baldelli!
Happy Birthday–November 13
Johnny Kling (1875)
Jackie Price (1912)
Ted Wilks (1915)
Jim Delsing (1925)
Steve Bilko (1928)
Wes Parker (1939)
Mel Stottlemyre (1941)
Gene Garber (1947)
John Sutton (1952)
Dan Petry (1958)
Pat Hentgen (1968)
Jason Simontacchi (1973)
Gerald Laird (1979)
Asdrubal Cabrera (1985)
Luke Bard (1990)
Jackie Price played one season in the major leagues, but was better known as a baseball entertainer. He is sometimes called a "baseball clown", but that's not really accurate, because he really performed tricks more than actually clowning.
1991 Rewind: Game Thirty-five
MINNESOTA 6, DETROIT 1 IN DETROIT
Date: Friday, May 17.
Batting stars: Kirby Puckett was 2-for-3 with a double, two walks, and two runs. Junior Ortiz was 2-for-4 with two doubles and a walk. Pedro Munoz was 2-for-4 with a triple, a walk, and two RBIs. Kent Hrbek was 2-for-4 with a double and a walk. Chili Davis was 2-for-4 with a walk and two runs.
Pitching stars: Scott Erickson pitched 6.1 innings, giving up one run on six hits and five walks and striking out three. Steve Bedrosian pitched 2.2 scoreless innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Tony Phillips was 1-for-3 with two walks and a stolen base, his fourth. Mickey Tettleton was 1-for-3 with a walk.
The game: Davis and Munoz singled to open the second inning. A double play looked like it might kill the rally, but Ortiz came through with an RBI double to put the Twins up 1-0. Detroit tied it in the bottom of the second on singles by Tettleton and Dave Bergman and a Travis Fryman sacrifice fly.
It stayed 1-1 until the fifth, when the Twins took control of the game. Ortiz led off with a double, followed by a Greg Gagne RBI single. Dan Gladden then hit into a fly ball double play, with Gagne thrown out trying to advance to second, and it looked like that might be it for the inning. But Chuck Knoblauch doubled, Puckett singled, and Hrbek doubled, leading to a three-run inning and a 4-1 Twins lead. The Tigers tried to respond in the bottom of the inning, opening with singles by Phillips and Lou Whitaker, but a pair of pop ups, a walk, and a fly out stranded three runners.
The Twins scored a run in the seventh on three walks and a passed ball (Twins Baseball!). The Detroit again tried to respond, loading the bases with one out on a single, a hit batsman, and a walk, but a pop up again ended the threat.
The Twins put it away in the ninth. With one out, Puckett walked, singles by Hrbek and Davis plated one run, and a triple by Munoz brought home two more to bring the total to 8-1.
WP: Erickson (6-2). LP: Bill Gullickson (4-2). S: Bedrosian (2).
Notes: In memory, Shane Mack was the starting right fielder for the Twins all year, but as we've already seen that's not how it was. He began the season in center, and then moved to the bench for a while. Munoz was the starting right fielder in this game. We'll see when Mack actually took over the right fielder job.
With Erickson pitching, personal catcher Ortiz was behind the plate.
Munoz raised his average to .333. Knoblauch was 1-for-5 and was batting .315. Davis raised his average to .308. Puckett went up to .306. Erickson's ERA went to 1.44. Bedrosian lowered his ERA to 2.82.
Scott Leius was used as a pinch-hitter and stayed in the game to play third. He went 0-for-1 with a walk and was batting .156. I didn't remember that Leius got off to such a poor start. Pagliarulo was batting .241 by this point--I wonder if there were people thinking Pagliarulo should be the full-time third baseman. If so, those people were wrong. Leius would start hitting, but even at this point, he had a .400 on-base percentage because he was drawing walks. His OPS was .713, compared to Pagliarulo's .540.
Ortiz had just five doubles in 1991, making it even more odd that two of them would come in the same game. He would have another on the last day of May, and then not another one until August 23. His final double of the season came on September 2. He also somehow had a triple on July 30 in Detroit. For his career he had 71 doubles, with a high of 13 for Cleveland in 1993. He had four triples, never having more than one per season.
The walk to Davis was an intentional walk, his fifth intentional walk of the season. He would end the year with thirteen.
The Twins were now 5-1 against the Tigers. The would go 8-4 against them for the season.
Record: The Twins were 18-17, tied for fifth with California, but just two percentage points behind Chicago. They trailed first-place Seattle by three games.
November 12, 2019: Wait A Sec…
Is Wiggins actually improving!?
- Yup. (78%, 7 Votes)
- Nope. (22%, 2 Votes)
Total Voters: 9
Young Thug (feat. Gunna) – Hot
My hip hop game is much smaller than it should be, but I definitely pay attention to Jeffery.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5dHD8MpSpU
Happy Birthday–November 12
Jack Ryan (1868)
Moonlight Graham (1877)
Carl Mays (1891)
Joe Hoerner (1936)
Bruce Bochte (1950)
Jody Davis (1956)
Donnie Hill (1960)
Greg Gagne (1961)
Jeff Reed (1962)
Randy Knorr (1968)
Sammy Sosa (1968)
Aaron Heilman (1978)
Charlie Morton (1983)
Mike Leake (1987)
Aaron Heilman was drafted by Minnesota in the first round in 2000, but did not sign.
We would also like to wish a happy anniversary to Mr. and Mrs. FT"HM"LT.
At The Movies: Infinite Content
As I'm sure many of you know, our kids certainly have the advantage when it comes to choices of media consumption. Back in my day, we had a VCR, but content was limited to whatever tapes we had in the house. The boy can watch something new he's never seen every hour of day while I watched Beetlejuice to the point that I could quote every line in the movie with perfect inflection and timing.
What movies/TV shows did you watch to a brain burning amount only because there was nothing else to watch?