1991 Rewind: Game Fifty-seven

MINNESOTA 8, CLEVELAND 5 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Monday, June 10.

Batting stars:  Shane Mack was 3-for-5 with two runs.  Scott Leius was 2-for-2.  Kent Hrbek was 2-for-3 with a walk, two runs, and two RBIs.  Brian Harper was 2-for-4 with a hit-by-pitch.  Kirby Puckett was 2-for-4.  Dan Gladden was 1-for-3 with two walks and two runs.

Pitching star:  Paul Abbott pitched four shutout innings, giving up three hits and no walks and striking out three.

Opposition stars:  Felix Fermin was 4-for-5 with a double and a stolen base, his fourth.  Mike Huff was 2-for-5 with a home run, two runs, and two RBIs.  Luis Lopez was 2-for-4.

The game:  Huff led off the game with a home run.  The Twins got the run back in the bottom of the first when Gladden walked, went to second on a Mack single, and scored on a pair of sacrifice flies.  The Indians responded with three in the second.  Luis Lopez got a one-out single and went to second when Turner Ward walked.  With two out, Huff had a two-run single-plus-error and Fermin had an RBI single, putting Cleveland ahead 4-1.

The Twins got a pair of one-out walks in the second, but a double play took them out of the inning.  In the third, however, Mack and Puckett singled, putting men on first and third with none out.  A force out brought home one run and singles by Chili Davis and Harper plated another, cutting the lead to 4-3.  Another double play, however, took them out of the inning.

The Twins took the lead in the fifth.  Puckett and Hrbek opened the inning with singles.  With one out, Harper was hit by a pitch, loading the bases.  Mike Pagliarulo then delivered a three-run double, giving the Twins a 6-4 lead.  It went to 8-4 in the sixth.  It again started with a pair of singles, this time by Gladden and Mack.  Sacrifice flies by Puckett and Davis followed.

Fermin created a run in the seventh.  He singled, stole second, went to third on a fly ball, and scored on a ground out, making the score 8-5.  The Indians threatened in the ninth.  Alex Cole singled but was taken off the bases by a double play.  With two out, Fermin doubled and Jerry Browne singled, bringing the tying run to the plate.  Rick Aguilera then came in and retired Rick James on a deep fly ball to end the game.

WP:  Abbott (1-0).  LP:  Eric King (4-5).  S:  Aguilera (16).

Notes:  Al Newman started at second base in place of Chuck Knoblauch.  Mack took the second spot in the batting order.  Pagliarulo started at third base.  Leius batted for him in the seventh inning and remained in the game at third base.

Harper raised his average to .336.  Puckett raised his average to .323.  Abbott lowered his ERA to 2.45.  Aguilera lowered his ERA to 2.20.  Terry Leach pitched 2.2 innings, giving up one run, to make his ERA 3.12.

Mark Guthrie started for the Twins and allowed four runs in two innings on five hits and a walk.  He struck out two.  King pitched 4.1 innings, allowing six runs on eight hits and four walks.  He struck out none.

This was not Abbott's longest relief stint--in fact, it's tied for third.  Each of his next two appearances would be longer.  It was, however, his longest scoreless appearance of the season.

Despite his four hits in this game, Felix Fermin was not a good batter.  For his career he batted .259/.305/.303.  He played for ten seasons and had over three thousand plate appearances, so one assumes he was a superior fielder.  He was thought to have been one, anyway.  His best offensive season was 1994, when he batted .317 in 411 plate appearances.  That sounds impressive, and in a way it is, but because he rarely walked and had little power, his OPS was still only .718.  That was the only season he got over. 700.  The next year he batted .195, and the following year he was done.  You'd have thought that, as a light-hitting shortstop, he might have been a good base stealer, but you'd have been wrong.  His high in stolen bases was six, in 1989.  For his career, he was 27-for-48 in stolen bases.  b-r.com says that his "main claim to fame in the US is that he was traded by the Cleveland Indians to the Seattle Mariners in return for Omar Vizquel, in what was arguably the worst trade in Mariners history."  He did, however, become a successful manager in the Mexican League, winning a league championship in 2007.

The Twins had now won nine a row and had swept series from Baltimore and Cleveland.  They were continuing to climb the standings.  Next, the Twins would host the Yankees.  The Yankees of this era were not "The Yankees", but they were still about a .500 team at this stage of the season.

Record:  The Twins were 32-25, in third place in the American League West, three games behind Oakland.  They were a half game behind second-place California and 1.5 games ahead of fourth-place Seattle.

Happy Birthday–December 4

Jesse Burkett (1868)
Shano Collins (1885)
Bob Shawkey (1890)
Harvey Kuenn (1930)
Mike Couchee (1957)
Lee Smith (1957)
Stan Jefferson (1962)
Bernardo Brito (1963)
Jerome Williams (1981)
Matt Fox (1982)
Carlos Gomez (1985)
Jake Cave (1992)

Mike Couchee was drafted by Minnesota in the second round of the January Secondary draft in 1978, but did not sign.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 4

1991 Rewind: Game Fifty-six

MINNESOTA 9, CLEVELAND 2 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Sunday, June 9.

Batting stars:  Pedro Munoz was 3-for-3 with a double.  Shane Mack was 2-for-4 with a home run (his fourth), a double, a stolen base (his second), two runs, and three RBIs.  Brian Harper was 2-for-4 with a double and two runs.  Al Newman was 2-for-4 with two RBIs.  Kent Hrbek was 2-for-4.

Pitching stars:  Jack Morris pitched eight innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on five hits and three walks and striking out three.  Steve Bedrosian pitched a scoreless inning, giving up a hit and a walk.

Opposition star:  Turner Ward was 1-for-2 with a double and a walk.

The game:  Hrbek's RBI single put the Twins ahead 1-0 in the first inning.  In the third, Mack hit a one-out double, went to third on a ground out, and scored on a wild pitch to make it 2-0.  With one out in the fourth, Harper singled and scored on a Munoz double to make it 3-0.

The Indians got on the board in the sixth on a walk, a passed ball, and Mark Lewis' RBI single.  The Twins then put the game out of reach.  In the seventh, Munoz singled, Newman singled, and Mack hit a two-out three-run homer to make the score 6-1.  Cleveland got one back in the eighth when Ward doubled and Joel Skinner singled, but the Twins responded with three more in the bottom of the eighth.  Hrbek singled, Harper doubled, and Gene Larkin was intentionally walked to load the bases.  Randy Bush was then accidentally walked to bring home one run and Newman hit a two-run single to bring the score to 9-2.

WP:  Morris (7-5).  LP:  Rod Nichols (0-5).  S:  None.

Notes:  Mack was in left field in place of Dan Gladden.  He batted second, with Chuck Knoblauch moved up to the leadoff spot.  Knoblauch, however, left the game after six innings.  Greg Gagne came in to play shortstop with Newman, who had started the game at short, moving to second base.  Munoz was in right.  Larkin pinch-hit for Munoz in the eighth and remained in the game in right field.  Bush pinch-hit for third baseman Scott Leius in the eighth inning, and Mike Pagliarulo then came in to play third the rest of the game.

Harper raised his average to .331.  Kirby Puckett was 0-for-4 to drop to .320.  Munoz raised his average to .317.  Gagne was 0-for-2 and was batting .304.

With his pinch-hit walk, Bush's average remained .189.

Knoblauch would miss the next day's game, but would be back in the lineup after that, so whatever caused him to leave this game was apparently not too serious.

Cleveland's starter was Rod Nichols.  He pitched 6.1 innings, allowing five runs (four earned) on eight hits and a walk and struck out three.  I don't remember him, but he appears to have been a hard-luck pitcher, at least in 1991.  He went 2-11 with an ERA of 3.54 and a WHIP of 1.27.  In his eleven losses, the Indians scored a total of twenty runs.  In fact, in his two wins they only scored five runs.  Cleveland finished dead last in runs scored in 1991, and by quite a bit--they scored 576 runs, and next-to-last was California with 653.  With an offensive offense like that, I suppose they had quite a few hard luck pitchers.  Nichols would end his career 11-31, 4.43, 1.41 WHIP.  It's kind of a shame, though, that he really didn't get rewarded for the one good year he had.

The Indians used two relievers named Valdez in this game--Sergio and Efrain.  A quick check of b-r.com reveals fourteen major leaguers named Valdez, so it's kind of odd that there'd be two of them in the same bullpen.

This was the eighth straight win for the Twins.  They were beating up on some bad teams--Baltimore, Kansas City, and Cleveland--but they didn't make the schedule, and beating bad teams is what you're supposed to do.

Record:  The Twins were 31-25, in third place in the American League West, three games behind Oakland.  They were 1.5 games behind second-place California and a half game ahead of fourth-place Seattle.

Happy Birthday–December 3

Billy McLean (1835)
Bennie Tate (1901)
Joe Collins (1922)
Ray Bellino (1932)
Clay Dalrymple (1936)
Chico Salmon (1940)
Jerry Johnson (1943)
Wayne Garrett (1947)
Pat Putnam (1953)
Gene Nelson (1960)
Damon Berryhill (1963)
Darryl Hamilton (1964)
Paul Byrd (1970)
Chad Durbin (1977)
Andy Oliver (1987)
J. T. Chargois (1990)

Billy McLean was the umpire in the first National League game ever, April 22, 1876.  He umpired in the National League through 1890.

Shortstop Ray Bellino played and managed in the Twins minor league system and also was a scout for them.

If I ever write a novel, I think I'll call one of the characters "Dalrymple".

Andy Oliver was drafted by Minnesota in the seventeenth round in 2006, but did not sign.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to DK.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–December 3