ANAHEIM 8, MINNESOTA 3 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Thursday, August 5.
Batting stars: Torii Hunter was 2-for-4 with a home run (his fourteenth) and a double. Michael Cuddyer was 1-for-2 with a double and a walk.
Pitching stars: Jesse Crain struck out two in 1.1 scoreless innings, giving up two hits. Aaron Fultz pitched a scoreless inning, giving up a hit and a walk. J. C. Romero struck out two in a perfect inning.
Opposition stars: Aaron Sele pitched seven innings, giving up three runs on five hits and two walks and striking out one. Garret Anderson was 4-for-5. Josh Paul was 3-for-4 with a double and two runs. David Eckstein was 1-for-3 with two walks and two runs.
The game: The first two innings passed by quietly. Then in the third, Tim Salmon and Paul singled and Eckstein walked, loading the bases with none out. Chone Figgins was retired on a short fly ball, but Anderson and Vladimir Guerrero each hit an RBI single and a sacrifice fly made it 3-0. The Angels had another big inning in the fourth. Robb Quinlan singled and scored from first on Paul's one-out double. Eckstein followed with an RBI single. With two out Anderson singled, an error loaded the bases, and Jose Guillen delivered a two-run single to make the score 7-0.
The Twins offense had done very little to this point, getting only one hit through the first four innings. Hunter changed that with a home run to lead off the fifth. Corey Koskie had a one-out single, Matthew LeCroy walked, and with two out Shannon Stewart singled home a run to make it 7-2.
That was as close as the Twins would come. Each team scored a run in the seventh, but neither threatened to put together a big inning. The Twins took an 8-3 defeat.
WP: Sele (7-0). LP: Terry Mulholland (3-4). S: None.
Notes: Justin Morneau had only recently become the regular first baseman with the trade of Doug Mientkiewicz. Stewart had injury problems in 2004 and was the DH in this game, with Lew Ford in left field.
Cuddyer pinch-hit for Jacque Jones in the fifth and stayed in the game in right field. LeCroy pinch-hit for Henry Blanco in the fifth and stayed in the game behind the plate.
Jason Bartlett was at shortstop in place of Cristian Guzman. This was the second major league game and first start for Bartlett. He would be sent down after the game, but would come back as a September call-up and would begin 2005 as the team's starting shortstop.
Stewart was the batting average leader at .312. He would finish at .304. Ford was batting .301. He would finish at .299.
Mulholland pitched just 3.2 innings, allowing seven runs (five earned) on nine hits and a walk and striking out one. It was not his worst start of the season--that would come on August 26, when he would again allow seven runs in 3.2 innings, but all the runs would be earned. He was forty-one, and was really not a good pitcher anymore. He really hadn't been very good for some time, but teams kept sending him out there. I assume it was a case where, as Bill James once put it, he would pitch well just often enough to fool teams into pitching him some more.
Despite Sele's 7-0 record, he didn't have all that good a year. At this point he was 7-0 with an ERA of 4.60. He would finish 9-4, 5.05, 1.62 WHIP. He started his career well, but after 1995 he only had one season with an ERA of lower than 4.20 and six seasons with an ERA of over 5.00. Despite that, he pitched until he was thirty-seven and had a fifteen-year major league career. It's always amazing to me how some guys keep getting chance after chance, long after they've proven they're not good enough, and other guys dominate AAA and at most get one brief shot.
The Twins had won four in a row and eight out of nine coming into this game.
Record: The Twins were 61-46, in first place in the American League Central, six games ahead of Chicago. They would finish 92-70, in first place, nine games ahead of Chicago.
The Angels were 58-50, in third place in the American League West, three games behind Texas. They would finish 92-70, in first place, one game ahead of Oakland.
Mullholland was left handed and breathing hahaha.
I am surprised Sele was never a Twin. He checks off a lot of the boxes: One of us (Born in Golden Valley), was once a highly thought of prospect (I was SUPER excited when I pulled a Sele card from a wax pack of Topps), low strike out rate innings eater. Maybe Terry Ryan didnt want to spend a $1,000,400 on him. That extra 400k is a killer.