Random Rewind: 2014, Game Twenty-eight

MINNESOTA 6, BALTIMORE 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Saturday, May 3.

Batting stars:  Joe Mauer was 3-for-4 with a home run (his second), two runs, and four RBIs.  Brian Dozier was 3-for-4 with a home run (his eighth) and three runs.  Kurt Suzuki was 2-for-4 with a double.

Pitching stars:  Kevin Correia pitched seven innings, giving up one run on five hits and no walks and striking out three.  Casey Fien pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit.  Jared Burton pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit and striking out one.

Opposition stars:  J. J. Hardy was 2-for-4 with a double.  Nick Markakis was 2-for-4 with a double.  Wei-Yin Chen pitched five innings, giving up three runs (two earned) on six hits and a walk and striking out five.

The game:  In the first inning Mauer hit a one-out single and scored from first on Trevor Plouffe's double.  The Orioles tied it in the second when Adam Jones reached on a strikeout-plus-wild pitch, stole second and scored on a Hardy single.  Dozier led off the third with a home run, putting the Twins back up 2-1.

The Twins got an insurance run in the fifth when Dozier got to second on a single-plus-error and scored on a Mauer single.  They put it away in the seventh.  Pedro Florimon and Dozier led off with singles and Mauer hit a three-run homer, giving the Twins a 6-1 lead.  Baltimore did not threaten to get back into the game.

WP:  Correia (1-3).  LP:  Chen (3-2).  S:  None.

Notes:  Florimon began the season as the starting shortstop, but when he predictably didn't hit he was replaced by Eduardo Escobar.  Jason Kubel was in left in place of Josh Willingham, who was injured.  Sam Fuld was in center field.  Aaron Hicks, who started the year as the regular in center, was apparently out with a minor injury.  Danny Santana would eventually take over in center field.  Chris Colabello was in right field, as Oswaldo Arcia was out due to injury.

Josmil Pinto was the DH.  The Twins didn't have a regular DH in 2014.  Kennys Vargas played the most games there with just 40.  Kendrys Morales had 26, PInto 21, Mauer 19, Colabello 13, and Willingham 13.  Fourteen others were at DH at least once, including such sluggers as Florimon and Doug Bernier.  In fairness, I suspect players like that were used as pinch-runners and so technically became the DH.

The only substitution the Twins made was that Chris Herrmann pinch-ran for Colabello in the seventh and stayed in the game in right field.

The Twins had no one batting over .300 at this stage of the season.  The only one who would end up over .300 is Santana, who batted .319.  They did have two batters below .200--Pinto (.198) and Florimon (.121).  The Twins would finish seventh in batting at .253.  Detroit led the league at .277.

Dozier led the team in home runs with 23.  Arcia was not far behind with 20.  The only others in double figures were Plouffe (14) and Willingham (12).  The Twins were eleventh in home runs with 128.  Baltimore led the league with 211.

Correia was not good for the Twins, but unfortunately did not particularly stand out.  Phil Hughes was easily the best starter at 16-10, 3.42.  Kyle Gibson was adequate at 13-12, 4.47.  After that it was Ricky Nolasco (6-12, 5.38) and Correia (5-13, 4.94).  They never really did settle on a fifth starter, with Yohan Pino making the most starts out of that slot with 11.  He was 2-5, 5.07.  Others who made at least five starts were Trevor MaySamuel Deduno (and his magical zoomball), Mike Pelfrey, and Tommy Milone.  The Twins were dead last in ERA at 4.57--Seattle led at 3.17.  They were twelfth in WHIP at 1.39--Oakland led at 1.15.

This team had a lot of "oh yeah" Twins, as in "oh yeah, I remember that we had that guy".  Some of them will eventually be forgotten Twins, but not enough time has passed.  I would put Correia, FlorimonFienFuldMoralesPino, and Milone all in that category, and maybe a few others.

Players with Twins connections who played for Baltimore in this game were Nelson Cruz, J. J. Hardy, Steve Pearce, and Jonathan Schoop.

This win broke a four-game losing streak and started a three-game winning streak.

Record:  The Twins were 13-15, in third place in the American League Central, 4.5 games behind Baltimore.  They would finish 72-90, in fifth (last) place, 20 games behind Detroit.

The Orioles were 15-13, in second place in the American League East, a half game behind New York.  They would finish 96-66, in first place, 12 games ahead of New York.  It hardly seems possible that Baltimore was that good that recently, but there you go.

Random record:  The Twins are 39-37 in Random Rewind games.

Happy Birthday–June 16

Max Surkont (1922)
Ernie Johnson (1924)
Richard Jacobs (1925)
Bob Miller (1926)
Ken Johnson (1933)
Joe Decker (1947)
Ron LeFlore (1948)
Salome Barojas (1957)
Wally Joyner (1962)
Calvin Schiraldi (1962)
Kevin Young (1969)
Chris Gomez (1971)
Kerry Wood (1977)
Joe Saunders (1981)
Jonathan Broxton (1984)
Justin Haley (1991)
Zack Weiss (1992)

Richard Jacobs was the owner of the Cleveland Indians from 1986-2000.

The Bob Miller born today, although a pitcher, is not the Bob Miller who pitched for the Twins.

We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to socaltwinsfan.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–June 16

Initial Time We Play A Game With Two Letters For Six Consecutive Weeks

Just in case the guy on KFAN has got his intellectual property ducks in a row with his Kickstarter thing, I will not refer to this game by the same name he has given his version. Instead, this will be the initial time I "host" a game for the second on this platform with the following rules:

1. I will give you two letters (for example, "K.P"). All the items that week will be a two-word answer in which each word begins with letter in the appropriate spot. The answer can be a person, place, thing, or other two-word phrase. For example, if "K.P." are the letters, then one answer might be Kirby Puckett. Another answer might be "Krakow, Poland." And so on.

2. I will provide six clues for each answer. The clues will be provided one-at-a-time.

3. If you believe you know the answer, make a Spoilered guess in the thread. The point will go to whomever correctly identifies the answer first. If you submit an incorrect response, then you can no longer submit for that particular answer.

4. The participant with the most correct answers at the end of the week wins. (If there is a tie, then I will have tiebreakers for only the participants in the tie.)

5. You're going to be on the honor system, but you should not be using the internet or other resources.

The letters will be revealed, and clues for the first phrase will commence at 9:00am.

Leaderboard

Random Rewind: 1993, Game One Hundred Thirty-eight

CLEVELAND 15, MINNESOTA 8 IN CLEVELAND

Date:  Wednesday, September 8.

Batting stars:  Shane Mack was 3-for-5.  Pat Meares was 2-for-4 with two runs and two RBIs.  Dave Winfield was 2-for-4.  David McCarty was 2-for-5.  Pedro Munoz was 1-for-2 with a home run, his tenth.

Pitching stars:  Mike Hartley pitched a scoreless inning, giving up two walks.  Rick Aguilera struck out two in a perfect inning.

Opposition stars:  Kenny Lofton was 4-for-4 with a walk, two stolen bases (his fifty-ninth and sixtieth), and two runs.  Felix Fermin was 3-for-4 with a triple, a double, and six RBIs.  Wayne Kirby was 3-for-5 with two runs.  Candy Maldonado was 1-for-1 with a three-run homer, his fifth.  Sandy Alomar was 1-for-5 with a home run, his sixth.

The game:  Mack led off with a single, went to third on Chuck Knoblauch's single, and scored on a ground out to put the Twins up 1-0.  The Twins loaded the bases later in the inning, but did not score.

From there, it got ugly in a hurry.  In the bottom of the first, Lofton singled, stole second, and scored on a bunt single-plus-error.  A single and a walk loaded the bases, a sacrifice fly put the Indians ahead, a walk reloaded the bases, and Fermin hit a three-run double to give Cleveland a 5-1 lead after one inning.

The Twins got one back in the second when Pat Meares singled, went to second on a ground out, and scored on a pickoff error-plus-error.  The Indians countered with two in their half of the inning.  Alomar led off with a home run.  Lofton singled, stole second, and scored on a pair of fly balls, making the score 7-2 Cleveland.  In the third a single and a walk put men on first and second with one out.  Fermin, Lofton, and Kirby then hit RBI singles to give the Indians a 10-2 lead.  It went to 12-2 in the fourth on two hit batsmen and Fermin's two-run triple.  In the sixth, a pair of two-out singles were followed by Maldonado's three-run homer to make it 15-2.

The Twins had a big eighth inning to make the final score look better.  Munoz led off with a home run.  Winfield singled and Lenny Webster walked.  McCarty had an RBI single.  Terry Jorgensen walked to load the bases.  Meares had a two-run single, Mack singled to load the bases again, and Chip Hale hit a two-run single to cut the lead to 15-8.  There were still none out in the inning, but Eric Plunk then came in to retire the next three batters.  The Twins went down in order in the ninth.

WP:  Jose Mesa (10-10).  LP:  Greg Brummett (3-4).  S:  None.

Notes:  Jorgensen was at third base.  Mike Pagliarulo was the regular third baseman, but he was traded to Baltimore in mid-August.

Mack was in center, with Kirby Puckett at DH.  Winfield, who was the regular DH, was in right.  McCarty was in left, with Munoz starting the game on the bench.

in a blowout game, the Twins made a number of substitutions.  Hale went to second base in the fifth, replacing Knoblauch.  Munoz came in to play left in the fifth, with McCarty going to first base and Kent Hrbek coming out of the game.  Bernardo Brito pinch-hit for Puckett in the seventh.  Webster came in to catch in the eighth in place of Brian Harper.  Jeff Reboulet pinch-hit for Brito in the eighth.

Harper was batting .311.  He would finish at .304 and was regular the only Twin to bat over .300.  Hale was batting .308 and would finish at .333 in 186 at-bats.  Puckett would finish at .300 and would finish at .296.  The Twins were ninth in batting at .264.  New York led the league at .279.

Hrbek led the team in home runs with 25.  Puckett was not far behind at 22.  Winfield contributed 21.  Others in double digits were Munoz (13), Harper (12), and Mack (10).  The Twins were twelfth in the league in home runs with 121.  Texas led with 181.

This was only the second start Brummett made for the Twins, and was easily the worst.  He lasted just two innings and allowed seven runs on six hits and two walks.  He struck out one.  His record is listed as 3-4 because he had pitched for the Giants earlier in the sesaon.  He was the player to be named later in the trade that sent Jim Deshaies to the Giants.

The Twins rotation was not uniformly awful, but it wasn't very good, either.  Kevin Tapani made the most starts but went 12-15, 4.43.  Scott Erickson was awful, going 8-19, 5.19.  Willie Banks was actually the most effective starter, going 11-12, 4.04.  Deshaies, before being traded, was 11-13, 4.41, Eddie Guardado was 3-8, 6.18 in his rookie season, and Mike Trombley was 6-6, 4.88 (although as a starter he was 3-5, 5.86).  The Twins were next-to-last in ERA at 4.71 and twelfth in WHIP at 1.46.  Chicago led in ERA at 3.70 and Boston led in WHIP at 1.33.

Record:  The Twins were 59-79, in sixth place in the American League West, 19.5 games behind Chicago.  They would finish 71-91, tied for fifth with California, 23 games behind Chicago.

The Indians were 66-73, in sixth place in the American League East, 11.5 games behind Toronto.  They would finish 76-86, in sixth place, 19 games behind Toronto.

Random record:  The Twins are 38-37 in Random Rewind games.

Happy Birthday–June 15

Babe Dahlgren (1912)
Bernice Gera (1931)
Mario Cuomo (1932)
Billy Williams (1938)
Ty Cline (1939)
Bruce Dal Canton (1941)
Ken Henderson (1946)
Champ Summers (1946)
Dusty Baker (1949)
Lance Parrish (1956)
Brett Butler (1957)
Wade Boggs (1958)
Tony Clark (1972)
Ramiro Mendoza (1972)
Andy Pettitte (1972)
Zach Day (1978)
Jeremy Reed (1981)
Tim Lincecum (1984)
Cliff Pennington (1984)
Trevor Plouffe (1986)
Eduardo Nunez (1987)
Jake Locker (1988)

Bernice Gera was the first female umpire in Organized Baseball, umpiring one game in the New York-Penn League in 1972.

Former New York Governor Mario Cuomo was an outfielder for the Brunswick Pirates of the Georgia-Florida League in 1952.

Quarterback Jake Locker was drafted by the Angels as an outfielder in the tenth round in 2009.  He signed a contract with them, but never played a game of professional baseball.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–June 15

WGOM Draft: Round 25

As a reminder, here's how I think this is playing out, sans objections:

-- Draft whomever you like this round.
--Round 26:  Draft someone who played for the Twins
--Round 27:  Draft a skipper
--Round 28:  Draft a stadium
--Mags drafts all 28 rounds at once

 

The board

Order:

Philosofer
Algonad
Mike
SoCalTwinsFan
Freealonzo
sean
bhiggum
Nibbish
brianS
CarterHayes
Beau
TheDreadPirate
cheaptoy
hungryjoe
rowsdower

Previous round.