MINNESOTA TWINS 10, BOSTON RED SOX 4 IN BOSTON
Date: Saturday, July 23, 1966
Batting stars: Cesar Tovar was 3-for-4 with a walk. Tony Oliva was 3-for-6 with a double and two runs. Jerry Zimmerman was 2-for-3 with a double. Don Mincher was 2-for-5. Ted Uhlaender was 2-for-6 with a home run (his second) and two runs. Harmon Killebrew hit a home run, his twenty-first.
Pitching star: Jim Kaat pitched a complete game, giving up four runs (three earned) on nine hits and a walk and striking out seven.
Opposition stars: Mike Ryan was 2-for-3. George Thomas hit a home run, his fourth.
The game: Each team missed scoring chances in the first two innings. Zolio Versalles led off the game with a walk and Oliva hit a one-out double, putting men on second and third, but nothing came of it. Carl Yastrzemski’s two-out double in the bottom of the inning similarly produced nothing. Bob Allison led off the second with a walk and went to second on a ground out, but he was thrown out at the plate trying to score on a Tovar single. Boston got another two-out double in the second, this time from Mike Ryan, but again the game remained scoreless.
Uhlaender put the Twins on the board in the third with a home run. They had a chance to lengthen the lead in the fourth, as Allison singled with one out and went to second on Tovar’s two-out single, but a popup ended the inning. In the fifth, however, the Twins took control. Singles by Versalles and Uhlaender opened the inning. A groundout put men on second and third and led to an intentional walk to Killebrew. Mincher made the Red Sox pay with a two-run single. Allison walked, re-loading the bases, and Jimmie Hall singled home a run. Mincher was thrown out trying to score from second, but Tovar was hit by a pitch to load the bases once again. Kaat came through with an RBI single and Uhlaender was hit by a pitch to force home another run, making the score 6-0.
The Twins added one more in the sixth. With two out Mincher singled, Allison was hit by a pitch, Zimmerman singled, and Tovar singled home a run. Boston got on the board in the sixth. Eddie Kasko led off with a double. Joe Foy hit a two-out double, but Kasko was only able to get to third. He scored on a ground out, however, to make the score 7-1.
With two out in the seventh, Tony Oliva singled and Killebrew followed with a two-run homer, making it 9-1. Ryan hit a two-out double in seventh, but was stranded. The Twins loaded the bases in the eighth–Zimmerman hit a one-out double, Tovar walked, a wild pitch sent runners to second and third, and Versalles drew a two-out intentional walk–but a liner to third ended the inning.
George Thomas homered in the eighth to make it 9-2. The Twins got the run back in the ninth. Oliva led off with a single, and walks to Killebrew and Allison loaded the bases with none out. Andy Kosco hit a sacrifice fly to push the lead to 10-2. The Red Sox rounded out the scoring in the bottom of the inning. Tony Conigliaro doubled and scored on a Don Demeter single. An error put men on second and third, and Bob Tillman singled home a run. Kaat then retired the next three men go close out the game.
WP: Kaat (14-6).
LP: Rollie Sheldon (5-11).
S: None.
Notes: Regular catcher Earl Battey started the game, but Hall pinch-hit for him in the fifth, bringing Zimmerman into the game. Tovar shared second base with Bernie Allen, with Allen getting a few more starts. Allison had a down year in 1966 and slipped to part-time status, with Hall seeing most of the action in left.
Oliva was batting .327. He would finish at .307. Kaat had an ERA of 2.84. He would finish at 2.75.
Zimmerman was your basic good-field, no-hit backup catcher, but 1966 was one of his better years. He batted .252/.338/.328 in 119 at-bats. His career numbers were .204./.269/.239. Still, he played eight major league seasons, the first with Cincinnati, the last seven with the Twins.
Kaat, of course, would never be allowed to pitch a complete game in a game like this today. He would lead the league in complete games with 19 and in innings with 304.2 in 1966. He would also lead in starts with 41 and in batters faced with 1227. For comparison, the leader in innings in 2024 was Logan Gilbert with 208.2 and the leaders in complete games had 2. It was a different time.
This was Sheldon’s last year. He’d been a good pitcher for the Yankees and the Kansas City Athletics, but he was 1-6, 4.97 for Boston in 1966.
Ex-Twin Dick Stigman played for Boston, facing two batters and giving up a hit and a walk. This was his last season, and it was not a good one, as he posted an ERA of 5.44.
Boston pitchers hit three Twins batters. It does not appear that there was any retaliation.
Record: Boston was 42-57, in ninth place, 24.5 games behind Baltimore. They would finish 72-90, in ninth place, 26 games behind Baltimore.
Minnesota was 48-49, in fifth place, 17.5 games behind Baltimore. They would finish 89-73, in second place, nine games behind Baltimore. After this game, the Twins would go 41-24, the best record in baseball over that span. But it wasn’t enough to overcome their slow start.
The Yankees finished last in 1966 with a record of 70-89. The good old days.
Random Record: The Random Twins are 3-3 (.500).
I was trying to figure out a 1996 ballgame with B&W photo...
Just keeping it half-baked!