MINNESOTA TWINS 9, KANSAS CITY ROYALS 2 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Tuesday, September 23, 1986.
Batting stars: Gary Gaetti was 3-for-5 with two home runs (his thirty-second and thirty-third) and six RBIs. Jeff Reed was 2-for-4. Kent Hrbek was 2-for-5 with a double and two runs. Randy Bush was 2-for-5.
Pitching star: Mike Smithson pitched a complete game, giving up two runs on twelve hits and one walk and striking out seven.
Opposition stars: Mike Kingery was 4-for-5. Willie Wilson was 2-for-4.
The game: Kansas City got singles from Wilson and Kingery in the first, but stranded them on first and second, which would be one of the themes of the game. The Twins then jumped to an early lead in the bottom of the first. Mark Davidson led off with a single and stole second. Kirby Puckett delivered an RBI single with one out, and with two down Gaetti hit a two-run homer, putting the Twins up 3-0.
In the second, Kevin Seitzer hit a one-out single and Buddy Biancalana hit a two-out double, putting men on second and third, but again the Royals could not score. The Twins added on a run in the second when Greg Gagne singled, Steve Lombardozzi walked, and Bush drove in a run with a single. They got another in the third when a Hrbek double, a Gaetti single, and a walk to Roy Smalley loaded the bases and Reed hit an RBI single. They scored one more time in the fourth on a Bush single, a walk to Puckett, and a pair of ground outs, making the score 6-0 Twins.
Kansas City threatened again in the fifth, getting one-out singles from Wilson and Rudy Law, and in the sixth when Jaime Quirk led off with a double, but still could not get on the scoreboard. The Twins got three more in the sixth on a two-out rally. Puckett reached on an error, Hrbek singled, and Gaetti hit a three-run homer, putting the Twins in front 9-0.
The Royals finally got on the board late in the game, but it was too little, too late. In the seventh Bo Jackson walked, went to second on a ground out, and scored on Kingery’s single. With two out in the ninth, Greg Pryor reached on an error, followed by consecutive singles by Lynn Jones, Kingery, and Jorge Orta to make the score 9-2. Quirk was then caught looking to end the game.
WP: Smithson (11-14).
LP: Dennis Leonard (8-13).
S: None.
Notes: Reed, Mark Salas, and Tim Laudner split catching duties pretty evenly in 1986. Bush usually played left, but he was in right this game, with Davidson in left and Tom Brunansky, the regular right fielder, on the bench.
Puckett was batting .332. He would finish at .328.
Kansas City stranded twelve runners, going 3-for-12 with men in scoring position.
Again, in the “this would never happen today” file, Smithson pitched a complete game despite giving up twelve hits. He gave up three hits in a row in the ninth, but was still allowed to complete the game. No pitch count is given, but it would have to have been substantial.
Buddy Biancalana, of course, achieved some fame due to his appearance in the 1985 World Series and mentions on the David Letterman show.
Mark Davidson was a reserve outfielder for the Twins from 1986-1988 and for Houston from 1989-1991.
Jeff Reed had a long career as a backup catcher, playing for six teams. His last year was 2000, when he was a backup for the Cubs at age thirty-seven.
This was the last major league season for Dennis Leonard. He would make only one more start in his career. It was a good career, though. He won twenty games three times and finished in the top seven in Cy Young voting twice.
The Royals’ second baseman was Rondin Johnson. He got a September call-up in 1986, his only time in the majors. He’d batted .289 in Omaha that year. However, he had no power, and did not draw a lot of walks, so his batting average was pretty much the substance of his offensive contribution. He batted .258/.258/.323 in 31 major league at-bats. He played at the University of Washington at the same time as former Twins pitching coach Rick Anderson.
Tom Kelly was managing the Twins at this point, having taken over for Ray Miller less than two weeks earlier.
Record: Kansas City was 69-82, in fourth place in the AL West, 19 games behind California. They would finish 76-86, tied for third with Oakland, 16 games behind California.
Minnesota was 65-85, in seventh (last) place in the AL West, 22.5 games behind California. They would finish 71-91, in fifth place, 21 games behind California.
Random Record: The Random Twins are 17-12 (.586).
Random is on a roll!
They're doing well so far, but it's a long random season.