ANAHEIM ANGELS 3, MINNESOTA TWINS 1 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Friday, May 29, 1998.
Batting star: Marty Cordova was 2-for-3.
Pitching stars: LaTroy Hawkins pitched 6.2 innings, giving up three runs on ten hits and two walks and striking out one. Hector Carrasco pitched a scoreless inning, walking two and striking out one. Eddie Guardado pitched 1.1 scoreless innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Gary Disarcina was 3-for-4. Jim Edmonds was 2-for-4 with a home run (his tenth), a walk, and two RBIs. Chuck Finley struck out ten in 8.1 innings, giving up one run on five hits and a walk.
The game: Each team only got one man as far as second base in the first three innings. In the fourth, however, Edmonds led off with a home run. With two out, Garret Anderson and Matt Walbeck hit consecutive doubles to make the score 2-0 Anaheim.
Disarcina and Darin Erstad opened the fifth with singles. They advanced to second and third on a ground out, leading to an intentional walk to Edmonds. The strategy worked, as a double play ended the inning. In the seventh, however, Disarcina again led off with a single, and this time he scored on a two-out double by Edmonds, putting the Angels up 3-0.
The Twins were able to do very little off Finley. Todd Walker hit a two-out double in the third, but he was the only Twin to get past first base until the eighth. Cordova led off with a single and Terry Steinbach doubled, putting men on second and third with none out. All the Twins were able to do, however, was score one on a ground out, cutting the lead to 3-1. The Twins went down in order in the ninth.
WP: Finley (5-2).
LP: Hawkins (3-5).
S: Troy Percival (13).
Notes: Ron Coomer was at first base. He alternated between first and third that year, spending most of his time at third. David Ortiz had the most games at first base, with Orlando Merced also seeing significant time there. Jon Shave was at third in this game. Matt Lawton, who usually played right, was in center, with Alex Ochoa in right and Otis Nixon out due to injury. Nixon would return to the lineup the next day after a month on the disabled list.
Todd Walker was batting .371. He would finish at .316.
Eddie Guardado had an ERA of 2.72. He would finish at 4.52. Guardado was not the closer yet, as the Twins still had Rick Aguilera.
Matt Walbeck went 1-for-3 with a walk for Anaheim. He had played for the Twins from 1994-1996.
You may remember that it was years before the Twins could get an earned run off Troy Percival. He was an excellent closer, of course, but he was seemingly at his best against Minnesota. For his career, the Twins batted .119/.234/.169 against him in 160 at-bats.
Jon Shave played in 19 games for the Twins in 1998, fifteen of them at third. He didn’t do badly, batting .250/.302/.400. He also played briefly for Texas in 1993 and 1999.
Record: Anaheim was 26-25, in second place in the AL West, 4.5 games behind Texas. They would finish 85-77, in second place, three games behind Texas.
The Twins were 23-28, in second place in the AL Central, 7.5 games behind Cleveland. They would finish 70-92, in fourth place, nineteen games behind Cleveland.
Random Record: The Random Twins are 21-15 (.583).
Short two-game series against the Angels. Somewhat more competitive than yesterday's game.
We've benefitted from several home games
The art department needs to do a better job. There are 5 pitchers on the front page right now.
Starting pitchers are losing their shine so might as well give them a spotlight now.
I'm going to guess they'll all be gone by the end of random season, anyway
Do the Random Twins have and random days off or random doubleheaders in their random season?
There are no random doubleheaders scheduled, but there may well be some random off-days.