Random Rewind: 1973, Game 56

MINNESOTA TWINS 13, DETROIT TIGERS 6 IN DETROIT

Date:  Friday, June 15, 1973.

Batting starsBobby Darwin was 4-for-5 with two home runs (his ninth and tenth) and seven RBIs.  Jerry Terrell was 3-for-5.  Larry Hisle was 3-for-6 with a double and two runs.  Harmon Killebrew was 2-for-3 with a double, two walks, two runs, and four RBIs.  Tony Oliva was 2-for-4 with a walk and two runs.  Rod Carew was 2-for-5 with a walk and two runs.

Pitching starJim Kaat pitched 6.2 innings of relief, giving up two runs on five hits and two walks and striking out three.

Opposition stars: Willie Horton was 3-for-5 with a home run (his eighth) and two RBIs.  Norm Cash was 2-for-3 with a double and a walk.  Aurelio Rodriguez was 2-for-5 with a home run, his fifth.  Dick McAuliffe hit a two-run homer, his third.

The game:  The Twins’ first five batters reached base.  Rod Carew and Larry Hisle singled and Tony Oliva walked to load the bases.  Harmon Killebrew hit a two-run single and Bobby Darwin had an RBI single.  That chased Detroit starter Jim Perry from the game.  The Twins would get another run on an RBI ground out to take a 4-0 lead.

The Twins missed a chance to expand the lead in the second, when they got two singles and a double but failed to score because they lost two men on the bases.  It looked like it would hurt them, as Willie Horton led off the bottom of the second with a home run, Norm Cash singled, and Dick McAuliffe hit a one-out two-run homer to cut the lead to 4-3.

The Twins came back in the third, when Harmon Killebrew walked and Bobby Darwin hit a two-run homer to make it 6-3.  Detroit got one back in the bottom of the third on singles by Mickey Stanley, Al Kaline, and Willie Horton to cut the lead to 6-4.

The Twins once again expanded their lead in the fourth.  Rod Carew walked with one out and Larry Hisle followed with a single.  Harmon Killebrew walked to load the bases with two out and Bobby Darwin delivered a two-run single to make it 8-4.  The Tigers again got one back when Aurelio Rodriguez homered with two out in the bottom of the fourth, making the score 8-5.

Nobody scored in the fifth, but in the sixth, Tony Oliva singled with one out and Bobby Darwin hit a two-out two-run homer to make the score 10-5.  The Twins got a couple more in the seventh.  George Mitterwald reached on an error and Jerry Terrell singled.  With two out, Tony Oliva hit an RBI single and Harmon Killebrew had a two-run double to make the lead 13-5.

Detroit got one in the eighth when Willie Horton singled and scored on a Norm Cash double, but that was it.  The Twins won, 13-6.

WPJim Kaat (7-4).

LP:  Jim Perry (7-5).

S:  None.

NotesHarmon Killebrew was at first base.  He was injured much of 1973, so that Joe Lis was the regular first baseman.  Jerry Terrell was at short.  Danny Thompson played the most games there, with 95 to Terrell’s 81.

Rod Carew was batting .340.  He would finish at a league-leading .350.

Jim Perry had pitched for the Twins from 1963-1972.  He was traded to Detroit shortly before the 1973 season start for Dan Fife, the father of college basketball coach Dane Fife.

Jim Kaat had started on June 11, but pitched only 3.2 innings.  He would start again on June 19.  He was thirty-four years old and was having a poor year, so the Twins, thinking he was about done, waived him on August 15.  He was claimed by the White Sox, but would only pitch for another ten seasons.

By game scores, this was not Jim Perry’s worst game of the season.  On July 20 he gave up six runs in a third of an inning.  Despite that, he went 14-13 for the season with a 4.03 ERA.  He had some games where he was really bad, but he also had seven complete games and one shutout.

Aurelio Rodriguez has all the vowels in his first name.

Record:  Detroit was 30-48, in fourth place in the AL East, one game behind Milwaukee.  They would finish 85-77, in third place, twelve games behind Baltimore.

The Twins were 31-25, in second place in the AL West, 1.5 games behind Chicago.  They would finish 81-81, in third place, thirteen games behind Oakland.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 51-51 (.500).

One thought on “Random Rewind: 1973, Game 56”

  1. Half the challenge of these older games is recognizing each post's featured image. I knew Bobby D's face right away.

    Darwin was Sano (or Min Big Papi?) before him, but he could play the field. Not horrible, but he struck out a ton, and Twins cut him loose.

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