Random Rewind: 1993, Game 104

BOSTON RED SOX 5, MINNESOTA TWINS 4 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, August 4, 1993.

Batting stars: Dave Winfield was 3-for-4 with a double and a walk.  Brian Harper was 3-for-5.  Shane Mack was 2-for-4 with a double and a walk.

Pitching starsScott Erickson pitched a complete game, giving up five runs on eleven hits and a walk and striking out five.  He threw 121 pitches.

Opposition stars:  Scott Cooper was 3-for-4 with a triple, a double, two runs, and two RBIs.  Mike Greenwell was 3-for-5.  Ivan Calderon was 2-for-4 with two runs.  Aaron Sele pitched 6.2 innings, giving up three runs on nine hits and two walks and striking out two.

The game:  Boston took the lead in the second.  Calderon singled with one out and scored on Cooper’s triple.  A ground out scored Cooper, making it 2-0.  John Valentin then singled and Scott Fletcher walked, but a strikeout ended the inning.

The Twins threatened in the third.  With two out Mack walked, Chuck Knoblauch singled, and Kirby Puckett was hit by a pitch to load the bases, but a force out ended the threat.  It cost them, because the Red Sox added on in the fourth.  It again started with a Calderon single, followed by a Cooper double that made it 3-0.  The next two batters went out, but Cooper tripled home a run and Greenwell followed with an RBI single that gave Boston a 5-0 advantage.

The Twins got on the board in the bottom of the fourth.  Winfield led off with a double, got to third with one out on an infield single by Mike Pagliarulo, and scored on Gene Larkin’s sacrifice fly.  The Twins threatened in the sixth, getting one-out singles by Winfield and Harper, but nothing came of it.  In the seventh, however, Mack hit a one-out double and scored on Puckett’s two-out triple.  Kent Hrbek walked and Winfield singled, making the score 5-3.  Harper followed with another single, but Hrbek was thrown out at the plate, ending the inning.

The Twins tried to pull it out in the ninth.  Knoblauch drew a one-out walk.  With two out, Hrbek doubled, cutting the margin to 5-4.  Winfield walked, bringing up Harper, who already had three hits in the game.  But he popped up to second, and the game was over.

WP:  Aaron Sele (6-0).

LPErickson (6-13).

S:  Jeff Russell (29).

Notes:  While Puckett was still primarily a center fielder, the Twins had started his transition to right, and that’s where he played in this game, with Mack in center.  Gene Larkin was in left, with Pedro Munoz on the bench.  Chip Hale pinch-hit for Pat Meares and stayed in the game at second base, with Knoblauch moving to shortstop.  It was one of six times Knoblauch would play short in 1993.

Harper was batting .314.  He would finish at .304.

Pagliarulo was in his last days as a Twin.  He would be traded on August 15 for a player to be named later, who turned out to be named Eric Schullstrom.  

It was a different time, but it’s still surprising to see someone allow five runs and pitch a complete game.  Erickson did, however, pitch very well after the fourth inning, giving up just one hit.  At one point he retired twelve consecutive batters.

Largely forgotten now, Scott Cooper was a two-time all-star.  He was traded to St. Louis early in 1995 and fell off rapidly after that.  But from 1992-1994 he batted .279/.347/.410.

The Twins went 4-for-10 with men in scoring position, but still stranded eleven.

Record:  Boston was 60-47, in second place in the AL East, two games behind Toronto.  They would finish 80-82, in fourth place, 15 games behind Toronto.  They had the worst record in the American League after this game, going 20-35.

Minnesota was 45-59, tied for sixth place with Oakland in the AL West, 13 games behind the White Sox.  They would finish 71-91, tied for fifth with California, 23 games behind the White Sox.   

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 10-8 (.556)

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