Dodgers should be good again this year. How will the Twins fare?
This is written 4 days before the game, please feel free to add anything.
Game time: 6:40
Dodgers should be good again this year. How will the Twins fare?
This is written 4 days before the game, please feel free to add anything.
Game time: 6:40
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-euHjhC7npo
The crack of the bat, the roar of the crowd. That’s right, baseball’s back!
Hello, Nation, I’m hungry joe. Join us today live from the internets for all the action. The boys of summer and the WGOM, a winning team!
Pop Corkhill (1858)
Ossee Schrecongost (1875)
Matsutaro Shoriki (1885)
Sam Chapman (1916)
Barney McCosky (1917)
Jim Hearn (1921)
Bob Casey (1925)
Sid Monge (1951)
Bret Saberhagen (1964)
Turner Ward (1965)
Sean Bergman (1970)
Robin Jennings (1972)
Jason Varitek (1972)
Trot Nixon (1974)
Todd Dunwoody (1975)
Kelvim Escobar (1976)
Mark Teixeira (1980)
Andres Blanco (1984)
Alejandro De Aza (1984)
Kenta Maeda (1988)
Matustaro Shoriki is known as the father of Japanese baseball.
Bob Casey was the Twins' public address announcer from 1961 until his death in March of 2005.
Jason Varitek was drafted by the Twins in the first round in 1993, but did not sign.
Doc White (1879)
Hippo Vaughn (1888)
Vic Sorrell (1901)
Fred Frankhouse (1904)
Claude Passeau (1909)
Zip Payne (1909)
Joe Brinkman (1944)
Peter Gammons (1945)
Nate Colbert (1946)
Kirk McCaskill (1961)
Hal Morris (1965)
Graeme Lloyd (1967)
Rudy Hernandez (1968)
A. J. Ellis (1981)
David Robertson (1985)
Luis Arraez (1997)
Cecil "Zip" Payne was a long-time minor-league player and manager, collecting 2,179 hits.
Joe Brinkman and Derryl Cousins hold the record for most games umpired together, 2,123.
Rudy Hernandez was an infielder in the Mets organization from 1987-1991, reaching AA. With the exception of 2004, he has been a manager or coach in the Twins' organization since 2001. Every article I've been able to find says he was being retained as a batting coach for 2022, but he is not listed as one of the Twins coaches on the team website.
We would also like to wish a happy birthday to Mama MagUidhir.
Hey, gang, it's been awhile since we rapped at you. Spring is soon approaching and things are... looking cautiously optimistic for Minnesota sports teams?
A lot has happened in a short time. In this (half) episode, we delve deep into the storied history of 2022. First we take a quick look at the CBA agreement and then go through a second by second recap of that fateful mid-March weekend (as well as the other recent signings).
We'll have Part II out before long (featuring a look at the Wild), but we wanted to get this out before the hot stove overtakes our takes. Enjoy!
WINS
WINNING PERCENTAGE
ERA
GAMES
STARTS
GAMES FINISHED
COMPLETE GAMES
SHUTOUTS
SAVES
INNINGS
STRIKEOUTS
ERA+
FIP
WHIP
HITS PER 9
HOME RUNS PER 9
WALKS PER 9
STRIKEOUTS PER 9
STRIKEOUT/WALK RATIO
GAMES
PLATE APPEARANCES
AT BATS
RUNS
HITS
DOUBLES
TRIPLES
HOME RUNS
RBIs
STOLEN BASES
WALKS
AVERAGE*
Rod Carew batted .266, but in just 204 plate appearances.
OBP
SLUGGING
OPS
OPS+
TOTAL BASES
HIT BY PITCH
SACRIFICE HITS
SACRIFICE FLIES
INTENTIONAL WALKS
AVERAGE
OBP
SLUGGING
OPS
WAR
GAMES
AT BATS
PLATE APPEARANCES
RUNS
HITS
TOTAL BASES
DOUBLES
TRIPLES
HOME RUNS
RBIs
WALKS
STRIKEOUTS
STOLEN BASES
SINGLES
ADJUSTED OPS+
RUNS CREATED
EXTRA BASE HITS
TIMES ON BASE
HIT BY PITCH
SACRIFICE HITS
SACRIFICE FLIES
INTENTIONAL WALKS
GIDP
CAUGHT STEALING
WPA
BALTIMORE 6, MINNESOTA 1 IN BALTIMORE
Date: Monday, October 5.
Batting stars: Cesar Tovar was 2-for-4 with a triple. Tony Oliva was 2-for-4.
Pitching stars: Bert Blyleven pitched two innings, giving up an unearned run on two hits and no walks and striking out two. Tom Hall struck out two in two shutout innings, giving up a walk.
Opposition stars: Brooks Robinson was 3-for-4 with a double. Dave Johnson was 2-for-3 with a home run (his second), a walk, and two runs. Don Buford was 2-for-4 with two RBIs. Jim Palmer struck out twelve in a complete game, giving up one run on seven hits and three walks.
The game: The Orioles took the lead in the first inning, as Buford singled, was bunted to second, and scored on Boog Powell's single. In the second, Palmer reached on a two-base error and scored on Buford's single, making it 2-0. In the third Robinson doubled and went to third on Johnson's single. An error brought home a run, a force out put men on first and third, Palmer hit an RBI double, and a sacrifice fly made the score 5-0.
The Twins put two on with none out in the fourth but did not score. They got on the board in the fifth when Tovar hit a two-out triple and scored on a Leo Cardenas single. But they only got two baserunners after that, and did not get a man past first base. The Orioles added a run in the seventh on Johnson's homer. They won they game 6-1 and took the series 3-0.
WP: Palmer (1-0).
LP: Jim Kaat (0-1).
S: None.
Notes: Jim Holt was in center field, with Tovar moving to left and Brant Alyea out of the lineup. Paul Ratliff was behind the plate in place of George Mitterwald. Danny Thompson was at second base in place of Rod Carew.
Charlie Manuel pinch-hit for Blyleven in the fifth. Bob Allison pinch-hit for Thompson in the sixth, with Frank Quilici going to second base. Carew pinch-hit for Hall in the seventh. Alyea pinch-hit for Quilici in the ninth. Luis Tiant pinch-ran for Rich Reese in the ninth. Rick Renick pinch-hit for Jim Perry in the ninth.
Kaat started but pitched just two innings, allowing four runs (two earned) on six hits and two walks and striking out one.
This was the first playoff appearance for Blyleven. He would not appear in another playoff game until 1979 with Pittsburgh.
The pinch-hit appearance by Allison was the last at-bat of his career.
Oriole pitchers went 5-for-13 with a grand slam, two doubles, four runs, and six RBIs. None of their pitchers were particularly good batters--the highest batting average on the staff was by Tom Phoebus, who did not pitch in this series, and his average was a mere .163. The best OPS among Oriole pitchers (not counting Dave Leonhard's 1-for-2) was .461 by McNally. They had no one else over .350.
Oriole pitchers were just too much for the Twins in this series. They scored only ten runs, and six of them came in the first five innings of the first game.
So another quick, frustrating exit for the Twins. But it was still a fun season, and I still remember it fondly. I hope you do, too, and I hope this was a fun series for anyone who was reading it. We'll put up a couple of season wrap-up posts before the series ends. And, God willing, we'll pick another season to rewind next off-season.
Record: The Twins lost the best-of-five series, 0-3.
Jack Boyle (1866)
Ernie Quigley (1880)
Goldie Holt (1902)
Bob Elson (1904)
Marv Owen (1906)
Billy Goodman (1926)
Al Schroll (1932)
Gene Oliver (1935)
Frank Pulli (1935)
Dick Ellsworth (1940)
Ron Wojciak (1943)
Jake Brown (1948)
Eddie Bane (1952)
Bob Costas (1952)
Eric Rasmussen (1952)
Scott Bradley (1960)
Matt Sinatro (1960)
Rich Monteleone (1963)
Glenallen Hill (1965)
Sean Berry (1966)
Ramon Martinez (1968)
Cory Lidle (1972)
Juan Uribe (1979)
Mike Morse (1982)
Joe Smith (1984)
Dexter Fowler (1986)
Ike Davis (1987)
Ernie Quigley was a National League umpire for twenty-six years and then became the NL supervisor of umpires.
Goldie Holt is credited with teaching Charlie Hough to throw the knuckleball.
Bob Elson was a baseball broadcaster for over thirty years, mostly in Chicago.
Frank Pulli was a National League umpire from 1972-1999.
Ron Wojciak helped the Minnesota Golden Gophers win the College World Series in 1964 and played in the Twins’ farm system in 1965. He passed away from lung cancer in 1966.
Jake Brown was drafted by Minnesota in the thirty-third round in 1967, but he did not sign.
Scott Bradley was drafted by Minnesota in the twelfth round in 1978, but he did not sign.