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Random Rewind: 1970, Game 158

KANSAS CITY ROYALS 4, MINNESOTA TWINS 3 IN KANSAS CITY

Date:  Sunday, September 27, 1970.

Batting starsGeorge Mitterwald was 2-for-3 with a double.  Tony Oliva was 2-for-4 with a triple.  Brant Alyea was 2-for-4.

Pitching star: Luis Tiant pitched four innings, giving up two runs on six hits and a walk and striking out two.

Opposition stars: Bobby Floyd was 4-for-4 with two doubles.  Lou Piniella was 3-for-4.  Amos Otis was 2-for-4 with a double and two runs.  Jim Rooker pitched 7.2 innings, giving up three runs on eight hits and two walks and striking out seven.

The game:  Kansas City jumped out to an early lead.  In the first inning Otis led off with a single and Piniella followed with a one-out single.  The Twins had Piniella picked off first, but an error, put men on second and third and a wild pitch brought home the game’s first run.  Ed Kirkpatrick then singled to make it 2-0 Royals.

There were a few threats before the next run scored.  In the second Floyd led off with a double and Tommy Matchick followed with a single, putting men on first and third with one out.  A strikeout, a popup, and a fly out ended the inning.  In the third, Mitterwald led off with a single and went to second on a two-out walk to Frank Quilici, but Harmon Killebrew struck out to end the threat.  In the fourth, Alyea had a one-out single and Bob Allison followed with a walk.  A balk put men on second and third, but Rick Renick and Mitterwald were each caught looking to strand the runners.  Oliva tripled with one out in the sixth, but a strikeout and a fly ball left him on third.

The Royals broke through in the sixth, as doubles by Bob Oliver and Floyd brought home a run.  They added one more in the seventh when Otis doubled and scored on Piniella’s single, making it 4-0.

The Twins got a one-out double in the seventh from Mitterwald, but again could do nothing with it.  They finally got on the board in the eighth.  Killebrew singled with one out.  With two out, Alyea singled and Allison hit a two-run double.  Rich Reese followed with an RBI single, making the score 4-3.

But that was as much as the Twins could do.  A ground out ended the inning, and the Twins went down in order in the ninth.

WP:  Rooker (10-15).

LPLuis Tiant (7-3).

STed Abernathy (14).

NotesQuilici was at second, with Danny Thompson moving to short and Leo Cardenas getting the day off.  Renick was at third with Killebrew moving to first and Reese on the bench, although he would pinch-hit.  Allison was in right, with Oliva moving to center and Cesar Tovar on the bench, although he would also pinch-hit.

The Twins had clinched the division title, and this was in the days of September call-ups and before thirteen-man pitching staffs, so they used a lot of bench players.  Nine of them, to be exact.  They used six pinch-hitters and two pinch-runners.  I kind of miss that.

Tiant had his best year at the plate in 1970, batting .406/.424/.531 in 32 at-bats.  Oliva was batting .322.  He would finish at .325.  Tovar was batting .299.  He would finish at .300.  Rod Carew was injured much of 1970.  He batted .366 in 191 at-bats.

Jim Kaat made 34 starts and pitched well over two hundred innings in 1970, yet he pitched two innings of relief in a meaningless game and was probably quite happy to do so.  Put that in your file of “things that would never happen today.”

Bobby Floyd batted .326 in 43 at-bats in 1970.  Take away this game and he batted .256.

While Tiant was injured much of 1970, he pitched pretty well when he could pitch, going 7-3, 3.40 in 92.2 innings (17 starts).  Makes you wonder why the Twins were so quick to give up on him.  In their defense, he had a poor year in 1969 and would have another one in 1971 before his career resurgance.

Record:  Kansas City was 64-94, in fourth place in the AL West, 31 games behind Minnesota.  They would finish 65-97, tied for fourth with Milwaukee, 33 games behind Minnesota.

The Twins were 95-63, in first place in the AL West, 8.5 games ahead of Oakland.  They would finish 98-64, in first place, 9 games ahead of Oakland.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 7-6 (.538).

Random Rewind: 2002, Game 155

CHICAGO WHITE SOX 8, MINNESOTA TWINS 2 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Sunday, September 22, 2022

Batting starsDustan Mohr was 3-for-5 with a double.  Matthew LeCroy was 2-for-4.  Michael Restovich was 2-for-4.  Luis Rivas was 2-for-5.

Pitching starJohan Santana pitched two shutout innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.  LaTroy Hawkins pitched a perfect inning.  

Opposition stars:  D’Angelo Jimenez was 2-for-4 with a three-run homer (his fourth) and two runs.  Frank Thomas was 2-for-4 with a home run (his twenty-seventh) and three RBIs.  Magglio Ordonez hit a home run, his thirty-sixth.  Mark Buehrle pitched six innings, giving up two runs on nine hits and two walks and striking out three.  Antonio Osuna struck out three in two shutout innings, giving up one hit.

The game:  The Twins got singles from Rivas and LeCroy in the first, and a passed ball put men on second and third with two out, but a ground out ended the inning.  In the bottom of the first, Jimenez singled and Thomas hit a two-run homer, making it 2-0 Chicago.

The Twins got on the board in the second.  Michael Cuddyer walked and singles by Restovich and A. J. Pierzynski produced a run.  The Twins still had men on first and second with none out, but Denny Hocking popped up a bunt and a double play ended the inning.  The White Sox got the run back in the bottom of the inning when Jeff Liefer doubled, went to third on a ground out, and scored on a sacrifice fly, making it 3-1.  

The Twins threatened in the third.  Mohr led off with a double, but was thrown out trying to go to third on a fly to center.  They had a chance to score anyway, as LeCroy singled and Corey Koskie walked, but a ground out ended the inning.  Chicago got another run in the bottom of the inning when Jose Valentin walked, went to second on a wild pitch, and scored on a Thomas single, increasing the lead to 4-1.  The White Sox put it away in the fourth.  Joe Crede and Aaron Rowand hit one-out singles, and with two down Jimenez hit a three-run homer.  

The lead was 7-1, and the Twins would not get back into the game.  They did get one more run in the fifth, when singles by Rivas and Mohr put men on first and third with none out and a double play brought a run home, but that was it.  Ordonez rounded out the scoring with a home run leading off the eighth.

WP:  Buehrle (19-11).

LP:  Joe Mays (4-8).

S:  None.

NotesLeCroy was at first base in place of Doug MientkiewiczHocking was at short in place of Cristian GuzmanRestovich was in left in place of Jacque JonesCuddyer was in right field, with Mohr moving from right to center.  Torii Hunter was the DH in place of David Ortiz.  The Twins had clinched the division at this point.

Pierzynski was batting .304.  He would finish at .300.  Restovich was batting .300.  He would finish at .308 in 13 at-bats.  Javier Valentin, who came in at catcher for Pierzynski late in the game, was batting .667.  He would finish at .500 (2-for-4).

Hawkins had an ERA of 2.18.  He would finish at 2.13, easily his best season in the majors up to this point.  J. C. Romero had an ERA of 1.96.  He would finish at 1.89.

We talked about Mays a few days ago.  He did pitch much better in the second half of 2002, after he came back from injury.  Not great, but his ERA in the second half was 4.52 with a WHIP of 1.30.

Santana made fourteen starts and had thirteen relief appearances in 2002

Jimenez was a future Twin, playing in their farm system in 2010.  Another future Twin, Joe Crede, was 1-for-4.  I always remember him as “Home Run Greedy Crede” because of a Twins radio commercial at the time.

The Twins out-hit Chicago 12-9, but still lost by six runs.  Eleven of the twelve hits were singles.  They stranded nine men and went 1-for-12 with men in scoring position.

Record:  Chicago was 79-77, in second place, 10.5 games behind Minnesota.  They would finish 81-81, in second place, 13.5 games behind Minnesota.

The Twins were 89-66, in first place, 10.5 games ahead of Chicago.  They would finish 94-67, in first place, 13.5 games ahead of Chicago.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 7-5 (.583).

Random Rewind: 2005, Game 69

DETROIT TIGERS 8, MINNESOTA TWINS 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, July 22, 2005.

Batting starLuis Rivas was 2-for-4.

Pitching starsJesse Crain pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit.  Juan Rincon struck out two in a perfect inning.  Joe Nathan struck out two and walked two in a scoreless inning.

Opposition stars:  Placido Polanco was 2-for-4 with a double and a walk.  Craig Monroe was 2-for-4 with a double and two runs.  Nook Logan was 2-for-4 with a double.  Omar Infante was 2-for-5 with a home run (his fourth) and three RBIs.  Ivan Rodriguez was 2-for-5.  Nate Robertson pitched a complete game, giving up an unearned run on five hits and a walk and striking out six.

The game:  The Twins scored first, in the first inning.  Rivas reached third on a single-plus-error and scored on a Lew Ford single.  Detroit had a two-out rally in the second to tie it.  Monroe doubled, Chris Shelton walked, and Infante singled to make it 1-1.

From there it was all Tigers.  Polanco led off the third with a double.  With one out, Rondell White walked and a wild pitch put men on first and third.  RBI singles by Rodriguez and Monroe followed, making it 3-1.  Infante led off the fourth with a home run.  Logan walked and scored on a Brandon Inge double.  He was bunted to third and scored when White reached on an error, making it 6-1.  Another run scored in the fifth when White led off with a walk, went to second on a wild pitch, and scored on a pair of ground outs.  Detroit added one more in the seventh when Shelton scored, Logan reached on an error, Inge walked to load the bases, and Polanco singled home a run.

The Twins did nothing on offense after the first inning.  They only once got a man as far as second, and that was on an error.

WP:  Robertson (3-5).

LPJoe Mays (3-3).

S:  None.

NotesMike Redmond was behind the plate in place of Joe MauerMatthew LeCroy was at first base in place of Justin MorneauRivas had lost the second base job at this point, but was playing in place of Nick Punto.  Baseball-reference lists Jason Bartlett as the regular shortstop, but Juan Castro actually played more games there, and played in this one.  With LeCroy at first base, Lew Ford was the DH.

The Twins did not have a .300 hitter in 2005, and no one was batting .300 after this game.

Crain had an ERA of 0.85.  He would finish at 2.71.  J. C. Romero had an ERA of 2.22.  He would finish at 3.47.  Rincon had an ERA of 2.87.  He would finish at 2.45.

Mays was in his last year with the Twins and his last year as a rotation starter.  He’d had an excellent season in 2001, and got a mutli-year contract, but had injury problems immediately thereafter and did not have a good season again.  He was easily the worst starter the Twins had in 2005, going 6-10, 5.65, 1.56 WHIP.  He would be replaced in the rotation in September by rookie Scott Baker.

Future Twins Rondell White and Craig Monroe started for the Tigers.  Monroe was 2-for-4 with a double and a walk.  White was 0-for-4 with a walk.

The Random Twins have seen Nate Robertson twice.  He has won one and lost one.

Record:  Detroit was 35-33, in fourth place in the AL Central, 14.5 games behind Chicago.  They would finish 71-9-1, in fourth place, 28 games behind Chicago.

Minnesota was 48-31, in second place, 10 games behind Chicago.  They would finish 83-79, in third place, 16 games behind Chicago.

Random Record:  The Random Twins had their six-game winning streak snapped and are 7-4 (.636).

Random Rewind: 1994, Game 61

MINNESOTA TWINS 5, BOSTON RED SOX 2 IN BOSTON

Date:  Monday, June 13, 1994

Batting stars: Jeff Reboulet was 3-for-3 with two doubles and a walk.  Chip Hale was 3-for-3 with a hit-by-pitch.  Chuck Knoblauch was 2-for-4 with a double, a walk, and two RBIs.  Shane Mack was 2-for-5.

Pitching starJim DeShaies struck out seven in six innings, giving up two runs on eight hits and a walk.  Rick Aguilera pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit and striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Wes Chamberlain was 3-for-4 with a double.  Carlos Rodriguez was 2-for-3 with a double.  Damon Berryhill was 2-for-4 with a double.  John Valentin was 2-for-5 with a triple and a double.

The game:  Boston scored first, and they did it in the first inning.  Valentin hit a one-out triple and scored on a single by Mo Vaughn.  The Twins tied it in the third.  With one out, singles by Matt Walbeck, Reboulet, and Knoblauch made it 1-1.

Boston missed a chance to get the lead back in the bottom of the third.  Otis Nixon singled, Valentin doubled, and Vaughn was hit by a pitch, loading the bases, but Andre Dawson hit into a double play.  The Red Sox took the lead in the fourth, although they missed a chance for more.  Lee Tinsley walked and scored on Chamberlain’s double.  Berryhill followed with a double, but Chamberlain could only advance to third.  They still had men on second and third with none out, but DeShaies came back to strikeout the next three batters–Scott Cooper, Greg Litton, and Nixon–to end the inning.

The Twins went ahead to stay in the fifth.  Reboulet walked and Nixon doubled, putting men on second and third, and RBI ground outs by Alex Cole and Kirby Puckett made it 3-2 Minnesota.  They got an insurance run in the sixth when Mack and Hale hit one-out singles and Reboulet delivered a two-out double.  They got one more in the eighth.  Hale singled and was forced at second.  Reboulet doubled, putting men on second and third, and Knoblauch’s run-scoring ground out made it 5-2.

Boston missed more chances to score.  In the fifth Rodriguez reached on an error and was balked to second with one out, but there he remained.  Rodriguez again reached second in the seventh, getting there with a two-out double, but again was stranded there.  In the eighth Chamberlain reached on an error and went to second on a Berryhill single with one out.  A ground out put men on second and third with two down, but another ground out ended the inning.  The Red Sox did not get the tying run up to bat again, and it ended 5-2.

WPDeShaies (3-6).

LP:  Roger Clemens (6-3).

SAguilera (13).

NotesReboulet was at shortstop in place of Pat MearesHale was at third base in place of Scott Leius.  

Cole was batting .330.  He would finish at .296.  Puckett was batting .328.  He would finish at .317.  Knoblauch was batting .325.  He would finish at .312.  Reboulet was batting .309.  He would finish at .259.  Mack was batting .308.  He would finish at .333.

In addition to the “pitching stars”, the Twins used three pitchers for two-thirds of an inning each:  Larry Casian, Carl Willis, and Mark Guthrie.  

Neither team did much with men in scoring position:  The Twins were 2-for-12 and Boston was 2-for-13.  Each team stranded eleven men.

DeShaies was in his last year as a rotation starter, and it did not go well.  He ended up 6-12, 7.39, 1.72 WHIP.  Despite that, he made twenty-five starts, leading the league, and pitched 130.1 innings.  He also led the league in earned runs allowed and home runs allowed.  He would make two starts for Philadelphia in 1995, then his major league career would come to an end.

Wes Chamberlain had a six-year major league career, mostly with Philadelphia.  He was a decent part-time outfielder.  He finished fifth in Rookie of the Year voting in 1991.  His best year was 1993, when he batted .282 with an OPS of .813 in 284 at-bats.  1994 was his next-to-last year– he would bat just .119 in 42 at-bats in 1995, and then his major league career was over.

Otis Nixon, of course, would go on to play for the Twins in 1998.  He went 1-for-5 in this game.

We’ve already had three games from 1994.  That’s just how randomness works sometimes.

Record:  Boston was 32-28, in third place in the AL East, 4 games behind the Yankees.  They would finish 54-61, in fourth place, 17 games behind the Yankees.

Minnesota was 34-27, in third place, 1 games behind Cleveland and the White Sox.  They would finish 53-60, in fourth place, 14 games behind the White Sox.  After this game, the Twins would go 19-33, the worst record in baseball over that span.  That’s one of the things that happens when you give 25 starts to a guy with an ERA over seven.

Random Record:  The Random Twins have a six-game winning streak, and are 7-3 (.700).

Random Rewind: 1994, Game 50

MINNESOTA TWINS 2, SEATTLE MARINERS 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, June 1, 1994.

Batting starsAlex Cole was 3-for-4 with a double.  Pat Meares was 2-for-3.  Chuck Knoblauch was 2-for-4 with two doubles and two RBIs.

Pitching starsKevin Tapani pitched eight innings, giving up one run on seven hits and a walk and striking out six.  Rick Aguilera pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit and striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Felix Fermin was 3-for-3 with a double.  Chris Bosio pitched a complete game, giving up two runs on nine hits and a walk and striking out one.

The gameCole hit a one-out double in the first but remained at second.  Seattle got on the board in the third, as Fermin hit a one-out double and scored on Torey Lovullo’s two-out double.  The Twins got the run back in the third when Meares laid down a bunt single and scored on a Knoblauch double.  

Each team missed chances to take the lead.  Fermin and Dan Wilson hit one-out singles in the top of the fifth, but a strikeout and a fly out ended the inning.  In the bottom half, Meares singled with one out and advanced to third with two out on a stolen base-plus-error, but a ground out ended that threat.  In the top of the sixth, Tino Martinez hit a two-run single and went all the way from first to third on a passed ball, but was stranded there.

The Twins finally broke through in the seventh.  Matt Walbeck singled with one out.  He went to second on a ground out and Knoblauch delivered an RBI double to put the Twins ahead.  Cole followed with a single put men on first and third, but the Twins could do no more.  

Still, they led, 2-1, and it was enough.  The Mariners got a two-out single in each of the last two innings, but did not move the man past first.

WPTapani (6-2)..

LP:  Bosio (2-7).

SAguilera (11).

NotesChip Hale was at first base, with Kent Hrbek moving to DH.  Dave Winfield was the regular DH that season.  David McCarty came in for defense at first in the ninth.

Kirby Puckett was batting .335.  He would finish at .317.  Knoblauch was batting .328.  He would finish at .312.  Shane Mack was batting .315.  He would finish at .333.  Cole was batting .306.  He would finish at .296.

Tapani was really up and down in 1994, mixing some fine games like this with some bad ones.  He would finish 11-7, but with an ERA of 4.62.  That ERA was actually the best among Twins starters, with Pat Mahomes as the only other starter posting an ERA under five.  Despite that, the Twins made no changes to their rotation, with only six starts made outside of their regular five starters.  The starting five was Tapani, Mahomes (4.73), Scott Erickson (5.44), Carlos Pulido (5.98), and Jim DeShaies (7.39).

This was Fermin’s last season as a regular.  He would be a part-time player for the Mariners in 1995 and make eleven appearances for the Cubs in 1996 before ending his major league career.

Record:  Seattle was 21-30, in third place in the AL West, just 2.5 games behind Texas.  They would finish 49-63, just two games behind Texas.  Texas won the division with a record of 52-62, but there were no playoffs that season.

The Twins were 26-24, in third place in the AL Central, 4.5 games behind the White Sox.  They would finish 53-60, in fourth place, fourteen games behind the White Sox.

Random Record:  The Random Twins have a five-game winning streak and are 6-3 (.667).

Random Rewind: 2003, Game 31

MINNESOTA TWINS 7, TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS 3 IN TAMPA BAY

Date:  Tuesday, May 6, 2003.

Batting starsJacque Jones was 5-for-5 with two home runs (his second and third), a double, and three runs.  Dustan Mohr was 2-for-4 with a two-run homer, his fourth.  Bobby Kielty was 2-for-4.  Torii Hunter hit a two-run homer, his fourth.

Pitching starBrad Radke pitched seven innings, giving up two runs on seven hits and a walk and  striking out six.

Opposition stars:  Rey Ordonez was 2-for-4 with a double.  Rocco Baldelli was 2-for-4.  Nick Bierbrodt pitched three shutout innings, giving up three hits and striking out two.  Jesus Colome struck out two in two shutout innings, giving up one hit.

The gameJones led off the game with a home run, giving the Twins a quick 1-0 lead.  Tampa Bay threatened in the bottom of the inning.  Baldelli hit a one-out single and stole second with two out.  Travis Lee walked, but a strikeout ended the inning.  In the second, Kielty hit a one-out single followed by Mohr’s two-run homer, making it 3-0.  In the third, Jones again led off with a home run.  With two out, Todd Sears walked and Hunter hit a two-run homer to give the Twins a 6-0 lead.  The Twins threatened in the fourth, as A. J. Pierzynski led off with a single and Jones singled with one out.  A force out put men on first and third, but a fly out ended the inning.

Meanwhile, Radke was in control.  He retired nine in a row before Al Martin reached on an error.  Toby Hall followed with a single, but a fly out ended the threat.  The Twins threatened again in the sixth, as Pierzynski was hit by a pitch with one out and Jones hit a two-out double, but a ground out ended the inning.

The Devil Rays finally got to Radke in the sixth.  Singles by Baldelli, Aubrey Huff, and Lee loaded the bases with none out.  Martin grounded out to score one and Hall hit a sacrifice fly to bring in another, but that was all Tampa Bay could do.  They threatened again in the seventh, getting one-out singles from Ordonez and Marlon Anderson, but a double play ended the inning.

Each team tallied one in the ninth.  Jones singled, stole second, and scored on a Corey Koskie single.  Chris Truby drew a two-out walk and scored on an Ordonez double.  That brought us to the final score of 7-3.

WPRadke (3-3).

LP:  Steve Parris (0-3).

S:  None.

NotesSears was at first base in place of Doug MientkiewiczChris Gomez was at second in place of Luis RivasKielty was the DH.  The Twins didn’t really have a regular DH in 2003, with Matthew LeCroy getting the most starts there.

Jones was batting .336.  He would finish at .304.  Kielty was batting .310.  He would finish at .252.  Radke got off to a very slow start in 2003–this would lower his ERA to 5.53.  His ERA was 5.49 in the first half of the season and 3.24 in the second half.

While Tampa Bay got a couple of men on base, Radke did not give up a run in the first inning.

Johan Santana pitched the last two innings.  This was in the “Free Johan” days, with Santana (and many fans) believing he should be starting, but Ron Gardenhire and the Twins believing he was more valuable in relief.  He would start a game three days later, on May 9, but would not join the rotation until mid-July.

This would be the last major league start and last major league decision for Parris.  He would make three more appearances, all in relief, and be released June 18, never to return to the major leagues.

Whatever became of Rocco Baldelli, anyway?

Record:  Tampa Bay was 12-20, in fifth (last) place in the AL East, eleven games behind the Yankees.  Not that the Devil Rays had high expectations, but it has to be discouraging to already be eleven games out in early May.  They would finish 63-99, in fifth (last) place, 38 games behind the Yankees.

The Twins were 16-15, in second place in the AL Central, 4.5 games behind Kansas City.  They would finish 92-70, in first place, four games ahead of the White Sox, with KC falling to third.

Random Record:  The Random Twins have a four-game winning streak and are 5-3 (.625).

Random Rewind: 2008, Game 84

MINNESOTA TWINS 6, DETROIT TIGERS 4 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Tuesday, July 1.

Batting starsAlexi Casilla was 3-for-4 with a double and a walk.  Justin Morneau was 3-for-4 with a double.  Craig Monroe was 2-for-3 with a three-run homer (his eighth) and a walk.  Carlos Gomez was 2-for-3 with two walks.  Mike Redmond was 2-for-4 with two RBIs.

Pitching starsScott Baker pitched six innings, giving up three runs on seven hits and striking out five.  Joe Nathan pitched a perfect inning, striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Carlos Guillen was 3-for-4 with three runs.  Marcus Thames was 2-for-4 with a two-run homer, his sixteenth.  Gary Sheffield was 2-for-4 with a double.  Ivan Rodriguez was 2-for-4.  Zach Miner pitched two shutout innings, giving up one hit and four walks.  Bobby Seay pitched two shutout innings, giving up two hits.

The game:  The Twins threatened in the first.  Gomez walked, Casilla got a bunt single, and a wild pitch moved runners to second and third with none out, but a home-and-first double play took the Twins out of the inning.  Detroit started the scoring in the fourth, when Guillen singled, went to third on Thames’ single, and scored on a wild pitch.  The Twins came right back in the bottom on the fourth.  Redmond and Morneau led off the inning with singles and Monroe followed with a three-run homer, putting the Twins up 3-1.  Minnesota added to their lead in the fifth.  Denard Span led off with a double, Gomez followed with a bunt single, Casilla hit an RBI double, and Redmond delivered a two-run single, making the score 6-1 Twins.

Detroit got back into the game in the sixth when Guillen hit a one-out single and Thames followed with a home run, making it 6-3.  The Twins got three one-out walks in the bottom of the sixth, loading the bases, but a double play ended the threat.  Detroit got one more in the eighth.  Guillen singled, went to second on a ground out, and scored on Sheffield’s two-out double.  But the next four batters were retired and the Twins took a 6-4 win.

WPBaker (5-2).

LP:  Nate Robertson (6-7).

SNathan (23).

NotesRedmond was behind the plate in place of Joe MauerBrendan Harris was at short, with Nick Punto going to third and sort-of regular third baseman Brian Buscher on the bench.  Monroe was at DH in place of Jason Kubel.

Casilla was batting .327.  He would finish at .281.  Morneau was batting .314.  He would finish at .300.  Redmond was batting .300.  He would finish at .287.

The Twins had fourteen hits.  Their first five batters went 12-for-18 with a home run, two doubles, and four walks.

Nathan did not allow an obligatory baserunner, retiring Detroit in order in the ninth.

This was the last home run Monroe would hit as a Twin.  He was released on August 8.

I think of Span as a center fielder, but he was in right in 2008, with Gomez in center.  He would not become the regular center fielder until 2010.

Future Twin Clete Thomas played left field for the Tigers, going 0-for-3.

Record:  Detroit was 42-41, in third place in the AL Central, 5.5 games behind Chicago.  They would finish 74-88, in fifth place, 14.5 games behind Chicago.

Minnesota was 46-38, in second place, two games behind Chicago.  They would finish 88-75, in second place, one game behind Chicago, due to losing game 163.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 4-3 (.571).

Random Rewind: 1996, Game 97

MINNESOTA TWINS 10, BOSTON RED SOX 4 IN BOSTON

Date:  Saturday, July 23, 1966

Batting starsCesar Tovar was 3-for-4 with a walk.  Tony Oliva was 3-for-6 with a double and two runs.  Jerry Zimmerman was 2-for-3 with a double.  Don Mincher was 2-for-5.  Ted Uhlaender was 2-for-6 with a home run (his second) and two runs.  Harmon Killebrew hit a home run, his twenty-first.

Pitching starJim Kaat pitched a complete game, giving up four runs (three earned) on nine hits and a walk and striking out seven.

Opposition stars:  Mike Ryan was 2-for-3.  George Thomas hit a home run, his fourth.

The game:  Each team missed scoring chances in the first two innings.  Zolio Versalles led off the game with a walk and Oliva hit a one-out double, putting men on second and third, but nothing came of it.  Carl Yastrzemski’s two-out double in the bottom of the inning similarly produced nothing.  Bob Allison led off the second with a walk and went to second on a ground out, but he was thrown out at the plate trying to score on a Tovar single.  Boston got another two-out double in the second, this time from Mike Ryan, but again the game remained scoreless.

Uhlaender put the Twins on the board in the third with a home run.  They had a chance to lengthen the lead in the fourth, as Allison singled with one out and went to second on Tovar’s two-out single, but a popup ended the inning.  In the fifth, however, the Twins took control.  Singles by Versalles and Uhlaender opened the inning.  A groundout put men on second and third and led to an intentional walk to KillebrewMincher made the Red Sox pay with a two-run single.  Allison walked, re-loading the bases, and Jimmie Hall singled home a run.  Mincher was thrown out trying to score from second, but Tovar was hit by a pitch to load the bases once again.  Kaat came through with an RBI single and Uhlaender was hit by a pitch to force home another run, making the score 6-0.

The Twins added one more in the sixth.  With two out Mincher singled, Allison was hit by a pitch, Zimmerman singled, and Tovar singled home a run.  Boston got on the board in the sixth.  Eddie Kasko led off with a double.  Joe Foy hit a two-out double, but Kasko was only able to get to third.  He scored on a ground out, however, to make the score 7-1.

With two out in the seventh, Tony Oliva singled and Killebrew followed with a two-run homer, making it 9-1.  Ryan hit a two-out double in seventh, but was stranded.  The Twins loaded the bases in the eighth–Zimmerman hit a one-out double, Tovar walked, a wild pitch sent runners to second and third, and Versalles drew a two-out intentional walk–but a liner to third ended the inning.

George Thomas homered in the eighth to make it 9-2.  The Twins got the run back in the ninth.  Oliva led off with a single, and walks to Killebrew and Allison loaded the bases with none out.  Andy Kosco hit a sacrifice fly to push the lead to 10-2.  The Red Sox rounded out the scoring in the bottom of the inning.  Tony Conigliaro doubled and scored on a Don Demeter single.  An error put men on second and third, and Bob Tillman singled home a run.  Kaat then retired the next three men go close out the game.

WPKaat (14-6).

LP:  Rollie Sheldon (5-11).

S:  None.

Notes:  Regular catcher Earl Battey started the game, but Hall pinch-hit for him in the fifth, bringing Zimmerman into the game.  Tovar shared second base with Bernie Allen, with Allen getting a few more starts.  Allison had a down year in 1966 and slipped to part-time status, with Hall seeing most of the action in left.

Oliva was batting .327.  He would finish at .307.  Kaat had an ERA of 2.84.  He would finish at 2.75.  

Zimmerman was your basic good-field, no-hit backup catcher, but 1966 was one of his better years.  He batted .252/.338/.328 in 119 at-bats.  His career numbers were .204./.269/.239.  Still, he played eight major league seasons, the first with Cincinnati, the last seven with the Twins.

Kaat, of course, would never be allowed to pitch a complete game in a game like this today.  He would lead the league in complete games with 19 and in innings with 304.2 in 1966.  He would also lead in starts with 41 and in batters faced with 1227.  For comparison, the leader in innings in 2024 was Logan Gilbert with 208.2 and the leaders in complete games had 2.  It was a different time.

This was Sheldon’s last year.  He’d been a good pitcher for the Yankees and the Kansas City Athletics, but he was 1-6, 4.97 for Boston in 1966.

Ex-Twin Dick Stigman played for Boston, facing two batters and giving up a hit and a walk.  This was his last season, and it was not a good one, as he posted an ERA of 5.44.

Boston pitchers hit three Twins batters.  It does not appear that there was any retaliation.

Record:  Boston was 42-57, in ninth place, 24.5 games behind Baltimore.  They would finish 72-90, in ninth place, 26 games behind Baltimore.

Minnesota was 48-49, in fifth place, 17.5 games behind Baltimore.  They would finish 89-73, in second place, nine games behind Baltimore.  After this game, the Twins would go 41-24, the best record in baseball over that span.  But it wasn’t enough to overcome their slow start.

The Yankees finished last in 1966 with a record of 70-89.  The good old days.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 3-3 (.500).

Random Rewind: 1994, Game 95

MINNESOTA TWINS 6, MILWAUKEE BREWERS 5 IN MILWAUKEE (13 INNINGS)

Date:  Friday, July 22, 1994.

Batting starsScott Leius was 3-for-5 with a home run (his thirteenth), a double, a walk, three runs and two RBIs.  Chuck Knoblauch was 2-for-5 with a double and a walk.  Kirby Puckett hit a home run, his sixteenth.

Pitching starsKevin Campbell pitched two shutout innings, giving up two hits and striking out one.  Erik Schullstrom pitched 2.2 scoreless innings, giving up one hit and striking out two.  Mark Guthrie pitched 1.1 scoreless innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.  Rick Aguilera pitched 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk and striking out two.

Opposition stars:  Rick Wrona was 3-for-4 with three doubles and a walk.  Kevin Seitzer was 3-for-6 with a double.  Dave Nilsson was 2-for-5 with a double.  Jose Mercedes pitched 2.2 scoreless innings, giving up a walk.  Jaime Navarro pitched four innings, of relief, giving up one run on three hits and two walks and striking out two.

The gamePuckett homered in the first inning to put the Twins up 1-0.  Milwaukee came back in the second.  Greg Vaughn led off with a double and scored on Nilsson’s single-plus error.  Matt Mieske then doubled home Nilsson, went to third on a ground out, and scored on a sacrifice fly, making the score 3-1 Brewers.

Milwaukee missed some chances to expand the lead.  Jeff Cirillo led off the third with a double and went to third on a ground out, but was stranded there.  Wrona walked and went to third on Jose Valentin’s single, but Valentin was thrown out trying to go to second.  Jody Reed then walked and stole second, putting men on second and third with two out.  But Cirillo flied out to end the inning.

Leius homered with one out in the fifth to cut the lead to 3-2.  Milwaukee again responded in the bottom of the inning.  Seitzer led off with a double.  He was on third with two out Mieske walked, Wrona delivered an RBI double, and a wild pitch made the score 5-2.

The Twins got one run back in the sixth.  With one out, Kent Hrbek walked, followed by singles by Shane Mack and Pedro Munoz to load the bases.  Leius drove in one with a single, leaving the bases still loaded, but Matt Walbeck hit into a double play.

The Brewers again missed a chance to expand the lead in the seventh.  Seitzer led off with a single but was picked off first.  Nilsson doubled with two out, but was left on second.  It cost them, as the Twins tied it in the ninth.  Leius walked.  With one out, pinch-hitter Chip Hale singled, with Leius going to third.  Pinch-runner Alex Cole stole second, with Leius coming home on an errant throw.  Knoblauch then singled to score Cole and tie it 5-5.

Wrona led off the eleventh with a double but advanced no farther.  Knoblauch led off the twelfth with a walk and was sacrificed to second.  Puckett was intentionally walked and Hrbek got an infield single to load the bases, but Mack hit into a double play.

The Twins took the lead in the thirteenth.  Leius doubled with one out, went to third on a ground out, and scored on a double by Jeff Reboulet.  In the bottom of the inning, Turner Ward walked and was bunted to second, but Alex Diaz flied out and Valentin grounded out to end the game.

WPAguilera (1-3).

LP:  Navarro (3-7).

S:  None.

NotesRich Becker was in center field in place of Cole, who was the regular center fielder.  Munoz was the DH in place of Dave Winfield.

Milwaukee hit eight doubles, but no home runs.

Eddie Guardado started for the Twins, the last of four starts he would make that season.  He lasted just 2.1 innings, giving up three runs on four hits and a walk.  He was twenty-three in 1994, and was obviously a long way from being Everyday Eddie at this point.

Mack was batting .320.  He would finish at .333.  Puckett was batting .319.  He would finish at .317.  Munoz was batting .314.  He would finish at .295.  Knoblauch was batting .313.  He would finish at .312.  Cole was batting .307.  He would finish at .296.

This was the second major league game for Erik Schullstrom.  He had not given up a run in 5.1 innings.  He would stretch that to 7.1 innings.  He did a very good job out of the bullpen for the Twins that year, posting a 2.77 ERA with one save before the season was prematurely ended.

Rick Wrona played in just six games for Milwaukee in 1994.  Three of his five hits and three of his four doubles came in this game.

Record:  Milwaukee was 45-51, in fourth place in the AL Central, 13.5 games behind the White Sox.  They would finish 53-62, in fifth place, fifteen games behind the White Sox.

The Twins were 44-51, in fifth place in the AL Central, fourteen games behind the White Sox.  They would finish 53-60, in fourth place, fourteen games behind the White Sox.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 2-3 (.400).

Random Rewind: 2022, Game 159

DETROIT TIGERS 5, MINNESOTA TWINS 2 IN DETROIT

Date:  Sunday, October 2, 2022.

Batting starCarlos Correa was 2-for-3 with a double and a walk.

Pitching starsGriffin Jax pitched a perfect inning, striking out two.  Jorge Lopez pitched a scoreless inning, walking one.

Opposition stars:  Miguel Cabrera was 2-for-4.  Eric Haase hit a home run, his fourteenth.  Victor Reyes hit a home run, his second.  Joey Wentz pitched 4.2 innings, giving up two unearned runs on two hits and four walks and striking out four.  

The gameCorrea hit a one-out double in the first, but nothing came of it.  In the bottom of the first Akil Baddoo led off with a walk, went to third on a stolen base-plus-error, and scored when Haase reached on an error with one out.  Cabrera singled to put men on first and third and a wild pitch made it 2-0 Tigers.  It went to 3-0 in the third when Haase hit a two-out home run.

The Twins got on the board in the fifth.  Ryan Jeffers reached on a two-base error to start the inning.  One-out walks to Gilberto Celestino and Jose Miranda loaded the bases and Correa walked to force in a run.  Nick Gordon then hit a sacrifice fly to cut the lead to 3-2.

That was as good as it would get for the Twins.  Neither team threatened until the eighth, when Reyes led off with a home run.  Baddoo singled and Riley Greene walked, putting men on first and second.  With one out, Cabrera hit an RBI single to make it 5-2, and that’s where it ended.

WP:  Alex Lange (7-4).

LPSimeon Woods Richardson (0-1).

S:  Gregory Soto (30).

NotesJeffers was behind the plate in place of Gary SanchezGordon was at second in place of Jorge PolancoGordon’s primary position that year was left field, but Jake Cave manned that position in this game.  Matt Wallner was in right in place of Max Kepler.

This was the major league debut of Simeon Woods Richardson.  He actually did pretty well, pitching five innings and giving up three runs (two earned) on three hits and two walks while striking out three.

The Twins kept talking in 2024 about how many young players they were using, but many of those players were already with the big club at the end of 2022.  Miranda, Jeffers, Wallner, Richardson, and Jax all played in this game.  They may not have been grizzled veterans in 2024, but they weren’t a bunch of kids, either.

A few other random Twins who played in this game were Jermaine Palacios, Mark Contreras, and Caleb Hamilton.

The Twins had been in contention much of the 2022 season, but collapsed down the stretch.  Where have I heard that before?

Record:  Detroit was 65-93, in fourth place in the AL Central, 24.5 games behind Cleveland.  They finished 66-96, in fourth place, twenty-six games behind Cleveland.

Minnesota was 77-82, in third place in the AL Central, thirteen games behind Cleveland.  They finished 78-84, in third place, fourteen games behind Cleveland.

Random Record:  The Random Twins are 1-3 (.250).