Twins Minor League Report (4/24): Palka's Power and Pitching Shutouts
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As their parent club was playing nearly two games in one day, all four affiliates of the Minnesota Twins were in action on Sunday afternoon. Three of those teams got strong starting pitching performances in wins, including a couple of shutouts, while another put up nearly as much offense as the other three combined, but came out on the losing end of back and forth slugfest.
To find out where and how it all went down in Sunday’s games, keep reading!
RED WINGS REPORT
Buffalo 3, Rochester 6
Left-hander Pat Dean squared off against fellow lefty and old friend Scott Diamond at Frontier Field in Rochester, New York Sunday afternoon, and both were fantastic for most of the game. Diamond shut out the Red Wings for six innings, while Dean held the Bisons to just one run on four hits in seven innings. He struck out two.
Rochester tied the game in the seventh after Diamond’s night was done, as Adam Brett Walker led off the inning with a single, and promptly stole second base for his first steal of the 2016 season. He was moved to third on a Darin Mastroianni ground out, and then scored on a Wilfredo Tovar single to knot the game.
Brandon Kintzler was brought in to relieve Dean for the top of the eighth, and retired the side in order to bring Rochester up to bat. They would break the game open by sending nine men to the plate.
Jorge Polanco and Reynaldo Rodriguez started the inning with consecutive singles, but a bunt attempt by Juan Centeno would erase Polanco at third. David Murphy picked up the slack by delivering an RBI single to put Rochester up. Later in the inning with two outs and the bases loaded, Tovar would deliver a ground ball single to third base, and Centeno and Murphy would scamper home after the throw was air-mailed to first for an error. A James Beresford triple to left field would finish the scoring at five for the inning, and a comfortable 6-1 lead for Rochester.
J.R Graham was summoned for the ninth inning and made it somewhat interesting by allowing two runs on two hits and two walks, but did finish out the game to improve the Red Wings to 7-10 on the season.
As a team Rochester pounded out thirteen hits on the day and were 4-12 with runners in scoring position. Beresford (3-5, 3B, 2 RBI), Polanco (2-3, BB), Rodriguez (2-4, R), Murphy (2-4, R, 2B, RBI), and Tovar (2-4, R, 2 RBI) led the offense with multiple hits on the day.
CHATTANOOGA CHATTER
Birmingham 14, Chattanooga 13
In Chattanooga Sunday afternoon, it was an absolute slugfest as the teams combined for twenty-seven runs on thirty-two hits in a nine-inning game. Both starters failed to pitch more than four innings, and for the Twins that starter was lefty David Hurlburt.
The first three innings were not bad, as he allowed two hits including a run-scoring triple in the first, but struck out the side; faced the minimum in the second aided by a caught stealing attempt with Stuart Turner behind the plate; and just a single in the third.
In the bottom half of those innings, the Lookouts offense put up three, one, and one respectively to put them out front early 5-1. The fourth is where Hurlburt ran into his trouble.
A leadoff home run led into a walk, three singles and a triple to put the Barons out front 6-5 before Hurlburt was able to finish the inning. On the game Hurlburt threw four innings, allowing the six runs on eight hits and a walk, with six strikeouts.
Chattanooga was quick to take back another big lead in the bottom half however, as they sent ten men up to bat before Engelb Vielma was erased at second-base on a steal attempt for the third out. Daniel Palk started the scoring with a single to plate D.J. Hicks, who had doubled earlier. A bases loaded 2-run double from Stuart Turner was followed by a 2-run double from Joe Maloney, and Vielma’s single before the caught stealing attempt brought in Maloney for six runs on the board in the frame and an 11-6 lead.
Brett Lee came on in relief of Hurlburt for the fifth, and gave three of those runs back on a single, RBI double, a walk, and wild pitch, and was also aided by a throwing error from third-baseman T.J. White. Only one of those runs was earned.
A bases-loaded ground out from White would make the score 12-9 heading into the sixth, which was the only clean inning (no runs) of the game.
Birmingham would tie it the seventh against Corey Williams out for his second inning of work. A single, hit-by-pitch, and walk around a strikeout would load the bases and bring in Brandon Peterson. He got two strikeouts to finish the three outs, but they were around a bases clearing double for the tying three runs and were charged to Williams.
A solo-home run against Peterson would put the Barons out front for good in the eighth, and they added a needed insurance run in the ninth against J.T. Chargois, who had come into the day having pitched five perfect innings to start his season. He was greeted by a leadoff double to surrender his first baserunner, and a sacrifice bunt and groundout would lead to his first run allowed. A single and groundout later would mark his first appearance without a strikeout, and Chattanooga down 14-12 heading into the bottom of the ninth.
As could be expected, the Red Wings did all they could to keep the game going, or end it with one swing. A two-out double from Palka would score Hicks who had singled earlier, and brought in Mitch Garver as a pinch-hitter with the tying run in scoring position. On a 2-2 pitch he struck out swinging to end the game with a loss for the home team, but it was an exciting game all the way through for the three-thousand-plus fans in attendance at AT&T Field.
Palka and Harrison each hit their second home runs of the season for the Lookouts and were 4-4 and 3-5 respectively on the day driving in six runs between them. Palka added two doubles and two walks, reaching base in all six of his plate appearances. Vielma (2-6, R, 3B, RBI), Levi Michael (2-5, 2 R’s, 2BB), and Hicks (2-6, 2 R’s, 2B) each had multiple hits at the top of the order, and Turner and Maloney each had 2 RBI in the offensive explosion for the Lookouts.
MIRACLE MATTERS
Charlotte 0, Fort Myers 2
While there was a ton of offense in Chattanooga, Fort Myers saw another dominating pitching performance from one of their starters.
On this day, it was left-hander Randy Rosario dominating an opposing lineup for the Miracle.
Rosario allowed baserunners in each of his six-plus innings except the fifth, but would strand all of them as Charlotte was 0-6 with runners in scoring position against him, leaving seven men on base for the game in the process.
Luke Bard came on to finish the seventh and added a scoreless eighth for the bullpen. And Todd Van Steensel was summoned for the ninth and his second save opportunity on the year. He retired the Stone Crabs in order for his second save, and helped improve Rosario to 2-1 on the season along with a 1.02 ERA that is good for second on the team behind Felix Jorge at 0.92.
The Miracle’s two runs came on a home run from the rehabbing Danny Santana, and he also scored the other on a single from Alex Real. Santana was 2-4 on the game for his first two hits of his assignment. The only other hit was a single from Chad Christensen, who also drew the only walk on the day for the Miracle. It was more than enough to support the Miracle pitchers and however, who have gotten outstanding starting pitching to begin the year and improved to 10-8.
In total, each of the Miracle’s six starters have now stared three games. This includes Stephen Gonsalves (1-1, 1.89 ERA), Kohl Stewart (1-0, 2.60 ERA), Tyler Jay (1-1, 3.60 ERA), Jorge (1-1, 0.92 ERA), Keaton Steele (0-2, 3.24 ERA), and Rosario (2-1, 1.02 ERA). Collectively they’ve thrown 105.1 innings, and allowed just 25 earned runs on 72 hits and 26 walks, with 98 K’s that’s good for a spectacular 2.14 ERA so far.
KERNELS NUGGETS
Cedar Rapids 9, Clinton 0
The Cedar Rapids Kernels imitated the good parts of each of the Chattanooga and Fort Myers games, as they also exploded for sixteen hits on offense and shutout their opponent on pitching and defense.
The Kernels put crooked numbers on the scoreboard in each of the second, third, and eighth innings that included seven singles, a double, and triple for eight of their nine runs. They added a single run in the fifth on an RBI knock from Rafael Valera. Three wild pitches in the eighth inning aided in putting the Kernels finals on the board.
Cedar Rapids got production throughout the lineup as seven of the nine hitters collected multiple hits, with A.J. Murray and Max Murphy in the three and four spots as the only ones without them, but Murray did have an RBI and Murphy scored two runs. Valera led the team with two RBI’s and the extra base hits came from Zander Wiel who was 4-5 with double, triple, RBI, and two runs scored.
Taking the mound for away team was Cody Stashak, and he scattered four hits and two walks in his six innings, striking out four along the way. Michael Theofanopoulos pitched a scoreless seventh, walking one and striking out one. Miles Nordgren finished the final two innings, allowing just one hit with one strikeout. The LumberKings lineup was a combined 5-30 on the game, were 0-5 with runners in scoring position and stranded just six. In comparison, Cedar Rapids was 7-19 with runners in scoring position and stranded nine.
Stashak improved to 2-0, winning both of his starts so far, and sports a 1.13 ERA and 0.75 WHIP in his sixteen total innings for the Kernels.
TWINS DAILY PLAYERS OF THE DAY
Pitcher of the Day – 3-way tie:
- Cody Stashak, Cedar Rapids Kernels (6.0 IP, 0 R’s, 4 H’s, 2 BB, 4 K’s)
- Randy Rosario, Fort Myers Miracle (6.1 IP, 0 R’s, 6 H’s, 2 K’s)
- Pat Dean, Rochester Red Wings (7.0 IP, 1 ER, 4 H’s, 2 K’s)
Hitter of the Day – Danial Palka, Chattanooga Lookouts (4-4, 2 R’s, 2 2B’s, HR, 4 RBI, 2 BB’s)
MONDAY’S PROBABLE STARTERS
Rochester – Scheduled day off.
Chattanooga @ Mississippi (7:00PM CST) – RHP D.J. Baxendale (1-1, 3.27 ERA)
Fort Myers – Scheduled day off.
Cedar Rapids – Scheduled day off.
Please feel free to ask any questions and discuss Sunday’s games.
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