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Article: SEA 2, MIN 1: Paxton Outduels Romero


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Fernando Romero was excellent once again, but he was dealt his first loss in five starts because the Mariners took advantage of their opportunities. Oh, and having James Paxton on the mound didn’t hurt, either. Max Kepler had a great game, but Paxton and the rest of the M’s staff held the lineup in check.Snapshot (chart via FanGraphs)

Current record: 21-25

Fernando Romero: 69 Game Score, 7.0 IP, 2 ER, 7 K, 2 BB, 61.4% strikes

Bullpen: 1.0 IP, 0 ER, 2 K, 0 BB

Lineup: 0-for-0 w/RISP, 3 LOB

Top three per WPA: Kepler .145, Romero .054, Reed .030

Download attachment: WinEx525.png

The Mariners did an excellent job manufacturing their runs. Jean Segura hit a leadoff single in the first and stole second base. He came around to score on a two-out single from Nelson Cruz.

 

Romero retired the first two batters he faced in the sixth but then ran into some control issues. He walked Guillermo Heredia, whose life must have flashed before his eyes on ball four, a 96.5 mph fastball that was headed straight for his head. Luckily he ducked. Heredia advanced to second on a wild pitch and scored on a single.

 

That was all the offense Seattle could muster, but Twins pitchers have to be basically perfect with the way their offense is playing right now. To be fair, Mariners starter James Paxton is among the better pitchers in baseball right now. He struck out 11 Twins batters over seven innings.

 

The star of the game for the Twins’ lineup was no doubt Max Kepler. He hit a home run (off Paxton, a lefty) and made an excellent throw to nail a runner at third base. He also got a single, meaning he accounted for two of the team’s four hits.

 

 

Romero was extremely efficient, completing seven innings for the first time of his big league career. Between Triple A and the majors, he’s logged 49 2/3 innings so far this season. That total already represents the third-most innings he’s thrown in a season.

 

Miguel Sano returned from the DL. He played first base. That was a good look for him, in my opinion. Unfortunately, he was 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. Nobody outside of Kepler hit well for the Twins, but it’s disheartening to see Byron Buxton in particular continue to struggle. He was 0-for-3 with a pair of strikeouts, dropping is OPS on the year to .416

 

Postgame With Molitor

Bullpen Usage

Here’s a quick look at the number of pitches thrown by the bullpen over the past five days:Download attachment: Bullpen525.png

 

Next Three Games

Sat at SEA, 9:10 pm CT

Sun at SEA, 3:10 pm CT

Mon at KC, 6:15 pm CT

 

Last Three Games

DET 4, MIN 1: Niko’s Revenge

MIN 6, DET 0: Lynn Shows Will to Win

MIN 4, DET 2: It’s All Coming Up Rosie

 

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Bartolo, the Twins, and a Guy Named Phil

Did Minnesota Just Summon the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come?

 

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Sano and Buxton simply have to hit for this team to be really good. I don’t blame Falvine for that.

 

But, that isn’t to say they can’t be held accountable for other issues. There is no bench, and there wasn’t much to start the season. And these are the lineups you get when you start the season with no bench, and precious little in AAA that can help.

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NO Sano NO Buxton NO PROBLEM.

0 for 7 with 5K tonight.

I think anyone can do that with eyes closed.

If this team wants to win now, Sano and Buxton should stay on the bench. Sano should be a pinch hitter, Buxton should be a pinch runner and defensive replacement. Adrianza and Wilson might be slightly better than those two offensively right now. That's just how pathetic they are at the plate.

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Sano and Buxton simply have to hit for this team to be really good. I don’t blame Falvine for that.

 

But, that isn’t to say they can’t be held accountable for other issues. There is no bench, and there wasn’t much to start the season. And these are the lineups you get when you start the season with no bench, and precious little in AAA that can help.

Going into spring training Adrianza, Escobar, Garver and Grossman were expected to be the bench, and that's with a 12-man pitching staff. Subtracting Polanco, Castro and Mauer leave us with what we have. Would Falvine have been able to find better than the current bench during the offseason? Maybe, but I doubt it when 29 other teams were shopping for the same types of players. Edited by Nine of twelve
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No matter how you slice it, the offense is bad. I saw the same thing again last night that I have seen all season. Hitters can't put the meat part of the bat on the ball when it is over the strike zone and they swing at way too many pitches out of the zone. Maybe it's time for the hitting coach to be held accountable? 

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You can't keep putting Buxton in the lineup. He's one of the worst players in MLB this year. We're 30% through the year and in a pennant race. He can't be playing every day.

 

I don't think he's going to start hitting until August again, but the the last thing the Twins want to do is start the AAA yo-yo.

 

It's an absolutely terrible situation for the Twins because you're damned if you do and damned if you don't.

 

This team cannot hit. It's embarrassing to watch and very depressing.

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It seems like a continual puzzle - Buxton and Sano - the first dialogue is when will they come up?  Why aren't the here.  

 

Second dialogue - can you believe Sano's power.  Yes he is big, but he makes our lineup so much better.

 

Third dialogue - Buxton has discovered his stroke.  He is on the way.

 

Fourth dialogue - Can we afford a HR or nothing at bat.  How many rallies are  killed by the big K?  And can Sano stay healthy?  Is it his weight, is he injury prone, is the air pressure from his big empty swing impacting his body?

 

Fifth dialogue - can we have a designated fielder?  Forget Buxton's bat (what bat) - I think we are seeing an excellent defensive replacement.

 

Sixth dialogue.  OK - Sano is back and its too bad it was not in MN, because the air movement from his three Ks could have worked as a fan to cool the MN fans on a hot day.  And Buxton just flounders with hope that the pitcher can find his bat and hit it, otherwise he joins the big K.

 

Last dialogue.  These two were our hope.  We never planned on Escobar, Rosario, Kepler being the top of the list.  These are our guys.  Hanley Ramirez just got dumped for his pathetic month.  We are waiting and hoping.  We hope so much that we still think of Sano in is rookie year, and Buxton in is one good 1/2 year (similar I might say to the way to treat Polanco's 1/2 year).  But where do we look to unlock the potential?  There are too few bats in the lineup to allow us to fail at two positions. I would love it if the coaches could be really honest with us.  Whatever they have tried is not working. 

 

But at least we have Romero and Berrios in the rotation that no longer looks like the bottom of the barrel and it is improvement from within, not the FA signings that have done it.  I want to see Gonsalves now!

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The good news was that I was able to stay up and watch the whole thing and I didn't doze off once. 

 

It's fair to point out that Paxton is really really good and right now he is even better than that. No shame in scoring one run against him. 

 

It's wonderful to point that Romero is also really really good. We might as well get used to him in the rotation for awhile. He is telling everybody that he plans on staying.

 

Even before Paxton hit the mound... the Twins have struggled all year stringing hits together and I'm gonna point to the right handed hitters as the culprit again like I've been doing for too long now. It seems like almost all of our run production has come from the long ball and we haven't been hitting a ton of long balls in comparison to other teams and with the right-handers spaced out equally in the lineup it makes it hard to string things together when they are doing what they are doing right now.    

 

It's been bad enough for long enough that the Twins would have to taking a flyer on someone like Chris Carter and It's been bad enough for long enough that the Twins may have to get real serious about making a run at a struggling decline phase player like Hanley Ramirez and figuring out how to wedge him into the lineup. 

 

He won't do it but I'd like to see Molitor shock Dozier by moving him down significantly in the lineup and telling him that he will have to hit his way back to where he was before. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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NO Sano NO Buxton NO PROBLEM.

0 for 7 with 5K tonight.

I think anyone can do that with eyes closed.

If this team wants to win now, Sano and Buxton should stay on the bench. Sano should be a pinch hitter, Buxton should be a pinch runner and defensive replacement. Adrianza and Wilson might be slightly better than those two offensively right now. That's just how pathetic they are at the plate.

Buxton has been extremely frustrating to watch, and you've gotta keep in mind this was Sano's first game back. This team's only hope at real success is for these guys to get back on track, and I don't see how they do that sitting on the bench.

 

I get that those two haven't contributed much of anything this season, but if you remove them form the lineup, this team's ceiling is probably .500. If those two catch fire, we've seen them carry this team to playing .650 ball for long periods.

 

You can't keep putting Buxton in the lineup. He's one of the worst players in MLB this year. We're 30% through the year and in a pennant race. He can't be playing every day.

It's clear at this point that it was foolish not to send him on a rehab assignment, but I'm not sure how they can get him back on track without letting him hit. Sure the Twins are technically in a pennant race, but they're also 21-25, and Buxton is a much too important a long-term piece to cast aside in favor of trying to make something of this season.

 

Byron the Bust. Rolls off the tongue easy. 

 

It's pretty depressing when you see other teams call up their top prospects and they do well. 

This is a pretty strange take to have when we've watched Fernando Romero pitch to a 1.88 ERA, 1.12 WHIP and 9.1 K/9 over his first five major league starts.

 

There's a big, brilliant ray of sunshine blasting through if you're willing to look past the clouds.

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Buxton has been extremely frustrating to watch, and you've gotta keep in mind this was Sano's first game back. This team's only hope at real success is for these guys to get back on track, and I don't see how they do that sitting on the bench.

 

I get that those two haven't contributed much of anything this season, but if you remove them form the lineup, this team's ceiling is probably .500. If those two catch fire, we've seen them carry this team to playing .650 ball for long periods.

 

It's clear at this point that it was foolish not to send him on a rehab assignment, but I'm not sure how they can get him back on track without letting him hit. Sure the Twins are technically in a pennant race, but they're also 21-25, and Buxton is a much too important a long-term piece to cast aside in favor of trying to make something of this season.

 

This is a pretty strange take to have when we've watched Fernando Romero pitch to a 1.88 ERA, 1.12 WHIP and 9.1 K/9 over his first five major league starts.

 

There's a big, brilliant ray of sunshine blasting through if you're willing to look past the clouds.

I wonder at what point does it make sense to option both Buxton and Sano. I realize that neither have much to learn in AAA, but there's something they aren't figuring out at the ML level that they can be sent down to work on. Both are liabilities in the lineups right now, and this team needs some bats. If Sano's problem is attitude as many think, then some time doing the AAA bus tours might do him good. As for Buxton, he never had much time in the high minors, so I kind of wonder if it makes sense for him to spend some time there working on identifying (and laying off of) breaking pitches.

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I turned on the game and saw Adrianza at bat with (8) batting spot shown - it took me a solid 40 seconds to figure out who could possibly be bad enough to be batting behind Adrianza...subconscious denial I guess.

 

Rosario and Kepler continue to get better, Sano and Buxton do not.  To me that seems like an indictment of the player more than the coaches.

 

It feels like Dozier has been on an island all year, like he's not engaged or something.  

 

Paxton's great but someone else needs to step up before some of the AA and AAA guys seem like better options.  That might be July.

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This lineup is absolutely frustrating to watch. And to think that a few months ago people were insisting that the Twins trade Rosario and Kepler for pitching. Now it's looking like they may have to trade some of that pitching for hitting. What could dealing Gibson, Lynn or Gonsalves net the team. If Sano and Buxton continue to not hit what do they do? The only players hitting right now are Kepler, Rosario and Escobar. That DOES NOT WORK PERIOD! Buxton, Adrianza and Sano should all go down to AAA and Grossman (cringes) should be long gone.

Edited by laloesch
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3 guys don't make a lineup. Rosario, Kepler and Escobar have been the only ones that have done anything worth mentioning. Mauer was Mauer for a brief instant and Morrison was starting to turn the corner but Molitor decided he didn't need to play against Paxton. Maybe a wise decision if he had anyone that could hit to give him a day off but there isn't anyone. Funny how we were overloaded with guys who could play 1B or DH but no one can really fill that role adequately. 

My question is.... How many times as a player do you have to strikeout swinging at the same dumb pitches before you realize you shouldn't be swinging at them? 

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Yeah, losing 2-1 is a tough way to lose, but, much better than losing 10-1.

 

At least the Twins were in it all the way to the end.

 

Unlike some games in the past couple of years.

 

No matter how you slice and dice it, the Twins are getting the pitching they've desperately needed for the last several years. 

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Yeah, losing 2-1 is a tough way to lose, but, much better than losing 10-1.

 

At least the Twins were in it all the way to the end.

 

Unlike some games in the past couple of years.

 

No matter how you slice and dice it, the Twins are getting the pitching they've desperately needed for the last several years. 

That's the worst part of this - the starting pitching has been one of the strengths of this team, but now the offense has become unable to muster any support to this good pitching. Hopefully Sano and Buxton will figure things out and when Polanco/Mauer/better backup catch arrive, the offense won't be so bad... hopefully.

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The perspective of most people posting to this thread is what one would expect from Twins fans: Seattle scored only two runs because our pitchers were very good, not because their batters were very bad. We scored only one run because our batters were very bad, not because their pitchers were very good.

Seems to me it was a low scoring game because all the pitching was good. It's thought by most people knowledgeable about baseball that good pitching will keep good batting down. This game was actually what to expect from two good teams. It was disappointing to lose the game but not shameful in any way.

Edited by Nine of twelve
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When Buxton,Rosario and Kepler were coming up and playing in the AZ fall league Buxton was even then way behind those two. Couldn't figure out why he was though of as a good hitter. Kepler looked the best then Rosario then Buxton who was a distant third. Gordon in the fall league looked as good as Kepler. That league is a pretty good barometer. I would bring up Gordon, That kid can hit!

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 Couldn't figure out why he was though of as a good hitter. 

 

Actually, it was pretty easy to figure:

 

Buxton Minor League Slash:

.302/.379/.504/(.883)

 

Rosario MiLB Slash:

.294/.340/.484/(.824)

 

Kepler MiLB Slash

.281/.363/.446/(.809)

Edited by jokin
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These problems will be solved with some games against the Detroit Kittens, the Chicago Faded Socks,  and the Kansas City Commoners. Hang in there until July when Santana and Polanco and maybe May and hopefully Mauer return and I predict the Twins will be in first place by July 4th, 2018.

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The perspective of most people posting to this thread is what one would expect from Twins fans: Seattle scored only two runs because our pitchers were very good, not because their batters were very bad. We scored only one run because our batters were very bad, not because their pitchers were very good.
Seems to me it was a low scoring game because all the pitching was good. It's thought by most people knowledgeable about baseball that good pitching will keep good batting down. This game was actually what to expect from two good teams. It was disappointing to lose the game but not shameful in any way.

It's not just this one game though. That's why we're so annoyed.

 

The Twins are 28th in runs scored and 20th in OPS this year.

 

Compare that to 7th and 9th last year, and they were supposed to get better, but the two most pivotal young players are hitting around .200 or worse.

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I don't think he's going to start hitting until August again, but the the last thing the Twins want to do is start the AAA yo-yo.

 

It's an absolutely terrible situation for the Twins because you're damned if you do and damned if you don't.

 

This team cannot hit. It's embarrassing to watch and very depressing.

 

Don't worry about the AAA yo-yo. Just send Buxton down until he's hitting again. That's fine if it's August. Whoever you run out there can't be any worse: just play decent defense and hit like .230. I'd think LaMarre could do that.

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