Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

Recommended Posts

Twins Daily Contributor

Looking to stretch the winning streak to seven games, the Minnesota Twins came up just short in their final contest with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Now onto another cellar dweller in the Kansas City Royals, Rocco Baldelli’s club faces another series with ample opportunity to bolster the number in the win column.Last Night's Game Recap

PIT 6, MIN 5: Taylor Rogers Blows Save, Win Streak Snapped

 

Today:

Minnesota @ Kansas City Royals, 7:05 PM CT

Betting Lines: MIN -155, O/U 9.5

 

Twins Starter: Devin Smeltzer, LHP 1-0 11.57 ERA

Tonight is Smeltzer’s first start of the year as he’s worked as a bulk reliever for his two outings on the season. In six starts a year ago he posted a 4.11 ERA and allowed a .704 OPS to opposing hitters. While his ERA registered at just 3.44 when working in relief for the 2019 Twins, opponents OPS was nearly 200 points higher at .898.

 

Smelter may be fond of Kansas City as they provided his first Major League win. When facing them at Target Field on August 4, 2019 he went 6.0 IP allowing no runs on just two hits while fanning four and walking one.

 

Download attachment: Smeltzer.PNG

 

The prototypical profile of a soft-tossing lefty, Smeltzer’s 89 mph average on the fastball won’t blow anyone away. His primary second pitch is the curveball, and it’s there that he looks for punchouts. He’s been a high strikeout guy in the minors and generated 7.0 K/9 last year as a rookie. The homer is his bugaboo and if he can avoid some of the Royals boppers tonight should go well for him.

 

Royals Starter: Jakob Junis, RHP 0-0 4.15 ERA

Junis has made just one appearance this season and it was a start against the Chicago White Sox. He lasted just 4.1 IP during that one and ceded two runs on six hits. Now in his fourth Major League season, the book has all but been written on Junis given the consistency he’s shown year over year.

 

Download attachment: Junis.PNG

 

You can pencil him in for an ERA in the mid fours, and it’ll be complimented by a modest walk and strikeout rate. He’s been an innings eater of sorts throwing over 170 IP in each of the past two years for Kansas City. Where the biggest opportunity for opponents against Junis comes is launching the longball. He’s never allowed less than 1.4 HR/9 and was up to 1.6 HR/9 each of the past two seasons.

 

Lefties had substantially more success against him last year, though the power numbers came from both sides of the plate. Kansas City knocked the Chicago Cubs around for 13 runs last night so it will be interesting to see if the bats have any runs support left in them.

 

Lineup

News & Notes

- The St. Louis Cardinals return to the field today following their COVID-19 outbreak. It’s the first time they’ll have played a game since July 29, and the first time all 30 teams are active and healthy since the Marlins outbreak on July 26. UPDATE: More positives for the Cardinals, so no full slate tonight and St. Louis has a postponed game today.

 

 

- Shohei Ohtani returned to the lineup for the Los Angeles Angels following the MRI revealing a forearm injury that will keep him off the mound for the rest of 2020. He homered.

 

- Today, Mike Trout turns 29. At 74.0 fWAR he’s already posted the 46th highest mark in MLB history. What comes from here is anyone’s guess but it’s clear we’re watching one of the best ever.

 

Around the AL Central

CLE 13, CIN 0

KCR 13, CHC 2

MIL 8, CHW 3

 

1. MIN 10-3 (+29 run differential)

2. CLE 8-6 (+17)

3. CWS 7-6 (+2)

4. DET 5-5 (-11)

5. KCR 4-10 (-11)

 

Click here to view the article

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Where the biggest opportunity for opponents against Junis comes is launching the longball. He’s never allowed less than 1.4 HR/9 and was up to 1.6 HR/9 each of the past two seasons.

Obviously Junis isn't a particularly good pitcher, but that HR rate doesn't seem that bad for 2019.

 

AL SP as a whole gave up 1.52 HR/9 in 2019 (would be curious about the effect of openers?), while Junis was at 1.59. Junis allowed 31 HR in 175.1 IP for the season; the average AL SP would have allowed 29.6 in the same number of innings.

 

The difference is even closer if we look at batters faced rather than innings pitched, because Junis faced more batters per inning than the average starter (due to worse than average opponent's batting average / WHIP). The average AL SP would have surrendered 30.3 HR facing the same number of batters as Junis in 2019.

 

Of course, that ignores park factors -- ESPN lists Kaufman Stadium as below-average in HR park factor every year of Junis's career. Although looking at Junis specifically, the difference between his career home and road HR rates may only equal about 1 HR per season.

 

And there it is! More words than I ever thought I'd write about Jakob Junis. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tonight is Smeltzer’s first start of the year as he’s worked as a bulk reliever for his two outings on the season.

It turns out that Devin P. Smeltzer's middle name is not Paul, but Psyllium.

 

 

 

/ you probably have to be old to even know why I think this is a joke.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Twins community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...