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Returning home to face Kansas City, the Twins play 16 more games in August from the 15th on. Of those, 13 are at Target Field. Only three of those games, the set on the road against the Houston Astros, are against a team currently projected to be a postseason club. While Minnesota has played poorly for a handful of weeks now, that’s exactly the slate they should be looking to get right against.
Although August sets up favorably from a scheduling standpoint, it’s September where Rocco Baldelli has to be considering the greatest opportunity for his team to take back the division. Assuming the Twins can hold serve in the month ahead, they’ll be within striking distance heading into the final month of the regular season.
During September, Minnesota plays their chief competition a combined 17 times. Facing the Cleveland Guardians eight times, and the Chicago White Sox nine times (including a final three game series to end the season in October), it’s there that the division will be decided.
You can certainly make the argument that Minnesota has done less with more all season. Sure, the lineup is lacking several key contributors at this point such as Trevor Larnach, Alex Kirilloff, and Kyle Garlick. Weeks or even months ago though, when the lineup was healthy, opportunities to expand the division lead were routinely missed. Now needing to regain their standing, they’ll have to do so on the basis of scheduling allowing them a way back in.
At the end of the day, if the Minnesota Twins can’t stack wins against the bottom of the division and pile up victories against lackluster competition at home, they don’t deserve to be in the postseason. This team certainly isn’t on the same tier as the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers, but they also don’t need to be. The front office did everything they could at the trade deadline to swing big moves and bring in impactful help. It’s now on those within the clubhouse to hold up their end of the bargain. Making the Postseason allows a turning of the page with an opportunity to make noise. Failing to capitalize on a season set up so perfectly for them would be nothing short of a failure.
Right now it seems as though the Twins are trending in the wrong direction, and you’d be hard-pressed to argue otherwise. Carlos Correa wasn’t signed to a team expected to go out with a whimper, and acquiring an ace like Tyler Mahle wasn’t done with a belief there wasn’t an opportunity to compete. Baldelli’s club has the pieces necessary to win ballgames, but they now must show it in the box score.
Less with more has been a theme at times this year, and while there’s still time to get it right, the clock is ticking.
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