
Twins Video
Hill: 5.0 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 5 K
Home Runs: Rosario (9)
Bottom 3 WPA: May -.214, Smeltzer -.193, Romo -.186
Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs):
Can’t Expect Perfection
During the team’s five-game winning streak they carried into today, Twins relievers gave up just two earned runs over 20 innings pitched (0.90 ERA). *I’m including Matt Wisler’s “start” in Friday’s bullpen game in that total.
Today, unfortunately, was a struggle. Trevor May gave up three runs on four hits while recording just a pair of outs. Tyler Duffey gave up two more runs in his inning and a third of work. Sergio Romo gave up a solo home run in the eighth inning, then Devin Smeltzer allowed two more runs to score.
Eddie Being Eddie
Third base coach Tony Diaz can only do so much.
https://twitter.com/TFTwins/status/1302697478085652480
This is season six of The Eddie Rosario Experience, so we know what to expect. He’s one of the most aggressive players in the game, and that means he’s going to get burned on a somewhat regular basis.
This was a nice two-run double from Brent Rooker, but Rosie got greedy. His decision to try to score resulted in the first out of the inning. Rooker later scored on a Jake Cave single, so it’s safe to say Eddie’s decision to go for it cost the Twins a run.
As contradictory as this sounds, the Twins were also burnt by Rosario’s lack of aggression. In the eighth inning, he didn’t finish a play in which he was expecting a ground rule double to be called. It was not.
https://twitter.com/TFTwins/status/1302720105072205829
Eddie also had a chance to rob a home run while Romo was pitching, but the ball bounced out of his glove. That would have been a great play, so can’t really fault him there, but what a strange day at the office for Rosario.
Oh, and Rosario would have nailed another runner at the plate in the second inning had Willians Astudillo made a clean catch and tag, and, to cap it all off, Rosie hit his ninth home run of the year in the bottom of the eighth.
Never a dull moment.
Hill Wiggles Through Five Innings
Rich Hill threw just 12 of his 21 pitches in the first inning for strikes. He fell behind 2-0 to three of the four batters he faced, but managed to strand Detroit’s only runner to reach base at third. The Tigers had a run expectancy of 0.99 before Miguel Cabrera and Jeimer Candelario struck out to end the inning.
The Tigers managed to tally a single run in both the second and third innings, but Hill actually looked more sharp in those frames than the first.
The Twins scored two runs in the bottom of the third to tie things up, giving Hill an opportunity at a fresh start. He managed to pitch around a leadoff double to keep Detroit off the board in the fourth inning. The Tigers had a run expectancy of 1.20 that inning before Hill shut them down once again, striking out Jorge Bonifacio when there was only one out and a runner at third base.
It wasn’t an especially encouraging outing by Hill, but he did a great job getting outs when he had to. After struggling to find the plate in the first inning, Hill threw 41 of his 56 pitches for strikes from there forward (73.2%). He also did not issue a walk for the first time this season, though he did hit a batter.
Beyond the Boxscore: Wade’s Day
LaMonte Wade Jr. rejoined the Twins this weekend and recorded a pinch-hit single in the eighth inning Saturday. He had a good game today, even better than the box score indicates.
Wade was maddeningly pesky at the plate, seeing 39 total pitches while fouling off 16 of them. He was so tough that the Tigers needed an assist from home plate umpire Ron Kulpa to get him out in a big spot. Wade was batting with two outs in the sixth inning and runners at first and second when this happened:
https://twitter.com/TFTwins/status/1302708254238277632
Wade started in right field this afternoon, and made a great throw to nail a runner at third base.
https://twitter.com/fsnorth/status/1302692999806291968
Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet
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