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  • MIN 4, DET 3: Fashionably Late


    Thiéres Rabelo

    The Twins’ lineup was quiet most of Saturday night's game, once again, but Miguel Sanó seemed to break the ice with a monster home run in the seventh inning. Sanó also drove in the game-tying run in the bottom of the ninth, and Byron Buxton walked it off by beating out an infield single.

    Image courtesy of © David Berding-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Box Score

    Maeda: 6.0 IP, 2 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 8 K

    Home Runs: Sanó (9)

    Top 3 WPA: Sanó .597, Buxton .248, Donaldson .115

    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs):

    ccs-8747-0-83791000-1599358252.png

    Facing rookie lefty Tarik Skubal for the second time in the last seven days, the Twins offense experienced much of the same difficulties they’ve had throughout this year against southpaws. In fact, he had an even better game tonight. Skubal held the Twins hitless the first four innings, as he cruised to pitch six innings of one-run ball in under 80 pitches.

    It’s not like Kenta Maeda was much less impressive. He did allow a home run to center fielder Victor Reyes to leadoff the first inning, but bounced back brilliantly, retiring the following 18 batters he faced. Before the seventh, 75% of Maeda's pitches were strikes and he produced a lot of swings and misses, with 41% Whiff% on his swings.

    To try and help their starter, Twins bats managed to bring a runner across home plate in the fifth. Rookie right fielder Brent Rooker led off the inning with his second major league hit, jumping on a 0-2 fastball for a single. Jake Cave came in to run for him and was moved to third after a Miguel Sanó single. He scored on a fielder’s choice when Eddie Rosario grounded into a double play, tying it up.

    The game shifted to a different direction in the seventh. Maeda allowed the first two batters of the inning to reach, which ended the night for him. Tyler Clippard took over and after successfully stranding all six runners he previously inherited this year, he couldn’t pull it off this time. He gave up three consecutive hits and Detroit took a two-run lead. Even with the bases loaded, he managed to retire the next three batters to end the inning.

    Minnesota shortened the distances in the home half of the inning, with Sanó clobbering a two-out, 414-foot bomb to left.

    https://twitter.com/Twins/status/1302416818502598661

    Jorge Alcalá had yet another impressive outing, pitching a couple of scoreless innings on 24 pitches and allowing the Twins to bat in the bottom of the ninth with a one-run deficit. This was the seventh time this season that he pitched at least two innings in a game, not allowing a run in any of them.

    The rally started when Tigers reliever José Cisnero allowed both Josh Donaldson and Nelson Cruz to reach to open the inning. Sanó got his third hit of the night with a ground ball to left, scoring pinch runner Ehire Adrianza. Eddie Rosario sent Cruz to third on a force play and later stole second, putting even more pressure on Cisnero. Then came Byron Buxton, still hitless on the night, and walked it off with his super human speed.

    https://twitter.com/Twins/status/1302429578296799232

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

    ccs-8747-0-22782100-1599358236_thumb.png

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    Buxton also strikes out a lot and hits a lot of first pitch pop-ups. I'm not walking the hitter who had batted ninth for the Twins the past 3 years in this scenario.

    With 2 outs, there is nothing particularly special about a strikeout or pop-up in this situation. (Maybe if he had a meaningfully high rate of "first pitch pop ups" that would reduce the risk of a passed ball or wild pitch on subsequent pitches, but I'm guessing Cruz wasn't eager to dash home under those circumstances either.) You just need the out.

     

    If you pitch to Byron, there are only 3 realistic possibilities to record the out:

    1. Strikeout

    2. Ball in the air

    3. Throw out Buxton at first on a grounder

     

    If you walk Buxton and pitch to Marwin, yes you lose the ability to walk him, but you expand that list of possibilities (and the grounder possibility becomes more realistic, IMO):

    1. Strikeout

    2. Ball in the air

    3. Throw out Marwin at first on a grounder

    4. Force play at any base

     

    BTW, Byron and Marwin have only slight differences in their overall BB%, K%, and BABIP since the beginning of 2019:

     

    https://www.fangraphs.com/leaders.aspx?pos=all&stats=bat&lg=all&qual=0&type=8&season=2020&month=0&season1=2019&ind=0&team=0&rost=0&age=0&filter=&players=14161,5497&startdate=&enddate=

     

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    I'm pretty confident a ground ball to the left side wasn't Buxton's goal in that AB. He beat it out, great, but that's a rarity. His goal, I'm sure, was a line drive single to the OF. Failing that...put the ball in play.

    It's not as if batters can only have one "goal" though. They have an approach that can produce a variety of outcomes, and you just pointed out his approach was almost certainly different here from a normal PA (emphasizing contact).

     

    Look at the PA -- Byron laid off the first two pitches completely. Does he do that in normal PA? Probably not. But here he's being more patient, more deliberate. By pitch #5 of the at-bat, he had two strikes on him, and it was a low pitch but not in the dirt, and he had seen low pitches twice already. In a normal PA, maybe Byron is still looking for something to drive there and is more willing to strike out, or forces himself to lay off that pitch. But not here. Morneau even mentioned it on the broadcast -- shorten up, put the bat on the ball, and take off running.

     

    And with a runner on third, the Tigers couldn't throw too much junk to him -- they had to make sure the pitch was catchable for the catcher, which also means fairly hittable for the batter.

     

    I'm not saying Buxton was 100% sure to beat out any grounder -- of course he wasn't. But from the Tigers perspective, if you just need an out, any out, and you can't just spike pitches in the dirt with the runner at third, I'd prefer to throw to Marwin with the bases loaded instead of Byron with second and third. 

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