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  • MIN 5, MIL 3: Smeltzer Shines in Emotional MLB Debut


    Seth Stohs

    If Devin Smeltzer was nervous on the mound as he made his Major-League debut for the Twins on Tuesday night against the Brewers, it didn't show. Smeltzer, who began the season at Double-A Pensacola, provided the first-place Twins with one of the best starts by a pitcher making his MLB debut in Twins history. No, he wasn't awarded with the Win, but the Twins had a big seventh inning against the Brewers bullpen and held on to the lead to split the two-game series with the Crew.

    Image courtesy of Jordan Johnson, USA Today

    Twins Video

    Box Score

    Devin Smeltzer: 6 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 7 K, 76.8% strikes (53 of 69 pitches)

    Home Runs: Eddie Rosario (17)

    Multi-Hit Games: Jorge Polanco 2-for-4

    WPA of +0.1: Devin Smeltzer (.365), Willians Astudillo (.159),

    WPA of -0.1: Jonathan Schoop (-.110),

    (chart via FanGraphs)

    The Devin Smeltzer Show

    Hey, when a guy makes his MLB debut, it is always going to be a story. But as we know, with Smeltzer, there’s always a bigger story. The fact that he made his major league debut as a 23-year-old when he was diagnosed with cancer as a nine year old is remarkable. The fact that he has been cancer-free for several years is remarkable. His willingness to give back and support others who are dealing with what he has dealt with is, yes, remarkable.

    Catch Cancer Looking

    Katie’s Krusaders

    And his major league debut was, in fact, remarkable. Six shutout innings with just 69 pitches, and 53 of them were strikes. He struck out seven batters. And as easy as he made things look in the first, fourth, fifth and sixth innings, he really had to do some work to get through the second and third inning. The second began with a leadoff triple, but he was stranded at third. In the next inning, a leadoff double was stranded.

    It was an emotional night for Smeltzer's family, friends and long-time supporters…

    https://twitter.com/fsnorth/status/1133537488037801984

    And for Jack Morris…

    https://twitter.com/fsnorth/status/1133540812480847877

    And for Devin Smeltzer too…

    https://twitter.com/fsnorth/status/1133569549154918400

    Buxton vs The Wall (Part)

    Advantage, the Wall. Yasmani Grandal led off the second inning with a blast to the wall in left center field. Byron Buxton raced toward the bullpens, leapt, and just missed the ball. And then, he slammed into the wall. His glove flew one direction. His body was five feet in the air, parallel to the ground. And he landed hard.

    Fortunately, the initial diagnosis was “right knee bruise.” It could have been much worse.

    Zach Davies Is No Romantic

    Despite such a nice MLB debut, Smeltzer got a No Decision because Brewers starter Zach Davies was also very good. Like Smeltzer, Davies doesn’t throw hard. He topped out maybe at 90, sat at 88 most of the time. But he was equal to the task, as he has been for much of the season for the Brewers. He used an impressive two-seam fastball most of the night and hit his spots throughout the night. Like Smeltzer, Davies threw six shutout innings.

    Another Big Inning

    The Twins have found a way to have a big offensive innings at least once in most games the last several weeks. On Tuesday night, that inning came in the bottom of the seventh inning. Lefty Alex Claudio came in. He’s been very tough on left-handed batters. So, of course, Jason Castro blooped a single to left. Willians Astudillo then grounded to second, but Keston Hiura threw toward second and hit the back of Castro’s helmet. The ball ricocheted into center field which allowed Castro to go to third base and Astudillo to hustle into second. Max Kepler, who has been crushing lefties of late, provided a big line drive double off the wall in right field to give the Twins a 2-0 lead.

    https://twitter.com/fsnorth/status/1133556346924675072

    A couple of batters later, CJ Cron doubled in a run, and then Eddie Rosario stepped to the plate with two runners on and uncoiled for his 17th homer of the season to give the Twins a 5-0 lead.

    https://twitter.com/fsnorth/status/1133558888001785856

    A Possible Storyline for Discussion

    I think we can all agree that Rocco Baldelli has done a nice job of not overusing his relievers. However, on Monday night, Taylor Rogers struggled and gave up an eighth-inning, go-ahead, two-run homer to Orlando Arcia. On Tuesday, Blake Parker came in for the eighth inning and gave up a two-run homer that cut the lead to 5-2. Taylor Rogers, pitching for the third straight game, started the ninth inning by giving up a solo home run. He got the next two outs before Ryne Harper came on and got the final out.

    As I said, I think that we all agree that the long-term benefits of rest for key bullpen arms is important. But in the short-term, might that mean some rust? Might that potential cause some short-term heartburn? Or, do we just give credit to a strong Brewers lineup in this case and realize that even the better guys aren’t going to be perfect every time?

    Bullpen Usage

    Here’s a quick look at the number of pitches thrown by the bullpen over the past five days:

    ccs-19-0-00261700-1559099404_thumb.png

    Next Three Games

    Wednesday - Day Off

    Thursday - 6:10 @ Tampa Bay- Martin Perez (7-1, 2.95 ERA) vs TBD

    Friday - 6:10 @ Tampa Bay - Jose Berrios (7-2, 3.20 ERA) vs TBD

    Saturday - 12:10 @ Tampa Bay - Kyle Gibson (5-2, 4.08 ERA) vs TBD

    Last Game

    MIN 5, MIL 4: Hader Closes the Door on the Twins Win Streak

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    Great story! Congrats to Smeltzer on a fantastic almost storybook-like debut (getting a win would have been sweet, but hey, you can't have it all!). But Buxton bouncing off the outfield wall again causes my heart to skip a beat. I DON'T want to see him injured again.

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    Let's not cry too much for Swarzak, who's still pitching (poorly last night for another new team). A second-rounder making it 11 years, accumulating 4.8 WAR, albeit with 8 different teams.

     

    Not sure I wouldn't take that deal if I was Smeltzer and it was offered.

     

    But yeah, great story and game, so fun.

     

    Good point.

     

     

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    Baldelli stated during his interview that the current plan was for Smeltzer staying with the team and getting another start. I suppose it will be at Cleveland. I suppose the plans could change too.

    I don’t see any reason not to push everyone back, give the starters a break during the coming off-days, and letting Smeltzer stick in a five man rotation to see what he can do.

     

    The team has a 9.5 game lead in May. They can afford to take small risks in hopes it improves the team for the rest of the season.

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    Great feel good story for Smeltzer and the Twins. Fun to see him have a great start. Not to be a Debbie Downer but to me his stuff looks really fringy. Kind of like a Tommy Milone. His delivery might make it look a little faster but if teams see him more than once, it probably won't go well. Hope i'm wrong.

    I agree but the kid sounds like he may be the type who will press on until he succeeds.

     

    It’s worth a couple of starts to find out more.

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    In all seriousness... This is what baseball needs right now... this very second and shouldn't wait until tomorrow. 

     

    They need to market their players and their stories. Baseball sucks at this. 

     

    The baseball audience is primarily old white and male. They are not going to grow trying to get more old, white and male audiences. They will grow by reaching all the others.

     

    Telling the stories of players will help baseball reach new audiences.

     

    My wife will sit and watch Survivor, the Bachelor and the Voice just to see who gets voted off. She watches the produced biographies of each contestant and she listens to what they have to say and why these moments are important to them and she lets those production pieces determine who she wants to get chosen and then she watches to see who gets chosen. 

     

    While my wife watches these shows... I tell her that Baseball has all of this ten times over. Players are voted off the island all the time but baseball does a crappy job of telling their stories and as a result... declining numbers and poor name recognition beyond the baseball fan elite. 

     

    I told my wife about Smeltzer surviving cancer as a 9 year old... She listened to his parents being interviewed... She watched the game and cared about Smeltzer. 

     

    I love the Smeltzer story but there are a lot of stories that need to be told. Tell them and baseball has a chance of increasing it's audience base. 

     

    I enjoy hearing the stories as long as it doesn't take away from viewing the game.

     

    Devin Smeltzer likely wants to be a major league baseball player that happened to beat cancer when he was 9.  He likely doesn't want to be the cancer kid who plays baseball.

     

    It seemed a bit awkward for Devin's dad to cheer for his son making a nice play on a weak groundball with Marni and a mic in his face.

     

    Again, it's a great story.  It's obvious that what didn't kill him made him stronger and all that good stuff, but I think people like Morris take it too far.  He just keeps adding to his resume of being the worst option as a color analyst.

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