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  • Twins 1, Athletics 0: Polanco and Pitching Give Twins Eighth Straight Home Win


    Sherry Cerny

    With the shortened season, injuries were a foregone conclusion. All 30 teams across MLB are feeling the sting of a shortened spring training, but players are starting to bounce back and make their comebacks. For the Twins, the fans couldn’t be more excited to see Sonny Gray making a start on Saturday, alongside the Minnesota Twins (nearly) homegrown line-up.

    Image courtesy of Nick Wosika-USA TODAY Sports

    Box Score
    SP: Sonny Gray 4 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 7 K (66 pitches, 42 strikes (63.6%))
    Home Runs: Jorge Polanco (3)
    Top 3 WPA: Jhoan Duran (.265), Sonny Gray (.205), Jorge Polanco (.159)
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

    image.png

    Welcome Back Sonny
    Sonny Gray has had a less than great start since coming to the Twins organization in a trade after the lockout. His much-anticipated acquisition meant some rounding out to the pitching rotation. Gray came from Cincinnati in March in exchange for right-handed pitching prospect Chase Petty, Gray brings a source of veteran leadership to the rotation and a player to watch, but he has been sidelined much of the early season. 

    He wasn’t nearly as stretched out as his teammates at the conclusion of spring training and ultimately ended up with a right hamstring injury early in the season. The discomfort was obvious on his face as he stepped back off the mound in the second inning and ultimately out of the rotation. 

    Gray has only pitched one game at Target Field, against Seattle. He missed the last 19 games. During his IL stint, the pitcher rehabbed his hamstring and made one rehab start for Low-A Fort Myers last weekend. He pitched three shutout innings with one hit allowed and five strikeouts. He hasn’t left the team except for that one rehab game. He’s been with them in Florida and Baltimore, so instead of taking the starting position in St. Paul today, he returned to the mound on Saturday. 

    In his first inning, he looked composed, loose, and settled in by the second batter, bouncing back from 3-0 count on Chad Pinder to strike him out. The outfield assisted in Gray getting through his first inning, giving him a quick 1-2-3 to his start back with the team.

    Gray continued to pinpoint his pitches and left the game with 66 pitches. The plan was for him to be around 65 pitches. Considering this is his first game back and throwing four shutout innings and allowing only one hit, this seemed to be like the time to pull him and let the bullpen take over. 

    The bullpen continued to keep the game right where Gray left it.

    Home Grown Lineup... until it wasn't
    For a short time, the line-up that complimented Sonny Gray’s return was a homegrown Twins farm system team. For all the years that the Twins fans have spent frustrated with the front office, this lineup is a product of patience and hard work. Players like Trevor Larnach, Jose Miranda and Royce Lewis who have all put up outstanding numbers in the minors only to come-up to the Twins and show why they deserve to be on the 40-man. 

    This was the original lineup. 

    Jayce Tingler who has stepped up for Rocco Baldelli who is currently quarantining in Baltimore, has done a good job steering the ship and making good lineup and in-game decisions. This is exactly what happened after the "home-grown lineup" was announced, Trevor Larnach was sidelined with lower body tightness. Gary Sanchez replaced him in the lineup. Hopefully, we will get a chance for that lineup again, but it was fun to see and awesome to know how much homegrown depth there is.. 

    Joining the crew on Friday was Alex Kirilloff. He didn't play on Friday night, but on Saturday, he batted eighth. Considering he had surgery that ended his 2021 season on that joint last July, there was some concern it would be more than just inflammation. This latest injury didn’t turn out to be anything structural. He started his rehab assignment with St. Paul on April 31st and played four games in St. Paul before being activated from the IL on Friday. 

    Polanco the under-rated All-Star
    Jorge Polanco has been flying under the radar and while carrying a batting average of .211, he has an eight-game hitting streak, and six of his last fourteen RBIs in two games alone (May 1st and May 3rd). 

    In his appearance against the Rays on May 1st, Polanco went 4-for-5 with two doubles and four RBI, rocketing the Twins to a 9-3 win. Among the stars of the Twins team, Polanco is potentially one of the better players on the team that doesn’t get talked about enough. He also doesn’t talk about himself. He is focused on being a team member and contributing to the game overall. He sets goals for himself that he doesn’t talk about, and even with solid defense and hitting, he still doesn’t reach all his goals. 

    In a previous press conference Manager, Rocco Baldelli talked about the significance that Polanco has on the field

    "He's such a solid contributor for us on the field," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. "He does everything almost kind of under the radar. Personality-wise, he's a wonderful human being, but he's a quiet guy, and that's just who he is. So we probably don't talk about him enough."

    And just as this writer was deep-diving into Polanco’s stats,  Polanco hit his third home run of the year, 451 feet according to Baseball Savant off of Kaprielian’s slider to center field to give the Twins a 1-0 lead in the sixth. 

    Close Calls and a Marginal Lead
    Things started to heat up in the seventh inning as it looked like the Athletics were going to get into the action after a deep liner to center field that slid between Buxton and Nick Gordon, allowing Christian Bethancourt to get a double. The A’s momentum was brought to a screeching halt when Max Kepler stopped a fly ball by Brian McKinney to end the inning.

    In the bottom of the eighth, Royce Lewis got the second hit of his MLB career, a double off the wall in right-center. He was promptly picked off when a bunt was missed. Even with a challenge to New York, the call remained, and a frustrated Lewis returned to the dugout. Pitcher A.J. Puk had a tough time in the eighth, bobbling a ball hit back to him off of the bat of Gilberto Celestino who advanced to first and waited for a chance to advance, but to no avail. 

    Heading into the ninth, the Twins had no insurance runs and a marginal lead, but Jhoan Duran came back out to finish what he started in the eighth frame. It wasn't without stress though. Just like Friday's game, this game brought extra anxiety in the ninth as Duran walked a batter and then hit another. The last out seemed to take forever. As Ryan Jeffers framed strike two to Bethancourt, the Twins were looking at one remaining strike to complete the game. Bethancourt continued to foul-off balls prolonging the pain of the ninth before Duran threw him with a 100mph fastball to get him swinging to end the game!

    Sonny Gray and the bullpen pulled off a combined shutout and guarantee a series win. Can they come back tomorrow and complete the sweep? 

    Who is your favorite reliever in our Bullpen right now? Are you nervous about all the ninth inning bases loaded?

    What’s Next? 

    The Twins finish up the series tomorrow on Mother’s day against Oakland before Houston arrives at Target Field. Pitching matchups for the series include: 

    Sunday  1:10 central: Chris Paddack (1-2, 3.15 ERA) vs RHP Dalton Jefferies (1-4, 4.81 ERA) 

    Postgame Interviews

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

      TUE WED THU FRI SAT TOT
                 
    Coulombe 0 26 0 0 12 38
    Thielbar 18 0 18 0 0 36
    Jax 0 0 15 0 19 34
    Duran 0 0 0 0 31 31
    Duffey 18 0 0 11 0 29
    Pagán 0 0 0 28 0 28
    Stashak 11 0 0 0 0 11
    Smith 0 0 0 6 0 6
    Sands 0 0 0 0 0 0

     

     

     

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    4 hours ago, TNTwinsFan said:

    Can anyone share how Lewis has looked at SS these past couple of games?

    Good!

    He had three fielding opportunities in the first game, I think. Two where he had to charge the ball and one where he had to go pretty far to his left. Made them all look routine. 

    Also turned a nice 4-6-3 double play in the second game.

    I wouldn't say he had to make an exceedingly difficult play yet but whenever he had the opportunity to make a play, he did so flawlessly. 

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    What would make it more boring is if the twins were losing.  I think the games have been good.  A little concerned that the offense is going south again.  I think we are on a streak of like 0 for 21 with runners in scoring position.  Bullpen is overworked and cannot be sustained like this over the long haul.  Twins starters have been great but team still ranks near the bottom in terms of innings pitched by starters.  But at this point I'm happy they are in first and playing much better than last year!

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    3 hours ago, wabene said:

    It is proven people from planets with more than one moon have a hard time focusing due to being pulled in many directions from the gravitational force of each moon.

    This sounds pretty much to be the best explanation yet of why some people insist on stating that baseball is boring. Boredom is a personal choice protected only by one's mind, at least until the final definitive decision from on high is leaked to all. I can watch an entire baseball game standing up in my living room but haven'y watched more than a few minutes  of NFL or NBA "action" in the last half century. This year I have been entertained by the Wild, but have turned off a number of games when the players resort to fighting, holding, interfering, or milling around the net for five minutes after a shot on goal. My mind tells me that I am bored but I have not yet resorted to suggesting to others that NFL, NBA, or NHL action is, in fact, boring. By the way, I looked out the window this morning and the grass is growing.

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    3 hours ago, wabene said:

    It is proven people from planets with more than one moon have a hard time focusing due to being pulled in many directions from the gravitational force of each moon.

    That’s really interesting

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    When you win the first two games of a series going 0-15 with RISP, after winning two games in April because your two chief division rivals needlessly threw the ball all over Target Field at the end of the games, you know at that point your team is experiencing really, really GOOD LUCK from the baseball gods.

     

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    11 hours ago, Dman said:

    Gotta say I wasn't a huge Sonny Gray fan but the way he can get the ball to go horizontal and end up in the zone was very impressive.  Honestly if he stays healthy he could be a big difference maker.

    Twins seem to have gone heavily into guys with low release points.

    Hopefully Paddack can give another good outing today and the Twins can head into the Astros series with a very rested bullpen.

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    Like many of you, I was expecting more scoring by the Twins.  But let’s remember who wasn’t playing yesterday, Larnach, Correa, Urshela and Arraez.  Sanó was also out, although that may not hurt their chances of putting up more runs.

    Loved the lengthy, detailed report Sherry.  Do have a question, however, dealing with your comments about AK.  You talk about his surgery to ‘that’ joint, however never define what joint you are referring to.  

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    15 hours ago, darwin22 said:

    Your not alone in the camp as I (last year and earlier this year) cringed every time Jax was called upon with the game close.  The change I see in Jax is purely mental.  He's pitching with confidence/hitting his spots and attacking hitters. Keep it up Griffin!

    I agree. His pitch location has been great. He's not afraid to throw inside.

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    13 hours ago, Aggies7 said:

    Duran should be given save opportunities until he proves that he can’t do it. Preferably the one inning variety. Yes he put two on in the 9th but he struck out 5 and walked 1 (and one HBP). Took 32 pitches to get through 2 innings. Pagan’s last 4 outings pitch count (all one inning or less): 34, 23, 27, 28

    It makes a big difference when he mixes in the heater. I noticed that once he got two runners on in the 9th, it was straight fastballs.

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    2 hours ago, Old Twins Cap said:

    When you win the first two games of a series going 0-15 with RISP, after winning two games in April because your two chief division rivals needlessly threw the ball all over Target Field at the end of the games, you know at that point your team is experiencing really, really GOOD LUCK from the baseball gods.

     

    Considering how the "baseball gods" treated the Twins in the 2019 playoffs and all of last season, this team was absolutely due for some good luck.

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    Count me in the camp of enjoying a good pitching duel (although it was frustrating to see the Twins make Kaprielian look like Cy Young).  Surprised that the game still lasted nearly 3 hours.

    Worried a bit about how Duran's arm will react to his longer outing.  Hopefully he will be fine and be ready to pitch again in a day or two.

    Glad that Royce looks solid in the field and not overmatched at the plate.

    VERY worried about Buxton's health.  Hopefully he can get a few days off and recover.  If not, maybe he could use another IL stint to fully heal.

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    Many people think soccer is boring, that's because they don't understand the stradegy or mechanics of the game. Many Brazilians think baseball is boring because they don't understand the stradegy and mechanics of the sport. I've came to appreciate soccer because I've taken the time to understand the stradegy of the it. 

    In baseball I enjoy a good pitching duel between batter & pitcher, great defense and a well execution of small ball more than watching a home run derby.

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    13 hours ago, alexthegreat said:

    He’s 2-7 at the plate in his first two games in the MLB.

    I haven’t been watching the games on TV, so I wouldn’t know how he’s looked in the field.

    He looks like a natural at SS

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    5 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Many people think soccer is boring, that's because they don't understand the stradegy or mechanics of the game. Many Brazilians think baseball is boring because they don't understand the stradegy and mechanics of the sport. I've came to appreciate soccer because I've taken the time to understand the stradegy of the it. 

    In baseball I enjoy a good pitching duel between batter & pitcher, great defense and a well execution of small ball more than watching a home run derby.

    You mean the part where is an opposing teams shirt sleeve brushes a players shoulder they fall on ground acting like they were just shot?

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