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  • Twins Go Down In Blowout, Lose Third In A Row


    JackWhite

    The Twins lost 7-0 to the Angels at the Big A in Anaheim, dropping to 1-3 during their current West Coast road stretch. The Angles Matt Shoemaker slowed the Minnesota bats tonight, throwing six scoreless innings while striking out ten and giving up only two hits. Chris Iannetta sparked the Angels with a big three-run homer in the sixth off of Blaine Boyer.

    Image courtesy of Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

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    There was no score until the second inning when Iannetta laced a single to center field to drive in cleanup hitter Erick Aybar. Twins CF Aaron Hicks grabbed the ball on one hop from center and gunned down C.J. Cron sliding into third. The ruling on the field was that Cron was safe, after advancing on the single from Iannetta. Twins Manager Paul Molitor requested review and Cron was ruled out. Hicks got the assist and ended the inning with Angels up 1-0.

    In the next inning, Twins’ starter Kyle Gibson loaded the bases with one out. After giving up a sacrifice fly–double play to Aybar, the Angels led 2-0. Trevor Plouffe nabbed Rosario’s throw to the infield. Plouffe’s quick throw to Brian Dozier caught the Angels Daniel Robertson, ending the inning.

    The Angels tacked on more runs in the sixth. Gibson was removed for Blaine Boyer after loading the bases with no outs. A sacrifice fly by David Freese drove in Albert Pujols from third. Later in the inning, Aybar scored on a sacrifice fly by Angels left-fielder Matt Joyce. Iannetta turned the game into a blowout by blasting a three-run shot to center field off of Boyer, increasing the Angels lead to seven runs.

    Offensively, the Twins struggled – getting only two hits and four base runners. The Angels' Chris Iannetta led both teams with four RBI. Shoemaker received the win, giving him a 5-7 record on the year. The losing pitcher was Kyle Gibson, dropping him to 8-7 overall. Torii Hunter received a standing ovation in his first at-bat for his five years spent in Anaheim.

    Mike Pelfrey will be the starter for the Twins in Anaheim on Wednesday and the Angels will try to repeat their pitching success with C.J. Wilson.

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    The big play of the game, in my opinion, wasn't the Ianetta homer. It came before that. With Pujols on 1B and nobody out, Gibson got a nice easy comebacker. He turned and way-too-quickly threw toward second. He didn't allow the shortstop (Escobar) to get close to the bag. The throw was also to the 1B side, so Escobar caught it a few feet from the bag and threw to first, unable to get either out. 

     

    Gibson was trying to be too quick, rather than taking his time and letting the play develop. If done properly, it's a double play and two outs with no one on. Things just got worse from there. Instead of 2-0, it was 7-0.  That one play was the turning point.

     

    To be fair, that is unusual. Gibson is a terrific defensive pitcher, so it was surprising to see that.

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    In my opinion, the big play of the game was when Joe West was assigned as the umpire.  What is the Twins record with Joe West behind the plate? In the top of the 2nd, Nunez got hit in the head with the ball running to first base, and Joe West called him out. Terrible call.  Shoemaker's strike zone was huge, and Gibson got squeezed. Doe Joe West hate the Twins or is he just terrible? 

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    Angles, Yankees and Pirates.  These 3 series should show whether or not the Twins are actually going to be playoff contenders.  The Angels have established a template:  Don't throw Dozier 1st pitch fastballs.  The rest of the lineup, lot's of breaking stuff.  The pitching staff resembles the Tigers [actually, the Tigers over the past several years]:  Don't worry too much about the starting staff.  Keep things close with the Twins starters, because you can tee-off on their bullpen.

     

    It's been a great ride:  A cause for looking forward to a .500+ WINNING season this year and renewed hope for the next.

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    I was at the game (thank you, glunn), walking around the stadium concourse (they have a Panda Express!) when Blaine Boyer was called into the game. As I walked along, I thought, "Well, here comes a home run." The crowd erupted in wild cheers. Home run.

     

    Boyer is so done, it's sad. Whatever he had in the first half, it's gone completely. Opponents are just teeing off on him. Same with Casey Fien.

     

    I didn't actually watch that much of the game because I was having a great time chatting with Glunn and H2OFace, both great guys. What I did notice was that the whole Twins team looked troublingly similar to the punchless bunch we all enjoyed so much over the previous four 90-loss seasons. Gibson actually didn't pitch that badly, kept his team within reach, but Twins hitters seemed to have no chance against an Angels starter with an ERA over 4.5.

     

    The Twins need more than just a great SS like Tulo. They need a good starting catcher, and they need some guys with better bats. But before they trade away promising prospects, they need at least one real, legitimate ace starter. Not a rental like Cueto, but somebody they'll have around for several years. Before that happens, trading away prospects seems really irresponsible.

     

    On the other hand, Kurt Suzuki looks worn out. They should either start platooning him 50/50 with Fryer, or trade for a better catcher. Find somebody that can be around for at least five years, while this group is peaking. Either that or promote guys like Turner, Garver, Swim and Navaretto to the next level asap, and then draft the best college catcher available in the 2016 draft.

     

     

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    I was at the game (thank you, glunn), walking around the stadium concourse (they have a Panda Express!) when Blaine Boyer was called into the game. As I walked along, I thought, "Well, here comes a home run." The crowd erupted in wild cheers. Home run.

     

    Boyer is so done, it's sad. Whatever he had in the first half, it's gone completely. Opponents are just teeing off on him. Same with Casey Fien.

     

    I didn't actually watch that much of the game because I was having a great time chatting with Glunn and H2OFace, both great guys. What I did notice was that the whole Twins team looked troublingly similar to the punchless bunch we all enjoyed so much over the previous four 90-loss seasons. Gibson actually didn't pitch that badly, kept his team within reach, but Twins hitters seemed to have no chance against an Angels starter with an ERA over 4.5.

     

    The Twins need more than just a great SS like Tulo. They need a good starting catcher, and they need some guys with better bats. But before they trade away promising prospects, they need at least one real, legitimate ace starter. Not a rental like Cueto, but somebody they'll have around for several years. Before that happens, trading away prospects seems really irresponsible.

     

    On the other hand, Kurt Suzuki looks worn out. They should either start platooning him 50/50 with Fryer, or trade for a better catcher. Find somebody that can be around for at least five years, while this group is peaking. Either that or promote guys like Turner, Garver, Swim and Navaretto to the next level asap, and then draft the best college catcher available in the 2016 draft.

     

    I highlighted the things I liked in your post :)

    After 4 years of, I don't even know what to call it anymore, I'm not big on making short-term changes in the hopes of making the playoffs this year.  I really like the idea of going after an ace.  The Tigers may be making Price available. [Possibly Cespedes, too]  That would most likely mean Buxton and 1-2 quality pitching talents would need to be included.  And I see the Tigers have Nick Castellanos playing 3B.  I'd toss in Plouffe too sweeten the pot, without any real knowledge how good Sano's defense is. 

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    Hey, at least Boyer didn't allow the first batter he faced to reach last night!  (Sac fly)  Second batter didn't reach base either, in a manner of speaking...

    oh, he reached base all right. He just didnt linger long at any of em.
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