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Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 7/11 through Sun, 7/17
***
Record Last Week: 2-4 (Overall: 50-44)
Run Differential Last Week: -22 (Overall: +28)
Standing: 1st Place in AL Central (2.0 GA)
Last Week's Game Results:
Game 89 | MIL 6, MIN 3: Winder Struggles in Rainy, Delay-Filled Loss
Game 90 | MIN 4, MIL 1: Miranda Delivers with 9th-Inning Walk-Off
Game 91 | CWS 12, MIN 2: Gray Knocked Around as Sox Rout Twins
Game 92 | CWS 6, MIN 2: Twins Outplayed by White Sox Again
Game 93 | MIN 6, CWS 3: Arraez, Correa Homer as Lineup Awakens
Game 94 | CWS 11, MIN 0: Blowout Concludes First Half
NEWS & NOTES
On May 24th, the Twins won their sixth consecutive game to move 11 games over .500, at 27-16. They were five and a half games up in the division. Since then, they've gone 23-28, failing to extend that division lead because they've failed to settle into a sustained groove at any point.
While Rocco Baldelli and the Twins deserve credit for their resiliency – they haven't lost more than three games in a row all season – they also have earned criticism for their inability to get on a roll, winning more than two consecutive games only once in the past eight weeks (they won three straight June 25-27).
A consistently leaky bullpen has been a big culprit, but so too is a feast-or-famine offense that goes into maddening slumps – an issue that re-emerged in a disappointing final week of the first half. And the lineup has now unfortunately lost a critical piece.
Ryan Jeffers had been coming around in a big way, with an .847 OPS in his past 20 games, before lingering thumb pain forced him to the injured list on Friday. Further scans revealed a small fracture requiring surgery, so Jeffers will be out 6-to-8 weeks – most of the remaining regular season.
Replacing him is Caleb Hamilton, a six-year minor-league veteran who has earned his chance by playing really well in St. Paul, where he was slashing .252/.387/.491 in 49 games, splitting time between catcher, third, and DH. He'll serve as backup catcher with Gary Sánchez elevating into a primary starter role.
Josh Winder was optioned back to Triple-A after an uninspiring effort against the Brewers on Tuesday, with Joe Smith returning from IL to the bullpen. Smith had an unconscionably bad outing in Sunday's loss, and is immediately in DFA territory.
Devin Smeltzer, experiencing some hardcore regression in his own right, followed Winder to Triple-A on Sunday to make room for Chris Archer, who was also bad on Sunday.
While Winder and Smeltzer try to battle their way back to the majors, Miguel Sanó's campaign is already well underway. He launched two home runs for the Saints on Saturday night. There's been talk of the Twins moving on without Sanó, who has about a week left on his rehab designation, but I'm not sure how they could pass up the chance to at least try and unlock his difference-making potential, if it's still in there. They need a spark.
HIGHLIGHTS
When the Twins lineup has gotten a spark lately, it's generally been coming from the young sluggers, which is a good sign. José Miranda came through with his biggest hit as a major-leaguer on Wednesday, launching a walk-off three-run homer in the ninth against Milwaukee.
His celebratory stare into the dugout was epic – another of those signature "I belong" moments.
Miranda pairs with Alex Kirilloff to paint an exciting future for the middle of the Twins lineup from both sides of the plate. Kirilloff went 6-for-20 in a week that included a key two-run double with two outs. He's taken on the much-needed role of a run producer, with 20 RBIs in 28 games since returning from Triple-A.
Carlos Correa enjoyed a good week with six hits including a big home run in Saturday's win. Jorge Polanco chipped in two more homers as his mid-summer power surge rages on.
While the bullpen as a unit has not been a highlight for the Twins through the break, Jhoan Duran is a huge exception (literally) and one of the team's most important players. The 6-foot-5 fireballer closed out his first half in style on Saturday with a two-inning save that included two strikeouts. He previously picked up the win on Wednesday, escaping a tight spot in the ninth to set up Miranda's magic.
LOWLIGHTS
Byron Buxton feels like a perfect embodiment of the Twins offense as a whole, which I suppose is fitting since he's become the face of the franchise.
Both he and the lineup are extremely talented and powerful, capable of more or less carrying the team at times. But they're also prone to major slumps where they are providing basically nothing.
It's been one of those latter periods for Buxton lately – and by no coincidence the Twins are going through one of their worst stretches of the season. Buck's all-or-nothing approach is producing the latter result all often, making him more of a liability than asset while frequently playing at DH and always near the top of the order.
The past week saw him go 5-for-22 with 11 strikeouts and one walk. He scored twice and drove in one. Dating back to the explosion in early June when he hit four home runs in two days against New York and Tampa, Buxton is batting .185 with a .254 OBP.
It's a really strange time for Buxton fans such as myself. He was named an All-Star Game starter on Sunday, replacing Mike Trout. It's great to see him getting his due. At the same time, he's going through one of the worst prolonged stretches of his post-breakout career.
Buxton's supposed to be leading this offense as its elite centerpiece, but instead he's throttling it by making out after out. Can some mental and physical rest in the week ahead help him straighten out his spiraling game?
The top of the Twins rotation is looking shaky with Sonny Gray stumbling his way into the break. He backed up a disappointing letdown in Texas with an even worse performance against the White Sox at Target Field.
Gray had nothing working on Thursday night, surrendering six earned runs on nine hits, including a back-breaking grand slam by Luis Robert. He couldn't get through four innings.
That's been a trend for the starters. Smeltzer failed to complete four innings on Friday and Archer couldn't get through five in his return from IL on Sunday. Winder surrendered five innings on Tuesday, and now has a 9-to-10 K/BB ratio in 23 innings his past five appearances after starting out 20-to-4 in his first 22 ⅓.
At one point, Winder and Smeltzer were looking like impact reinforcements for a rotation led by the high-performing veteran in Gray and aided by a sneaky free agent pickup in Archer. Now all of these things are in question, or worse, and it's got the looks of a house of cards ready to collapse. If it hasn't already.
The Twins bullpen has barely equipped to supplement a good rotation. It has no hope of making up for a bad one.
TRENDING STORYLINE
This team needs serious help. A few weeks ago, one could've argued that a frontline starter was a nice-to-have more so than an essential addition. I don't think you can make that case anymore. If the Twins have any aspirations of a postseason run, they need to bring in a starter who is as good or better than Gray. That's pretty cut and dry.
They also, obviously, need at least one impact reliever and probably two. AND they may now find themselves in the market for a catcher, in light of the Jeffers news.
The coming trade deadline – coming up in just over two weeks, on August 2nd – figures to be one of the most intriguing and consequential for the Twins in many years. We'll have plenty of coverage here at Twins Daily, including special premium content for caretakers: division-by-division breakdowns of buyers, sellers, and targets of interest for the Twins – delivered to your inbox.
If you haven't yet, make sure to sign up at any tier to ensure you don't miss out.
LOOKING AHEAD
Lots of time off. Then a two-game series in Detroit to kick off the second half.
SATURDAY, 7/23: TWINS @ TIGERS
SUNDAY, 7/24: TWINS @ TIGERS
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