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  • 3 Takeaways from Friday's Win Over the White Sox


    Nick Nelson

    Well that was something, wasn't it? 

    In reflecting on a series opener that was – well, I guess everything we should have expected – here are three things that stick with me. 

    Image courtesy of Jordan Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

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    1: Baldelli showed confidence in Duffey, and it paid off.

    Confirmation bias runs rampant in sports fandom, and it's one reason that every coach, manager, and official reliably receives an undue share of criticism. In recognizing this, it's only fair to give Rocco Baldelli his due.

    I wrote earlier this week, following Tyler Duffey's second costly meltdown of this young season, that Baldelli should act quickly in reducing the veteran's bullpen role. This was less a reaction to Duffey's two bad outings this year and more with an eye toward his overall regression since 2020. He just seems to have lost a ton.

    Alas, Baldelli turned back to Duffey in a big spot on Friday night. With the Twins down 1-0 in the eighth inning and the top of Chicago's order due up, Duffey took the ball and mowed 'em down. He struck out Tim Anderson and Leury Garcia before inducing a groundout from José Abreu. 

    Threat neutralized. And along with it, the angry mob. For now. 

    2: Correa finally caught a break.

    The game started in signature fashion for Carlos Correa. He worked a good first AB against Michael Kopech before smashing a hard drive up the middle ... straight to the shortstop for a double play – his league-leading fifth of the season to quash a modest budding rally.

    Correa hasn't looked great at the plate by any means, and his whiff rate says it all. But he's also been dealing with some rotten luck. His exit velocities and hard-hit rates are near the top of the charts, but so often the outcomes have resembled the above.

    So it was nice to see fortune finally tilt in his favor in the eighth inning. With runners on the corners and two outs, Correa drilled a 98-MPH one-hopper into the hole between short and third. Anderson made a nice play on it to his right, but his off-balance throw to first missed wide and chaos ensued.

    By the end of it all, the Twins were in the lead and Correa was pumping up his teammates in the dugout. It was an unorthodox way to finally come through for the new team but we'll take it.

    3: Baseball sure is a boring product right now.

    I guess Correa's eventful infield hit could be described as exciting, but there have been few such moments in the many innings of baseball played this week. What a dull and dreary product fans are receiving these days.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to have it. I realize that Major League Baseball could've easily been absent from our lives at this point, had the lockout not mercifully ended in March. But the quality of the play has just been really sub-par, with dead-ball era vibes across the league, and Friday was a perfect encapsulation.

    The Twins have been a big mess lately, yet Chicago was only messier. The winning runs scored on sloppy defensive plays, and the game featured a familiar lack of compelling offensive sequences. 

    I was watching on TV with a few friends who are – I would say – at least moderate Twins fans. None of them could even sustain their attention on the ninth inning of a tightly contested one-run game. Even as a total diehard who revels in every intricacy of the game, I could feel their pain. 

    It was a drag to watch. In the waning moments of a game where seemingly nothing ever happened, Emilio Pagán was battling through never-ending at-bats up until he finally escaped his self-made mess with a borderline strike three call. 

    It was an unfulfilling end to an unfulfilling victory. I hope better days are ahead.

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    Baseball has been more difficult to watch this year.  Hopefully if the lineups come around it will get better.  One way around this is if you have a DVD, record the game and start watching 2-3 hours later and fast forward after each pitch and the game is tolerable to watch, but you miss some of the commentary.

    I would love to see the robot ump for balls and strikes.  It's super frustrating to see pitches inside the box called balls and those outside the box called strikes.

    I also would like to see the pitch clock and see it enforced to the second.  Like a buzzer going off if the pitch does not cross home plate within the time limit similar to the way basketball works.  This has to be a two-way clock so that the hitter cannot stall causing the pitcher to be penalized.  Maybe the batter has X seconds to get back into the batters box after the prior pitch.

    The instant replay also needs refining to speed it up.

    Gotta pick up the pace and there is no one silver bullet.

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    4 hours ago, Linus said:

    The end was a good old fashioned Legion ball snowball fight. 
     

    Credit Jeffers with some key blocks. They were all pretty much right at him but it is not usually a strength for him. Any of those get by him and it’s a different game. 

    Good summary Linus.

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    All in all, I feel pretty fulfilled, Nick. The starters have been outstanding. Rocco is learning which relievers he can use where. The hitters will start hitting better as the weather warms up. The defense has been more than adequate, with Gordon and Jeffers providing recent outstanding defensive play.. Correa's defense has been as advertised and Sanchez has been not near as bad as advertised.  I feel we are in for many "fulfilling"" games in the future.

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    I've been very impressed by the starting rotation. I wasn't surprised that Pagan got himself into that mess, seeing that he pitched the day before. But what impressed me was that he fought through and got the job done.

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    On the plus side we are on a 3 game win streak with the win today.  We could even be potentially tied for first if Cleveland loses today. 7-8  from 4-8.  I will take it ugly boring game and all.  Cause I know that when the temperature goes up so will the HRs and actions and all kinds of good happiness stuff that makes people happy at games.  

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    6 hours ago, RpR said:

    A group of dudes going back and forth, back and forth, back and forth; the last five minutes of a basket ball game are about all worth watching.

    I was about to say something similar, because I tuned in late due to other activities, and all I saw was the top of the ninth.  And I found it compelling, fundamental baseball.  I'm repeating myself to say more about the inning itself, but I do wonder why baseball is held to a different standard than other spectator sports.  Basketball is famous for being interesting only in the last five minutes, as you say, and even American football is watched only sporadically during a game except for the most diehard of fans until the two-minute warning where you check to see if the QB can put together the needed drive.

    And I don't begrudge those sports' their following, but the idea that baseball alone must be uniquely riveting from first pitch to final out is slanted.

    I allow myself just enough paranoia to look at the unholy alliance between ESPN and the NFL, and see where a portion of the constant drumbeat about baseball being sooooo booooooring comes from.

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    Yes MLB has at many times become unwatchable.  It is at times too slow paced.  Many times it is just plain boring.  However one of the many great things about baseball is a slower pace than the other sports.  And I generally like all the sports.  To me baseball is meant to be slower paced ( but not this slow).  I think what is hurting the game is the video game atmosphere it has created with all these silly and ridiculous analytics pushing the game.  Also all the swing for the fences or nothing mentality being coached throughout baseball.  Home plate umpiring has become atrocious.  Way too many strikeouts.  Strikeouts don't produce anything for offense.  Then people defend their players striking out all the time.  The game, in it's current state, is very hard to watch.  I still watch it after all these years because I like the game of baseball.  No matter how  and why MLB seems hellbent on destroying it.

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