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  • Twins 6, White Sox 4: Twins End White Sox Series Sweep with a Bang


    Sherry Cerny

    The Twins fell behind very early, like on the first pitch. Chris Archer started out the Twins game by giving Tim Anderson a one-run home run and continued to struggle throughout the game. Archer fought through three innings giving up two runs before being relieved by Josh Winder, who gave up a solo home run in the seventh.

    Image courtesy of Bruce Kluckhohn, USA TODAY Sports

    But they battled back, scoring one run off of White Sox ace Lucas Giolito and tying up the game on a home run by Byron Buxton in the seventh inning. They threatened to take the lead in the eighth inning but left the bases loaded when Luis Arraez grounded out to second base. 

    That didn't stop the Twins from having faith. Byron Buxton came up to bat in the 10th inning to get a three-run homerun to walk it off!

    Box Score
    SP: Chris Archer: 3 IP,3 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 2 K (61 pitches, 32 strikes (52.4%))
    Home Runs: Byron Buxton 2 (6)
    Top 3 WPA: Byron Buxton (.761), Jhoan Duran (.227), Max Kepler (.168) 
    Win Probability Chart (via FanGraphs)

    image.png.dc8c8b361fdd8a2d2b6ef69cce7edfb7.png

    Larnach’s Series
    Trevor Larnach’s series versus the White Sox has been one of consistency. Since the game in Kansas City versus the Royals, Larnach has had a hit every game, responsible for two of the RBIs in the Saturday afternoon game giving the Twins a seven-run lead in the bottom of the fourth. He did not fare as well at the plate today, striking out twice (looking, once with the bases loaded, and once with runners on second and third) but still found a way to contribute. 

    As Archer struggled to maintain control in the third inning, with bases loaded, Andrew Vaughn singled a sharp line drive to Larnach in left-field, who threw a cannon home to Jose Godoy to end the inning. 

    Godoy Makes Twins Debut
    Jose Godoy’s contract was added to the Twins’ roster yesterday and made his debut with the Twins today. The former Seattle Mariner had 40 at-bats last year ending the season with a .162 batting average. Ryan Jeffers was scratched from the line-up two hours before game time for a knee contusion and Gary Sanchez is still out with abdominal tightness. 

    Godoy saw five pitches in his first at-bat, striking out.  Godoy’s first and second appearances he struck out, but rounded out his first game with the Twins being walked by Aaron Bummer, before being sent home off Byron Buxton game-tying two-run home run. Then he walked again in the 10th inning, coming around again on Buxton's game-winning home run. 

    His defense and chemistry with Archer was impressive to watch. The rookie catcher was able to frame pitches on a consistent basis and has good reaction time. Godoy showed his speed and agility as he ran to catch a foul off Grandal’s bat at the top of the third. Interference from the fence made for a hard catch, but Archer and Godoy got Grandal to swing at a high fast ball striking him out with the next pitch.

    He did, however, commit a cardinal sin in the 8th inning. With the winning run on third base and one out, he squared to bunt but popped out to White Sox pitcher Kendall Graveman. 

    Postgame Postscript: We learned after the game that Jeffers took a ball off his knee earlier this series and had a left knee contusion and that Rocco really did not want to use him. That proved to be important as there was that opportunity in the 8th inning to pinch hit for Godoy in the bat in which he popped out on a bump. So the Twins entered today's game with three catchers on the active roster, but only one was truly active. 

    Bats Show Signs of Life
    The Twins line-up was consistent over the series and through today battling rain and cold to keep their bats swinging, a nice change of pace from the earliest part of the season’s start. With the exception of a few players getting strikeouts early, by the 6th inning, at a minimum, almost every bat made contact with a pitch. Even Miguel Sano who was 0-for-8 through the series ended up getting a single into right field in the second inning. 


    Giolito Returns But Doesn’t Last Long
    The Twins have been having trouble scoring runs, so the last thing they need is to face a preseason Cy Young Award candidate. Not only was today’s opposing pitcher, Lucas Giolito, a candidate, he opened the season as one of the favorites at 13-2 odds.

    However, he was also making his first start after a stay on the 10-day injured list for an abdominal strain, and that rust showed a bit in the first inning. Giolito threw 26 pitches that inning, only half of which were strikes, and walked two Twins. But with the bases loaded, he escaped untarnished by striking out Trevor Larnach on two changeups and a fastball. 

    The story was similar in the third inning. This time, a walk, and a couple of singles loaded the bases, and the Twins cashed in a run on a sacrifice fly by Gio Urshela. But Giolito escaped further damage by fooling young left-handed hitters - this time both Larnach and Nick Gordon - with his changeup and fastballs away. 

    Still, he had already thrown 65 pitches through three innings, and due to his stint on the injured list, it was expected he would only throw 70-80 pitches in his second outing this year. Sure enough, after an efficient fourth inning, his day was over. 

    Gordon’s Growth
    Nick Gordon played in his 12th game today, starting at shortstop as manager Rocco Baldelli gave Carlos Correa a day off. He entered today with a 694 OPS in 26 plate appearances. He will likely never show a lot of power, and a .261 batting average is nothing special, but he is getting on base almost 35% of the time.

    Almost any evaluation of Gordon’s future and performance are tied to the wide range of expectations attached to him. If your expectations are tied to his selection in the first round of the 2014 draft, or of his family pedigree, you’re likely going to be disappointed. If, on the other hand, your expectations of him were set by his performance and health issues in AAA as recently as 2019, you might be delighted by his sudden progression as a valuable bench asset. 

    To both camps, I’d suggest it is time to take a look at him with fresh eyes. He’s a 26-year-old who is likely to never post a big OPS because he will likely never hit for power. But he gets on base, he is capable (though not outstanding) in several key defensive roles, and as a left-handed hitter, he is more likely to get a decent matchup versus right-handed pitchers. Plus, he’s an asset on the base paths.

    All that makes him an ideal super-utility player, which is exactly the role he is fulfilling this year. If he can show that he can raise his batting average closer to .300, he might improve to the point where he could be a regular starter. Fortunately for him, his performance and usefulness should provide plenty of opportunities to show his development in the super-utility role.

    Winder Unleashed
    After nearly a week without making an appearance, long reliever and promising prospect Josh Winder made an appearance when Chris Archer only lasted three innings. He gave up one run over four innings, striking out two and giving up three hits. Maybe most notably, after struggling with his control in his first appearance, he walked none and threw strikes in 42 of his 61 pitches. 

    Winder is working as the long reliever but is a starting pitching prospect long-term. We saw today what we have seen from him so far: he is a slider-first pitcher who turns to his fastball to keep hitters off-balance. It seems to be working well in a relief role, but it will be interesting to see how it plays when he has to face a lineup a second time. Certainly today that was in question, as he gave up a home run on his second time through the order. 

    But for the most part, we likely won’t see him face batters more than once in his current role with the Twins. We might get a better sense of that if he was starting in St. Paul, but he’s now fulfilling an important role with the major league club. Regardless, it’s nice to see another Twins pitching prospect having some success in the majors. 

    Postgame Postscript: We learned after the game that the plan was always for Archer to be limited to only 50-60 pitches, and he was told that after his last start in Kansas City. We also learned from Rocco that this decision was specific to Archer; they're not planning right now on similar planned short starts with the rest of the rotation. He also hinted that they wanted to do this now, when they still had a 28-man roster. It'll be interesting to see if Winder eventually does go down to St. Paul as part of the mandatory roster trimming that will happen next week, or whether he'll continue in this role in which he's having success. 

    Clutch Buxton

    Byron Buxton had a fantastic series, hitting every chance he got, and coming through whenever the team needed him. His 3-run home run came on a 3-1 count with runners on second and third base and one out. White Sox closer Liam Hendricks, in his second inning of work, pitched to Buxton in that situation rather than give him a free pass to first base and load the bases for Luis Arraez. It’s not clear that strategy would have fared any better, but they likely would choose a different path given another chance.

    Postgame Postscript: As expected (and completely appropriate) postgame interviews centered entirely around Buxton doing godlike things. Baldelli called Buxton the best player in the world right now, and marveled at some of the things he did. But you might be surprised at what he wanted to breakdown: it was Buxton's first, game-tying home run in the 8th.  Here it is, because he breaks down what  we are seeing pretty nicely.

    "He's facing a left-hander who as we saw earlier in the game, is one of the best left-handers in the game. Gets a ton of groundballs. He's a really hard guy to drive the ball in the air against. And he's a guy that normally pitches all the right-handers in, pound 'em in. And he decided to go away to Buck.

    And it took a few pitches, but Buck identifies what's going on. Completely changes what he's trying to do at the plate. And lines a ball over the right field fence. I mean, there's nothing typical or everyday or normal about that. That's very, very special. And I don't want to stop talking about it, because it's so impressive. Even for people who watch this level of baseball everyday. To see what he's doing it's just awesome."

    What’s Next? 

    The Twins will enjoy an off day at home on Monday before starting a three-game series against the Detroit Tigers at Target Field. Pitching matchups for the series include: 

    • Tuesday 6:40: Chris Paddock (0-2, 5.00) vs LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (0-1, 5.27 ERA)
    • Wednesday 6:40: Joe Ryan (2-1, 1.69 ERA) vs RHP Michael Pineda (1-0, 0.00 ERA) 
    • Thursday 12:10: Bailey Ober  (1-1, 2.81 ERA) vs LHP Tarik Skubal (1-1, 2.30 ERA)

    Postgame Interview 

    Bullpen Usage Spreadsheet

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    1 hour ago, Squirrel said:

    I don't know yet if this is how the Sox's year will end ... but their beginning certainly reminds me of the Twins last year ... high expectations, then injuries and illness and under/poor performance just derailed them. The Sox seem to be going that route this season when their expectations are high

    I had the same feeling watching this series. It just seems like a team that is going to disappoint, much like the Twins last year.

    Could definitely be reading too much into one series, but the injuries are also piling up.

    The Twins should absolutely have a shot at the division. I think the rest of the bats (besides Buxton) and the bullpen are coming around now. It should be a fun season.

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    2 hours ago, Yawn Gardenhose said:

    I know they're dealing with a bunch of injuries now but wow did the White Sox look terrible this weekend. Did their best to gift-wrap two wins to the Twins this series. And this is supposed to be a legit World Series contender? They don't look to be even a .500 team if they keep this up. Three weeks into the season the AL Central has zero teams above .500 - in the last year of the hyper-unbalanced schedule, this division might be the worst it's ever been, which is truly saying something. 

    They looked brutal in their previous series against Kansas City too.

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    4 hours ago, Steven BUHR said:

    How huge was that walk Godoy came back to work in the 10th after going down 0-2? 

    Steve, I'm glad you mentioned that walk. Godoy was not supposed to be on the Twins. He was not supposed to play tonight. Although he looked over-matched batting,  and he messed up a bunt, he drew 2 critical walks and scored both times. Mainly though, he performed more than adequately behind the plate with pitchers who were virtually strangers,   who were pitching to him. I thought, given the circumstances, he was a huge contributor to today's victory.

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    9 hours ago, Nine of twelve said:

    And that was on a 45° day. That ball goes significantly farther on a warm humid afternoon.

    There was also a pretty stiff wind blowing out to left, too.  That ball was hit plenty high to get up in it.

    Still quite a blast though.  

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    1. Buxton was incredible when healthy last year. He has been incredible again so far this year. It's possible that Buxton is indeed incredible when healthy. MVP discussion incredible. 

    2. Buxton has been so good that I don't think the April small sample size argument applies to him. He's been locked in long enough. 

    3. Thank You to that old school closer mentality. There was no reason to pitch to Buxton. His run didn't matter. Walking Buxton sets up a force at every base and sets up the possible inning (game) ending double play. Instead, the White Sox opted to bring the infield in and pitch to our best hitter... maybe best in baseball. Thank You to that old school --never give out an intentional pass -- closer mentality. Thank You

    4. I hope Byron gets every single penny of that bonus. I drink to his health. 

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    I agree Buxton is awesome.  He saved Baldelli today.  His refusal to use Correa in key pinch hitting opportunities was disgraceful.  It wasn't lost on the radio broadcasters as well.  Beldelli continues to mismanage this team.  You pay a superstar $35 million a year yet don't use him in a key situation to try and win the game.  If  not for Buxton Baldelli would have had a lot of questions to answer.  Did Carrea need a day off?  He just had one a few days ago.  Besides there was already a day off Monday.  Baldelli gets an F for the day.  Buxton an A+.  The A for a great performance.  The + for bailing out Baldelli..

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    1 hour ago, Whitey333 said:

    I agree Buxton is awesome.  He saved Baldelli today.  His refusal to use Correa in key pinch hitting opportunities was disgraceful.  It wasn't lost on the radio broadcasters as well.  Beldelli continues to mismanage this team.  You pay a superstar $35 million a year yet don't use him in a key situation to try and win the game.  If  not for Buxton Baldelli would have had a lot of questions to answer.  Did Carrea need a day off?  He just had one a few days ago.  Besides there was already a day off Monday.  Baldelli gets an F for the day.  Buxton an A+.  The A for a great performance.  The + for bailing out Baldelli..

    I think everything was defensible since we won. If Baldelli gets credit for losing games, he gets credit for winning them, imo. But overall, I think it’s a combined effort between everyone.

    as for the day off, I think this explains it. He didn’t just have one, and he’s had fewer rest than others, on a shorter ST than others. And this day off today along with yesterday sets up 13 days in a row of play, so, good for Baldelli to be thinking ahead for a long stretch of play, especially since we will be losing two players come May 1st

     

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    18 minutes ago, Squirrel said:

    I think everything was defensible since we won. If Baldelli gets credit for losing games, he gets credit for winning them, imo. But overall, I think it’s a combined effort between everyone.

    as for the day off, I think this explains it. He didn’t just have one, and he’s had fewer rest than others, on a shorter ST than others. And this day off today along with yesterday sets up 13 days in a row of play, so, good for Baldelli to be thinking ahead for a long stretch of play, especially since we will be losing two players come May 1st

     

    I did not realize that giving any credit to Baldelli was permissible???  

     

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    35 minutes ago, Karbo said:

    What has been a little surprising to me has been Kepler willing to finally go with the pitch the other way this year. If he can continue this trend sooner rather than later teams will begin playing and pitching him a little different. Then he should get more pitches to pull with a bigger hole to pull them through!

    Plus it is best to go the other way now, during these cold wet days when the ball won't travel as far anyway and hopefully the opponents will see and stop the exaggerated shifts against him, so that when it is warm, and the baseballs are flying far, Kep can be pulling balls into the RF stands again. 

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    13 hours ago, 2wins87 said:

    I had the same feeling watching this series. It just seems like a team that is going to disappoint, much like the Twins last year.

    Could definitely be reading too much into one series, but the injuries are also piling up.

    The Twins should absolutely have a shot at the division. I think the rest of the bats (besides Buxton) and the bullpen are coming around now. It should be a fun season.

    Agreed. Thanks FO.

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    Baldelli is a stiff for a manager.  Using your logic regarding days off, why not give Sano days off, or Polanco.  There's nothing wrong with a day off, they are important!  But to refuse to use him in obvious pinch hitting situations with runners on base is inexcusable!  Would it have been so hard for Correa to bat once and play ss for a couple of innings?  I stand by my comments and insist that had Buxton not bailed him out, people would have been after Baldelli for his " strategy".  Great game Buxton.  

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    6 minutes ago, tarheeltwinsfan said:

    True, but Buck was the only one playing who hit the ball there. 

    I'm not really trying to take anything away from him.  He crushed it.  It probably ends up in the Twins bullpen without the aid of the wind and that's still an impressive shot.  

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    2 minutes ago, Whitey333 said:

    Baldelli is a stiff for a manager.  Using your logic regarding days off, why not give Sano days off, or Polanco.  There's nothing wrong with a day off, they are important!  But to refuse to use him in obvious pinch hitting situations with runners on base is inexcusable!  Would it have been so hard for Correa to bat once and play ss for a couple of innings?  I stand by my comments and insist that had Buxton not bailed him out, people would have been after Baldelli for his " strategy".  Great game Buxton.  

    Sano and Polanco have had a day off each.  Correa has had two.

    Kepler is the only Twin to have played in all 16 games.

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    15 hours ago, Squirrel said:

    I don't recall Buxton ever being this animated, showing how much of a leader he is. Shades of Kirby's 'jump on my back' ... it seems like either he's just really, finally, coming into his own, or what? But it seems he's found a missing component

    Buck's quote after Saturday's game , in response to Dick Bremer telling Buck to "Go out tomorrow and do it again" , was a grin from Buck and a positive statement: "We will."  How prophetic. 

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    2 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    3. Thank You to that old school closer mentality. There was no reason to pitch to Buxton. His run didn't matter. Walking Buxton sets up a force at every base and sets up the possible inning (game) ending double play. Instead, the White Sox opted to bring the infield in and pitch to our best hitter... maybe best in baseball. Thank You to that old school --never give out an intentional pass -- closer mentality. Thank You

     

    I actually appreciate this aspect.  As a fan, I want to see the best players go head to head.  Even better when the game is on the line.  One player has to lose in that situation.  Thankfully, Hendricks is the one that lost this time.

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    6 minutes ago, wsnydes said:

    I actually appreciate this aspect.  As a fan, I want to see the best players go head to head.  Even better when the game is on the line.  One player has to lose in that situation.  Thankfully, Hendricks is the one that lost this time.

    Well, also … I think we are forgetting who was coming up to bat. Loading the bases for Arraez wasn’t necessarily a good idea, either. Arraez hits a single, two runs score. That was perhaps the higher likelihood than another Bux bomb. And Buxton did have those 3 Ks from earlier in the game. I don’t think it was indefensible to pitch to Buxton, with your best closer on the mound. They decided to pitch to Bux instead of Luis. And LaRusso just got beat, is all. It happens. But boy, am I glad it did!

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    It's a bit eerie how similar the White Sox are starting when compared to last year's Twins. I've heard some talking heads say, "The White Sox will be fine... it's only April." Sound familiar?  

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    4 minutes ago, Squirrel said:

    Well, also … I think we are forgetting who was coming up to bat. Loading the bases for Arraez wasn’t necessarily a good idea, either. Arraez hits a single, two runs score. That was perhaps the higher likelihood than another Bux bomb. And Buxton did have those 3 Ks from earlier in the game. I don’t think it was indefensible to pitch to Buxton, with your best closer on the mound. They decided to pitch to Bux instead of Luis. And LaRusso just got beat, is all. It happens. But boy, am I glad it did!

    I'm not forgetting about Arraez at all.  I've mentioned that point in other comments as well.  It was a pick your poison situation and LaRussa went after the RH batter instead of rolling the dice against the LH batter with the bases loaded.  I think that's an entirely defensible position.  Sometimes you just have to tip your cap.

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    3 minutes ago, Aerodeliria said:

    It's a bit eerie how similar the White Sox are starting when compared to last year's Twins. I've heard some talking heads say, "The White Sox will be fine... it's only April." Sound familiar?  

    Yeah, I made that observation, too, earlier in thread. Time will tell, but they have really been hit with the injury bug, along with less than stellar play. Listening to the White Sox recap with Ozzie and Frank Thomas … was interesting. A year ago Ozzie was saying, ‘Wow, these aren’t the Twins I remember’ and he’s close to that with the Sox after losing 7 in a row.

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    It's reasonable to see that Archer is still fine tuning is slider, since FO didn't sign him until ST was almost over. In his interview he kept referring to Wes. So it goes to show that Wes Johnson is actively involved in his present training. Archer was uncharacteristic lacking control of his slider. Archer has had an elite slider, my hope is that Wes isn't trying to convert him to his slider on the fly like he was trying to do to Dobnak, which would prolong his return to form and produce finger problems. I'd love to have Santana spend some time with Archer to perfect his circle change up that propelled him to stardom.

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    1 hour ago, Squirrel said:

    Well, also … I think we are forgetting who was coming up to bat. Loading the bases for Arraez wasn’t necessarily a good idea, either. Arraez hits a single, two runs score. That was perhaps the higher likelihood than another Bux bomb. And Buxton did have those 3 Ks from earlier in the game. I don’t think it was indefensible to pitch to Buxton, with your best closer on the mound. They decided to pitch to Bux instead of Luis. And LaRusso just got beat, is all. It happens. But boy, am I glad it did!

    La Russa did state that Arraez on deck and the possibility of a Buxton K was his thinking. 

    How bout that... Arraez protecting Buxton in the lineup. ?

    Myself... I walk Buxton for the DP possibility and force at every base but Tony has a few more World Series titles than I do.

    What a cool home run it was! Loving Buxton right now.  

     

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    1 hour ago, Squirrel said:

    Yeah, I made that observation, too, earlier in thread. Time will tell, but they have really been hit with the injury bug, along with less than stellar play. Listening to the White Sox recap with Ozzie and Frank Thomas … was interesting. A year ago Ozzie was saying, ‘Wow, these aren’t the Twins I remember’ and he’s close to that with the Sox after losing 7 in a row.

    ... even the way they are losing the games. They had the lead in two of the three games late and the defense threw one game away and the bullpen melted down in the other. It was reminiscent of that series against the A's last year.

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    16 hours ago, darwin22 said:

    Being very selfish here, but it feels really good being rewarded with such an excellent victory today after I invested my whole afternoon watching this game.  

    For anyone wondering, this is the 1st time the Twins have been at .500 since April 13th, 2021, which was in the midst of a 3 game losing streak.

    A few observations to make:

    1.  Buxton...nothing to add than hasn't been covered.  Just stay humble young man, eat your vitamins and stay HEALTHY!

    2.  Star 1B to today's Twins win----------I would submit the excellent performance of Josh Winder:  4IP only 3 hits, 1 ER and 0 walks.  That allowed Rocco to avoid others (thank goodness) to go to Duran in the 8th.

    Others may not agree, but I truly believe Winder will be a productive mainstay in our rotation for years to come.  That may be coming as early as this season if Archer's command (only 32 strikes over 61 pitches in his 3 IP) doesn't improve very soon.

    3.  Johan Duran:  This dude is special.  Note to Rocco and Wes Johnson:  Leave him in bullpen.  With Alcala out for extended time combined with Duffey's continued struggles, Duran has to be there to hold games tied or protect a lead.

    4.  Joe Smith:  Just the type of aggressive type of RP I like with a funky delivery that produces.  Can't overuse him though.

    5.  Urshela:  Gio is looking like he's settling in at the plate. 2-3 today with a BB along with his great play at 3B.  He should play everyday.  With Miranda looming at SP, Gio has responded.

    6.  Kepler:  1 of my main "whipping boys" for the last 2 years plus, but maybe he's turning a corner.  Sure would like him to regain his power stroke from 2019, but his .300 slug pct. is an issue.

    7.  Sano:  Not much to say other than I hope Kirilloff can show he can hit soon so he can take over at 1B.  Sano is nothing more than a bench player against RH pitching.  A possible DH against a LH SP.

    8.  Garlick:  Ugh.  He needs to be DFA'ed soon.  Celestino offers much more.

    9.  Rocco:  Sorry to end on a negative note, but I have to question his absolute refusal to pinch hit Correa late in the game!!   I will give Rocco the benefit of the doubt not pinch hitting Correa for Goday due to the health issues of Sanchez and Jeffers, but I would really like to hear his answer of why he refused to pinch hit for Gordon in the bottom of the 9th with Kepler (good speed) on 2nd base???  Did Rocco forget that Gordon had already whiffed 3x earlier in game?? With an off day tomorrow, I just don't understand his reasoning for keeping Correa's bat on the bench.

     

    Great post. 3 thoughts on this. If you were the #1 person using Kepler as a whipping boy, I was #2. I think Kepler is a 4th OF on a good team but after watching the games this weekend I'm starting to think he could be more. He actually tried to hit the ball the other way and was successful a couple of times. I'm beginning to hope that he has finally learned that he has to do that to open up his pull side. Maybe he can be a .260 hitter after all. Combine that with 20-25 HRs and an above average glove and we may have a #5 or #6 hitter that deserves to play every day. Also, Urhela is a player - good defense and decent hitter. He should be playing every day in the #5 or #6 hole. Arraez can play somewhere else, mostly 1B and DH, although we do have a huge hole in LF. 

    On the negative side, I have to agree on Sano. He looks like a RH DH, backup 1B right now. I would put Arraez at 1B so he plays every day against RH pitching, and only play Sano against LH pitching. When and IF Kirilloff is back AND shows he can hit, he can play LF or 1B with Arraez playing the other spot, and Sano an occasional 1B and part-time DH. Sano reminds me of the bench scorer/ no D guy on an NBA team. You put him in and tell let him hoist up a couple right away. If they go in, he plays. If he misses, you pull him and he sits the rest of the game because if he isn't scoring he has a negative value.  With Sano, you give him a a game's worth of ABs. If he hits it hard, he plays. If he strike outs or hit pop ups, he sits for a few games and you give him another shot hoping to catch that hot streak. He helps when he's hot, he drags us down when he's not. 

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    Nice write up, Sherry!  So fun to finally see Winder go to work.  Using the potential future starters in the pen seems like such a no brainer, yet the Twins so rarely embrace that.  I realize they were somewhat forced to do so this year, so let's hope they see the value in it.  

    Also really enjoyed the sidebar info on Nick Gordon in this post.  Indeed, it's been so fun to watch him force himself into the lineup - again due to external influences, so seeing him flourish compared to expectations has been really gratifying.  If he can raise that batting average just a few ticks he'll have a great opportunity to be a solid super-utility (and may allow us to use him or Arraez as trade bait, though I don't love the idea of dealing Arraez).  Makes me wonder, since his family predecessors were major leaguers, if he's actually more prepared, from a mental make-up perspective, to perform better in the big leagues than in the minors.  Zero expectations of him during his call up last year, and man did he make his case!

    Edit to add: And oh man is it fun to see Buxton emerge as a leader!  He's working the clubhouse AND the fans.  I didn't see it in him when he was a youngster, but as he's matured it's become crystal clear that he's a natural leader.  That's great news for this team.

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