2020 Twins and MLB coming to life in spite of COVID-19

Star Tribune Twins beat writer La Velle E. Neal III must have been up bright and early this morning as he posted that the Minnesota Twins will not allow their two oldest coaches, bullpen coach Bob McClure, 68,  and major league coach Bill Evers, 66, to work games this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Pete Maki, the minor league pitching coordinator, is in line to step in as the new bullpen coach, while Evers’ role is expected to be filled in the near future. McClure is on the left and Evers is on the right in the images above.

Remembering the Twins first season from 1961 – Week 11

I have been working on a very long term project whereas I do a brief recap of Twins games on my “In This Day in Twins History Pages.” So my plan is to give you a brief recap of the Twins first season as it plays out on a weekly basis. For more info on a particular game you can also click on the date and go to the appropriate “In This Day in Twins History Page” as there you will often get to see some player pictures and supporting documentation. We will see how long I can keep up with it, no promises. So let’s see what we have for week eleven.

Starting a new week the ninth place Minnesota Twins are 25-40 on the season and 16.5 games behind the league leading Detroit Tigers.

Rain check from July 3 game against the White Sox.

Remembering the Twins first season from 1961 – Week 10

I have been working on a very long term project whereas I do a brief recap of Twins games on my “In This Day in Twins History Pages.” So my plan is to give you a brief recap of the Twins first season as it plays out on a weekly basis. For more info on a particular game you can also click on the date and go to the appropriate “In This Day in Twins History Page” as there you will often get to see some player pictures and supporting documentation. We will see how long I can keep up with it, no promises. So let’s see what we have for week ten.

The ninth place Twins are 22-36 on the season and 15.5 games behind the league leaders. The Tigers and Indians are tied for first place with 38-21 marks and the Yankees are just a game back nipping at their heels.

Remembering the Twins first season from 1961 – Week 9

I have been working on a very long term project whereas I do a brief recap of Twins games on my “In This Day in Twins History Pages.” So my plan is to give you a brief recap of the Twins first season as it plays out on a weekly basis. For more info on a particular game you can also click on the date and go to the appropriate “In This Day in Twins History Page” as there you will often get to see some player pictures and supporting documentation. We will see how long I can keep up with it, no promises. So let’s see what we have for week 9.

The Twins start the week with a record of 19-32, a whopping 14.5 games behind the Cleveland Indians who have taken over first place by a 1/2 game over the Detroit Tigers.

Jim Kaat

June 8 – The Twins finally snap their 13 game losing streak when they beat the Baltimore Orioles 3-1 in Memorial Stadium. It is their first win since May 25th and their first road victory in this road trip that started in Washington on the 26th of May. The Twins took a 2-0 lead in the third inning when Jim Kaat led off the inning with a single and Twins lead-off hitter Billy Martin hit his first home run wearing a Twins uniform. The Twins were out hit 10 to 7 but starter Jim Kaat kept the Orioles off the board for 7 innings before running into a bit of trouble in the eighth inning after retiring the first batter. The O’s followed with a double, walk and a single that scored a run and sent Kaat to the showers. Don Lee came in to retire Brooks Robinson and then Chuck Stobbs was brought in and he retired Jim Gentile. Stobbs picked up his second save when he kept the Orioles from scoring in the ninth. It turns out  that it would be his final big league save. Kaat picked up the win, upping his record to 2-5 and he also had a good day with the bat going 2 for 3 with 2 runs scored. Martin also had two hits for Minnesota. The win got the Twins out of the cellar and put their record at 20-32 and in the process gave interim manager Sam Mele his first win as a manager. As an aside, the win also ends the Twins longest losing streak of the season. Box Score

Off the field owner Calvin Griffith was busy also signing Jim Roland to a $50,000 bonus and sending him to Wilson in the class B Carolina League. Jim Roland picture credit to Denver Post via Getty Images.

Twins select Aaron Sabato with first round pick

The Minnesota Twins have selected 1B/DH Aaron Sabato with their first round selection (27th overall) in the June free agent draft. Here is what the Twins stated in their press release.

The Minnesota Twins announced tonight that they have selected infielder Aaron Sabato from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with the 27th overall selection in the first round of the 2020 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft. The 6-foot-1, 235-pound first baseman set a North Carolina freshman record for home runs in a season with 18 in 2019 (the eighth-most ever by any UNC player). Sabato also led the team in batting average (.343), hits (79), doubles (25), RBI (63) and slugging percentage (.696), while posting an OPS of 1.149. He had 44 extra-base hits, which tied for the second highest single-season total in Tar Heels history, matching Kyle Seager (2008) and Dustin Ackley (2009). Sabato, 21, was also named 2019 Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Co-National Freshman of the Year, First Team All-American and Freshman All-American; Baseball America and D1 Baseball First Team Freshman All-American and Third Team All-American; NCBWA National Freshman Hitter of the Year; ABCA/Rawlings First Team All-American; Perfect Game First Team Freshman All-American; ACC Freshman of the Year and First Team All-ACC. He was hitting .292 (19-for-65) with six doubles, seven home runs, 18 RBI, 20 runs scored, 22 walks and a .478 on-base percentage in 19 games as a sophomore for the Tar Heels before the 2020 season was shortened due to COVID-19. Sabato was ranked as the 41st-best prospect in the 2020 Draft by MLB.com and 35th by Baseball America. The Rye Brook, NY native attended the Brunswick School in Greenwich, CT where he was ranked as the fourth-best player in the state and the 35th-best shortstop in the country by Perfect Game. His father played baseball at Mercy College, while his brother, Teddy, also played at UNC. This is the 12th time the Twins have selected a college position player with their first selection in the draft, with the most recent being Trevor Larnach from Oregon State University in 2018. Additionally, the Twins have now selected a position player with their first pick six times since 2014 (Keoni Cavaco in 2019, Larnach in 2018, Royce Lewis in 2017, Alex Kirilloff in 2016, and Nick Gordon in 2014). Since 2001, 16 of the Twins’ first round selections have reached the major leagues. This year marks the third time in Twins history they have had the 27th overall selection in the MLB June Amateur Draft, doing so in 2008 (RHP Carlos Gutierrez) and 1991 (INF Scott Stahoviak). Aaron Sabato was recommended by Twins scout Ty Dawson.

My opinion for what it is worth? I don’t like the pick. My reasoning is simple, I don’t like to see a first round pick used to select a first basemen/DH. Sabato was chosen the Twins say as the best hitter on the board at the time. Fine, but first basemen are a dime a dozen and there is really no other position he can play. Add in the fact that he is also slow and I think you have a bad pick. Who knows how this will turn out, only time will tell.

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Categorized as MLB Draft

Remembering the Twins first season from 1961 – Week 8

I have been working on a very long term project whereas I do a brief recap of Twins games on my “In This Day in Twins History Pages.” So my plan is to give you a brief recap of the Twins first season as it plays out on a weekly basis. For more info on a particular game you can also click on the date and go to the appropriate “In This Day in Twins History Page” as there you will often get to see some player pictures and supporting documentation. We will see how long I can keep up with it, no promises. So let’s see what we have for week 8.

The Twins started the month of June at 19-24 and in seventh place in the American League, nine games behind the league leading Detroit Tigers.

Sascha the Hamm’s beer bear

June 1 – No scheduled Twins game today. In the Twins first ever trade, the Twins trade third baseman Reno Bertoia and pitcher Paul Giel to Kansas City for outfielder Bill Tuttle. That very same day they acquire second baseman Billy Martin from the Milwaukee Braves in exchange for shortstop Billy Consolo.

The Minnesota Twins also announced that they had signed Purdue’s Bernie Allen for $50,000 beating out the Yankees, Mets, and six other teams that were in the hunt to sign Allen. Allen was also the starting QB for the Purdue Boilermakers football team. There was some discussion of having Allen start his pro career with the Minnesota Twins but the ballclub decided to have him report to the class A Charlotte Hornets. Allen played in 80 games for the Hornets in 1961 and then made the Twins big league roster in spring training the following season.

June 2 – A 58 minute rain delay as the game started just postponed the inevitable as Tigers starter Jim Bunning shuts out the Twins 2-0 at Tiger Stadium allowing just four hits and two of those belonged to Zoilo Versalles. Jack Kralick allowed just six hits in seven innings but two of them were home runs by Rocky Colavito and Al Kaline. Bunning was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1996 by the Veteran’s Committee. Box Score

In off the field news Twins owner Cal Griffith opened his wallet for the second day in a row when the team spent $50,000 to sign their second bonus selection in as many days when they inked Joe Nossek a slugging outfielder from Ohio University. Nossek made his Twins debut on April 18, 1964.

June 3 – Twins pitchers Pedro Ramos (3-6) and Ray Moore hold the Detroit Tigers to just five hits but the slumping Twins still find a way to lose their seventh game in a row when they come up on the short end of a 2-1 game at Tiger Stadium. Granted, five walks and two errors did not help the situation. The Twins who trailed 2-0 after eight innings rallied for one run in the top of the ninth but Billy Martin’s ground out with runners at first and second snuffed that rally. Zoilo Versalles had two of the Twins seven hits, all of which were singles. Tiger lefty Don Mossi upped his record to 6-0. The eighth place Twins play a DH against the first place Tigers tomorrow.  Box Score

June 4 – The Twins take on the league leading Tigers as 32,761 baseball fans pack Tiger Stadium and most go home happy, a number of them with Tiger home run balls in their pockets as the home town Bengals pound the visiting Twins 10 to 4 and hit five home runs in the process. Tigers starter Frank “Yankee Killer” Lary won his eighth game against just 3 losses logging his eighth complete game in 12 starts this season. Camilo Pascual went the first seven innings and allowed two of the five home runs and was nailed with his sixth loss against just four wins. Ed Palmquist relieved Pascual and probably wished he hadn’t. Palmquist retired the first batter he faced in the eighth inning but then gave up a single, a SB, then back-to-back home runs followed by a single, another home run and a double making the score 10-1 before Cookie Lavagetto had to take him out and burn another pitcher to get the final two outs of the inning. Jose Valdivielso and Julio Becquer each hit their first home runs of the season for Minnesota but it was not nearly enough to prevent the Twins eighth straight loss. Box Score game one

June 4 – Game two didn’t go much better for Minnesota as the Tigers greeted Twins starter Jim Kaat with a three run blast from Rocky Colavito in the first inning and another three run blast from Bubba Morton in the second inning. Kaat fought back and lasted six innings but he took the loss and his record now stood at 1-5. Twins reliever Ted Sadowski who got the final two outs in the first game came in again in game two but the Tigers got to him too as he gave up the Tigers third home run of the game and  3 runs on 4 hits over the final two innings. Manager Lavagetto even tried coaching first base himself starting in the third inning but it did not help much. Tigers reliever Paul Foytack (3-3) relieved starter Bob Bruce and got credit for the win with 6.1 innings of stellar relief allowing just two runs on four hits. Harmon Killebrew broke an 0-15 slump with two hits and Billy Martin had two hits. The two losses dropped the Twins record to 19-28, thirteen games behind the high flying Tigers. Just when you think things can’t get any worse, the Twins get to fly to New York to play two games again tomorrow after having burnt through their best starters against the Tigers. Box score game two 

June 5 – The Twins are in New York to take on the Bronx Bombers and will play their second DH in two days. The first game today is a make-up game for the April 13 game that was rained out. The Twins jumped out to a quick lead in the first inning when Zoilo versalles singled and went to third on a throwing error and scored on a Bill Tuttle’s ground out to second. Lenny Green followed that with a home run off Yankee starter Jim Coates and the Twins had a quick 2-0 lead. Don Lee started for Minnesota and held the Yanks to just two hits through the first six innings. Things went to pot for Lee with one out in the seventh inning when the Twins committed their third error of the game behind him allowing Bill Skowron to reach first. Elston Howard then singled putting runners at first and second and Minnesota native Johnny Blanchard stepped up to the plate as a pinch-hitter. Blanchard was in an 0 for 11 slump as a pinch-hitter and Lee had him down 0-2 before trying to throw another fastball past Blanchard who quickly deposited the ball 360 deep in the right field stands. Lee quickly dispatched the next Yankee hitters but the Twins and Lee found themselves down 3-2. In the eighth inning the Yankees kept the peddle to the metal and scored three insurance runs with two runs coming off a Mickey Mantle home run  off Twins reliever Ray Moore. The Twins tried to mount a rally in the ninth inning of Coates with singles by Jim Lemon and Julio Becquer but the Yankees brought in reliever Luis Arroyo who got Billy Martin to hit a ground ball that forced Becquer at second laving the Twins with runners at the corners. That brought up Billy Gardner who was not having a great game with two errors in the field and a 0 for 3 day with the bat and he added to his bad day by hitting into a game-ending double play and the Twins losing streak reached double figures (10). Lee went 7 strong innings allowing just four hits and one walk but all he got for his efforts was his second loss of the year. Lenny Green who got himself ejected in the fifth for arguing a third strike call had two hits including his home run, and Bill Tuttle also chipped in two hits, one of which was a double. Box score game one

Rollie Sheldon

June 5 – In game two the Twins faced 24 year old rookie right-hander Rollie Sheldon who was pitching in his eighth big league game and making just his fourth start in the majors. What was “crazy” about Sheldon was that he spent the previous season, his first in pro ball with class D Auburn in the New York-Pennsylvania League where he made 17 starts, completing 15 of them going 15-1. In 150 innings he struck out 127 and posted a 2.88 ERA.  The Twins drew first blood in this game when Twins starter Chuck Stobbs doubled in Billy Martin who had singled earlier and after 3 innings the Twins had a 1-0 lead. Things started unraveling for Stobbs in the fifth when he gave up 3 runs on 4 singles. The Yanks knocked Stobbs out of the game in the following inning and after six innings the Twins found themselves down 4-1. The Yankees added on two more insurance runs and when the final score was posted, it said Yankees 6 and Twins 1. Sheldon had pitched his first big league complete game allowing just 6 hits and upped his record to 2-2. Twins hitting woes continued as Billy Martin had two of the Twins 6 hits. Things were looking bleak for Minnesota who have now lost 16 out of their last 17 and 11 in a row and Whitey Ford couldn’t wait to take the mound for the Yankees the following day. Box Score

Sam Mele

June 6 – The Twins find themselves in ninth place in the with a 19-30 record to begin the day. Twins manager Cookie Lavagetto is given a weeks “furlough” by owner Calvin Griffith prior to the game today. Coach Sam Mele temporarily replaces Lavagetto but it doesn’t help much as the Twins lose 7-2 to New York at Yankee Stadium I making it 12 losses in a row and 17 losses in their last 18 games. Interim manager Sam Mele was ejected in the second inning and coach Ed Lopat took over, making him the Twins third manager of the day. Yankee starter Whitey Ford was tough, allowing just one hit through the first seven innings before being pulled after allowing two hits in the eighth inning. Two of the Twins three hits were by pinch-hitters Billy Gardner and Jim Lemon. Yankee Roger Maris hit the games only home run and Tony Kubek was 3 for 5. Box Score

June 7 – A Yankee five-run third inning does in the Twins in Gotham as Roger Maris and Yogi Berra both go long off Twins starter Pedro Ramos. The Maris home run was number 17 and leads the league. The Yankees had two more hits in the fourth inning but Ramos got out of that situation with no runs allowed and neither he or reliever Ed Palmquist allowed another Yankee hit for the remainder of the game. The Twins can only muster two hits off Yankee hurler Ralph Terry as he goes the distance for the win and the Twins drop into the AL cellar with the 5-1 loss, their 13th loss in a row. The Twins actually had a 1-0 lead when they bunched their two hits in the first inning and then were held hitless by Terry for the rest of the game. The Twins are off to Baltimore to continue their long six city 18 game road-trip. Box Score

There are bad weeks and then there are real bad weeks, the Twins had one of those real bad ones as they went winless with a 0-9 record in just 6 days and they are in the midst of an 18 game road trip. On the plus side, June 7 is the only day this year that the Twins will find themselves in the AL cellar. The Twins are now 19-32, a whopping 14-5 games behind the Cleveland Indians who have taken over first place by a 1/2 game over the Detroit Tigers. After 51 games the Twins have given up a MLB leading 274 runs, an average of 5.37 a game.

You need one of these after reading about this bad week of Twins baseball.

Are Rob Manfred and MLB serious?

It appears that yesterday MLB released another trial balloon offering to play the players their pro-rated pay in 2020 but the season would be only 50 game long. Is this some kind of a stupid and sick joke?

I have stated in the past that baseball is like a marathon and not a sprint. I find it ironic that a game with no clock tests teams in every way possible during its 162 game schedule but time is the final true test in determining the champion. Teams having winning streaks, teams go through pitching and hitting slumps, teams suffer long losing streaks, players get injured and players no one has heard of sometimes unexpectedly rise from the minors to help carry their team to victory. This is what makes baseball such an interesting game.

Now MLB is proposing a 50 game season? What a joke. I know that I miss baseball as do all baseball fans everywhere but who in the heck wants to see a 50 game season? I know I don’t, and I have little to no interest in following baseball and my favorite team, the Minnesota Twins in 2020 if that they don’t play a minimum of 100 games. A 50 game MLB season would be a sham and Rob Manfred and his cohorts should be embarrassed to even throw out a proposal like this.

As for the players side of this, if the players accept this proposal and are willing to play this short schedule and risk their health for this proposal, you are not as smart as I thought.