Cuddyer Homers off Buehrle in a 1-0 Game

Michael Cuddyer homered and singled off Mark Buehrle in the Twins 1-0 win over the White Sox yesterday. Cuddyer has 33 hits in 96 career at-bats against Buehrle. That ties Cuddyer with Johnny Damon (33-for-97 vs. Roy Halladay) and Todd Helton (33-for-71 vs. Livan Hernandez) for the most hits by any current major-league batter against any current major-league pitcher. It was the second time in Cuddyer’s career that he homered in a 1-0 game. (He also did that on Aug. 19, 2007 vs. Texas.) In franchise history, only two other players have done that more than once: Harmon Killebrew (three times) and Steve Braun (twice). Source: Elias

Twins loss count is rising to historic levels

The 2011 Minnesota Twins‘ record fell to 17-35 and 8-18 in the month of May in a 6-5 loss at Detroit. With one more game to play this month, Minnesota will record the second-highest loss total at the end of May in franchise history, including 60 seasons as the Washington Senators. The Twins had a 12-39 mark at the end of May in 1982. Source: Elias

Swarzak throws a gem

Anthony Swarzak

Three Twins pitchers – starter Anthony Swarzak (8 innings and 1 hit), Matt Capps, and Alex Burnett – held the Angels to one hit in 10 innings yesterday. Since the American League adopted the designated hitter in 1973, there has been only one other game in the league in which a team had no hits or one hit in a game of more than nine innings. On June 21, 1976, the Rangers’ Bert Blyleven threw a 10-inning one-hitter in a 1-0 Texas win in Oakland. The Athletics’ only hit in that game was a fifth-inning single by Ken McMullen. The Angels have been held to one hit in an extra-inning game once previously, against the Yankees on May 22, 1962. Whitey Ford left with an injury after seven no-hit innings; Buck Rodgers had the Angels’ lone hit in the ninth inning, and the Yankees won it in the 12th inning. Source: Elias

I still can’t believe the Twins blew a 5-0 lead

Scott Baker

Even in the era of pitch counts, few complete games and relievers used in particular roles; you don’t see many like this. Twins starter Scott Baker threw seven scoreless innings and left with a 5-0 lead, but the Angels scored five in the eighth and one in the ninth against the bullpen and defeated the Twins, 6-5. Baker became the first major-league starter in 13 years to fashion a scoreless outing of at least seven innings and leave with a lead of at least five runs, only to see his team lose. The last pitcher to be so unlucky was the Yankees’ Hideki Irabu, in a game against the Rangers on May 14, 1998; as did Baker on Friday night; Irabu turned a 5-0 lead over to the bullpen at the start of the eighth and watched his relievers implode, as Texas won, 7-5, in 13 innings. (And, yes, Mariano Rivera himself was one of the culprits: he allowed the tying run in the ninth inning.) Now here’s the moral of the story: the Yankees went on to finish the season with a record of 114 wins and 48 losses, and swept the World Series.

It’s also our unhappy duty to report that as badly as things have gone for the Twins this season, Friday night’s game set a new low. It was the only the second time since the team came to Minnesota in 1961 – and the first time in nearly 40 years – that the Twins have lost a game in which they led by five-or-more runs going into the eighth inning. Since their only previous such loss – to the Yankees on July 30, 1971 – the Twins had gone 755-0 in games in which they took a lead of five-or-more runs into the eighth inning! That was the longest winning streak in major league history in games of that type. Source: Elias