Walks and a missed opportunity in the fourth inning sank the Twins on Tuesday night, as the Astros pulled away for a 6-4 win after Minnesota had opened the series with a victory the night before.
Minnesota had the early edge and put Mike Burrows under pressure right away. In the first inning, the Twins loaded the bases with a single and two walks before Victor Caratini was hit by a pitch to force in the game’s first run. Ryan Kriedler, filling in at center field for an ailing Byron Buxton, followed with a single to left that made it 2-0.
Joe Ryan looked in control for much of the early going, even as Houston put a couple of runners on in the first without scoring. In the third, Astros third baseman Raynel Delgado opened with a double and advanced to third on a groundout, but Ryan responded by striking out Yordan Alvarez and getting Isaac Paredes to ground out.
The inning that changed everything came in the fourth. Yainer Díaz singled in a run to cut the lead to 3-1, and after Ryan struck out Nick Allen, he issued back-to-back walks to make it 3-2.
Then came the turning point: Ryan appeared to escape with a called third strike against Jose Altuve, but Altuve challenged the call and it was overturned. What had looked like a huge strikeout became an RBI walk, and suddenly the Astros had the bases loaded for Alvarez.
Then, Yordan Alvarez did what Yordan Alvarez does.
The Twins did push back in the fifth. Kody Clemens singled and Josh Bell doubled, and both hits came with two outs, trimming Houston’s lead to two.
But that was as close as Minnesota would get. Neither bullpen gave an inch from there, and the Astros’ relievers shut the door through the late innings before Josh Hader finished off his eighth save.
Ryan’s final line told the story of the night: 4 innings, 6 hits, 6 runs, 6 earned runs, 3 walks and 5 strikeouts on 91 pitches, 57 of them strikes. The Twins’ offense had its chances early, but the combination of missed pitches, a costly overturned call and Houston’s relief work left them chasing the rest of the way.
Minnesota’s bullpen did its job. Eric Orze and Marco Raya each threw two scoreless innings, but the offense couldn’t cash in again.
The teams will meet again Wednesday night in the rubber match. The Twins are set to send Taj Bradley (6-3, 3.98) to the mound against the Astros’ Tatsuya Imai (5-3, 5.36 ERA).
Bradley is coming off back-to-back solid outings against the Diamondbacks and Rockies. Against Colorado in his most recent start, he worked seven innings, allowed two runs and struck out seven in a Twins win.
After Wednesday’s game, the Twins head to New York for an off day before opening a three-game series against the Yankees.
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The harder question for Minnesota remains the same one that has followed the club for months: the run prevention has not held up, and the bullpen has become the clearest source of anxiety. After last summers relief-deadline selloff, the late innings have too often tilted the wrong way, leaving the Twins with a familiar kind of tension as the schedule turns toward the second half. [Read more 🡒]
