The Twins spent Wednesday night surviving one mess after another, then finally got the one swing they needed. Alan Roden, back in the majors after waiting for his chance, delivered the decisive hit in the ninth as Minnesota edged Cleveland 6-5 and took the series.
It was the kind of game that kept flipping on itself. The Guardians grabbed a 3-0 lead in the fourth, the Twins answered right back to tie it, Cleveland went back in front in the seventh, and Minnesota clawed even again before Roden ended it with a gapper to right-center. For a night that featured shaky defense, wild relief work and plenty of traffic on the bases, the Twins found just enough clean execution at the end.
Connor Prielipp gave Minnesota a needed outing on the mound. The rookie worked five innings, allowing four hits and three earned runs while striking out six across 83 pitches, 49 of them strikes.
He was sharp early, but the fourth inning turned ugly when Chase DeLauter opened with a single and Brayan Rocchio and Rhys Hoskins followed with home runs to put Cleveland ahead 3-0. Prielipp still managed to settle things down after a mound visit and retired the next three hitters in order.
Minnesota answered immediately in the bottom of the fourth. Brooks Lee, Kody Clemens and Josh Bell strung together singles to load the bases with nobody out.
Royce Lewis brought home the first run with an RBI single, Luke Keaschall added a deep sacrifice fly to center, and Roden tied it with a single into center that scored Bell. The Twins had a chance to keep the rally rolling, but Cleveland changed pitchers and stopped the bleeding.
Prielipp held the line through the fifth, and Travis Adams followed with a scoreless sixth. After that, the game got messy.
Eric Orze couldn’t finish the seventh, getting only one out while leaving two runners aboard. Taylor Rogers came in for the final two outs, but instead allowed two runs, and Cleveland was back on top 5-3.
That lead didn’t last long either. Guardians relievers handed Minnesota a lifeline by walking five Twins batters - Keaschall, Ryan Kreidler, pinch-hitter Austin Martin, Lee and Clemens - and the free passes forced in the tying runs. Cleveland’s usually tidy bullpen looked anything but sharp in a series that has turned sloppy fast.
Kody Funderburk worked around two singles in a scoreless eighth, striking out three of the five other batters he faced. Minnesota then had a chance to finish it in the bottom of the inning when Victor Caratini singled and Keaschall doubled, but Cade Smith shut that door with strikeout, strikeout, walk and flyout.
Yoendrys Gómez handled the ninth without much trouble, and the Twins finally pieced together the winning rally in the bottom half. Clemens reached on a single after Rocchio made a strange play on a ball hit right at him, Josh Bell struck out, and Royce Lewis nearly grounded into an inning-ending double play before beating it out. Alex Jackson followed with a cue shot to the right side that took a wild hop and got away from Travis Bazzana, and Keaschall worked a tough walk to load the bases.
That brought up Roden, who had missed his earlier chance in the eighth. He battled to a full count, fouled off several pitches, and then lined a gapper to right-center to bring home the winning run.
The series wraps up Thursday at 12:40 pm CST, with Mike Paredes set to start for the Twins against Cleveland ace Gavin Williams.
In Other News...
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Twins May Be Forced Off Their Draft Plan At No. 3
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Keith Laws latest read on the class only adds to the uncertainty, since the Twins may have to react to how the first two picks and the clubs ahead of them break. If Cholowsky is there, he could be the obvious fit, but Minnesota may not get that clean a choice, and the possibility of a pivot to another college bat or arm is very much alive as the draft order starts to sort itself out. [Read more 🡒]
