Zebby Matthews gave the Twins exactly the kind of outing they needed on a day when the injury news wasn’t exactly light.
Minnesota arrived at Daikin Park already dealing with the loss of reliever Anthony Banda for a period of months because of a lat injury, and Byron Buxton’s status was left in question after he felt hip discomfort. Then the Twins went out and played clean baseball anyway, leaning on sharp infield defense, a big night for extra-base hits and Matthews’ latest deep start to beat the Astros 5-4.
Matthews worked seven strong innings, continuing a run of dependable performances that has become a real theme for him this season. The third-year right-hander has now gone at least six innings in eight of his nine starts, and he has reached the seventh inning four times.
Against Houston, he stayed on his usual script: attack the zone, throw strikes and keep hitters from settling in. The Astros did drive a few balls to the warning track, but Matthews mostly managed contact and limited the damage.
Cam Smith’s solo homer was the only run against him. He finished with seven strikeouts and one walk, and it marked the third straight start in which he has gone at least six innings while allowing no more than two runs.
For a Twins club suddenly thinner in the bullpen, starts like that are going to matter. Matthews has become the kind of arm that can steady a night, and on this one, he helped set the tone for a road trip opener Minnesota had to have.
In Other News...
Saints Rotation Scramble Is Becoming A Bigger Twins Problem
The pitching shuffle in St. Paul has gone from an inconvenience to a daily reality for the Saints, and it is starting to matter for the Twins too. With call-ups and injuries constantly changing the roster, the Saints have been working with a four-day rotation plan just to get through games, leaning on Ryan Gallagher as their only traditional starter while moving arms like Aaron Rozek and John Klein between starting and relief roles.
Around them, the staff has been pieced together with whatever length can be found, including relievers taking starts when needed and workload adjustments aimed at keeping everyone effective. The current mix has been stretched even further by the need to cycle through multiple arms, and the more the Saints have to improvise on the mound, the more it complicates the Twins broader pitching depth picture. [Read more 🡒]
Twins Farm System Suddenly Has Two New Hitters Worth Watching
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Sprocks June surge has been especially noticeable, giving the Twins another bat in the lower minors who is doing more than just holding his own. Fragoza has followed a different path, but the result has been similar: a young player who is forcing the organization to keep paying attention. For a system that always needs more impact position players, the encouraging part is not just that both have hit lately, but that each has done it in a way that suggests there may be more to come. [Read more 🡒]
Twins First Half Verdict Feels Worse In One Familiar Area
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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 🡒]
