MLB: Royals hope to break Twins’ head-to-head dominance

Date:

Share post:


The Minnesota Twins have wasted no time establishing dominance in the American League Central.

With the season nearing the one-month mark, Minnesota has gone 7-1 against its division rivals and will have a chance to better that mark on Saturday when it continues a four-game set with the Kansas City Royals in Minneapolis.

A good portion of that success within the AL Central has come against the Royals. Minnesota is 5-0 against Kansas City after winning the first two games of the current series.

The Twins posted an 8-6 victory on Friday, but it wasn’t easy. Minnesota led 8-2 after a three-run homer from Jorge Polanco and solo shots from Max Kepler and Jose Miranda, but Kansas City pulled within two after scoring twice in the sixth and twice in the seventh.

The Royals also managed to load the bases with two outs in the ninth, but Minnesota closer Jorge Lopez struck out Nick Pratto to earn his second save.

The Twins scored at least six runs for the fifth straight game. They chased Kansas City starter Jordan Lyles after just four innings on Friday. Minnesota manager Rocco Baldelli has been thrilled with his team’s approach at the plate.

“We’ve been pretty consistent in talking about the way that we’ve approached the at-bats and just the way that our at-bats have gone over the past week,” Baldelli said. “That’s what leads into those kinds of really important big swings and guys driving the ball around the ballpark.”

Minnesota’s Bailey Ober (1-0, 1.59 ERA) will hope the offense keeps rolling when he makes his second start of the season on Friday.

Ober allowed one run on three hits in 5 2/3 innings against the Nationals on Sunday in his season debut. He walked three and struck out four. In five career starts against the Royals, Ober is 0-1 with a 4.64 ERA.

Brad Keller (2-2, 3.96 ERA) will oppose Ober with the hopes of getting Kansas City’s rotation back on track. Over the past 14 games, a Royals starter has been credited with the win just once, with starters combining to yield 57 runs (56 earned) in 67 2/3 innings during that stretch — an ERA of 7.45.

In 14 career appearances (12 starts) versus Minnesota, Keller is 3-6 with a 3.89 ERA. He surrendered two runs on five hits in 4 2/3 innings in a loss against the Twins on April 2.

Despite losing for the 12th time in its last 14 games on Friday, Kansas City finally showed some life on offense, scoring at least six runs for just the fifth time this season. Pratto, Salvador Perez and Edward Olivares each had three hits, with Perez also driving in three runs.

Pratto was playing his first game with the big-league club since April 6 after being recalled from Triple-A Omaha earlier Friday.

“It felt good,” Pratto said of his swing. “I felt like I conducted my at-bats well. … Overall, felt back to normal.”

Pratto was also happy with the effort his team showed against a tough opponent like the Twins.

“They execute really well,” Pratto said of Minnesota’s pitchers. “We put up tough at-bats all day, and we did a good job of chipping away at the end. … That’s what you want out of a team — consistently getting back into situations where you can make (an) impact.”

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

MLB: Rays asked to declare intention on stadium deal by Dec. 1

The Tampa Bay Rays have until Dec. 1 to declare whether they want to commit to the construction...

MLB: Aggressive Angels land LHP Yusei Kikuchi on $63M pact

Left-hander Yusei Kikuchi agreed to a three-year, $63 million deal with the Los Angeles Angels, according to multiple...

MLB: Former All-Star Rico Carty dies at 85

Former top-10 MVP finalist Rico Carty, who played 15 seasons with six different teams, died Saturday in the...

MLB: Dodgers name former Rangers manager Chris Woodward as 1B coach

The Los Angeles Dodgers named former Texas Rangers manager Chris Woodward as their first-base coach. Woodward replaces Clayton McCullough,...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.