MLB: Twins ‘have to do better’ against Cardinals

Date:

Share post:


As they struggled through a three-game sweep by the Royals in Kansas City, the Minnesota Twins looked like a team that needs roster upgrades.

“It drives some points home for me, but I don’t know if it drives any points home for the organization as a whole,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “There’s a lot of things we have to do better right now. We’re not playing good baseball going into the trade deadline.”

The Twins will be in St. Louis to face the Cardinals on Tuesday, with the opener of the three-game series coming shortly after baseball’s trade deadline passes. Whether new faces will join them in the dugout remains a question.

But the Twins could use some kind of boost. Minnesota will carry a five-game losing streak into the game and is trying to hang on to the lead in the American League Central.

“We’ve mixed some really good baseball in with some really bad baseball, and it’s probably evened out to not good enough,” Baldelli said.

Among the team’s issues is a woeful offense against left-handed pitching. The Twins are hitting a MLB-worst .219 against lefties with a .658 OPS.

“There’s no real excuse for it,” Twins infielder Kyle Farmer told MLB.com. “We’re just not hitting lefties. Sometimes, that happens.”

The Twins will open the series with Pablo Lopez (5-6, 4.13 ERA) on the mound. He will be seeking his first victory since July 5, when he blanked the Royals 5-0 with a complete-game four hitter.

Lopez struck out 12 batters in that game and walked none. But in his past three games, he allowed five homers and walked six batters in 17 2/3 innings.

He allowed two solo homers in seven innings in his most recent start, a game the Twins eventually lost 9-7 to the Seattle Mariners.

Lopez is 1-2 with a 3.16 ERA in four career starts against St. Louis.

After trading starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery and relievers Jordan Hicks and Chris Stratton for prospects in two separate deals Sunday, the Cardinals’ pitching staff is in flux and without a starting pitcher firmed up against the Twins.

“It’s a decent amount of talent that just walked out the door,” Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said. “It’s going to be different moving forward. Some guys are going to get opportunities to grow.”

Starting pitcher Jack Flaherty (7-6, 4.43 ERA) has an expiring contract so he, too, could get traded before the deadline. He was in line to start Tuesday, but the Cardinals are likely to give him a break until the trade chaos concludes.

Miles Mikolas (6-6, 4.38 ERA) is the likely option to start. He earned a five-game suspension for hitting Cubs outfielder Ian Happ with a pitch Thursday, but he is appealing the suspension.

Mikolas worked just two-thirds of an inning before getting ejected from that game, so he would be fresh enough to face the Twins. He has one career start against the Twins in 2018. He didn’t earn a decision while allowing two runs on seven hits in 4 2/3 innings.

Cardinals infielder Nolan Gorman is questionable for Tuesday due to lower back tightness. He sat out Sunday’s game because of the issue, which has become a persistent problem.

On the other hand, Cardinals infielder/outfielder Tommy Edman could come off the 10-day injured list Tuesday after recovering from a right wrist injury. He took a brief rehabilitation assignment to Triple-A Memphis over the weekend and was 2-for-8 in two games.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

MLB: Pirates sign LHP Caleb Ferguson to 1-year contract

The Pittsburgh Pirates announced the signing of left-hander Caleb Ferguson to a one-year contract on Friday. The Pirates did...

MLB: Jays, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. avoid arbitration with $28.5M deal

One year after earning a record salary through arbitration, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Toronto Blue Jays avoided...

MLB: Eight Astros avoid arbitration; Framber Valdez lands reported $18M

The Houston Astros came to terms on one-year contracts for all eight of their arbitration-eligible players on Thursday,...

MLB: Cardinals heading to arbitration with Lars Nootbaar, 2 others

The St. Louis Cardinals did not reach deals with three arbitration-eligible players - outfielder Lars Nootbaar, outfielder/second baseman...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.