Power Poor But
Team Scores Runs
Happy to watch Nathan close out games in
the ninth, almost making the Twins unbeatable in the last inning. Happy to have Morneau for several more years, an all-star first
baseman with 14 home runs (best on the team), 68 RBI (third in the
American League) and a .323 batting average (second best in the
league).
Happy to have baseball’s best catcher in
Joe Mauer (third in the league with a .322 average) and see the
farm system develop new starting pitchers Scott Baker, Nick
Blackburn, Glen Perkins and Kevin Slowey, and also
second baseman Alexi Casilla who has been a catalyst for hitting,
fielding, and running the bases since being recalled from Rochester.
Our smile isn’t so big but we can still give a lower case “h” to
newcomers Delmon Young, Denard Span, and Brendan Harris, and veterans Nick Punto (the play-anywhere infielder who found
his bat after a dismal 2007) and Jason Kubel (second in home runs
with 13).
Inexperienced players are erratic and that
description fits Casilla, Gomez and Young. Particularly aggravating has
been Gomez’s lunging at bad pitches and Young’s miniscule
total of three home runs.
We’re handing out “S’s” to infielder
Mike Lamb (.220 average in 65 games) and Adam Everett (.189
average in 25 games), and outfielder Michael Cuddyer (.252
average, three home runs in 62 games). Everett and Cuddyer have missed
a lot of the season because of injuries, and even when healthy were
disappointing. At 29-years-old, with a big contract, and Span
excelling in right field, Cuddyer might be trade material in the months
ahead.
Another “s” word comes to mind when
sometimes describing the team’s relief pitching in the mid to late
innings. Shaky. If the Twins are going to beat baseball’s best teams,
they need better results than Mike Bass and Matt Guerrier
delivered in a Red Sox sweep of the Twins last week. Boston scored 25
runs, and won two of the three games because Twins relief pitchers
didn't deliver.
The Twins score lots of runs (fourth in
the American League with 464) but they’re way short on long balls that can decide
games quickly. They don’t matchup in power to the American League’s
top playoff contenders. The Twins are tied with Toronto for fewest home
runs in the league, 65 each. For run scoring the Twins receive an “H,”
but the power outage draws an obvious “S.”