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Boof Bonser

#26 / Pitcher / Minnesota Twins

6-4

245

R

R

Oct 13, 1981

W-L G GS CG SHO SV BS IP H R ER HR BB K ERA WHIP
2008 - Boof Bonser 2-4 8 8 0 0 0 0 46.0 50 29 26 4 12 30 5.09 1.35

Twins 7, Tigers 6

Boof2_mediumTwins score four in bottom of the seventh, win fifth straight.

This game kicked off with one of those ominous half-innings, the ones that make you cringe as your team gets rocked.  Things that can go wrong do go wrong, and by the time that third out finally gets recorded you need a few minutes to shake the haze from your head.  Such was the top of the first inning, as Bonser combined bad location with bad luck, and following Curtis Granderson's leadoff homer the Tigers strung together five consecutive singles.  By the time the number seven hitter, Marcus Thames, popped out to Joe Mauer, it was five to nothing.  And the Twins hadn't even come to the plate.

A wild pitch by Bonser on a third strike allowed Ivan Rodriguez to reach, a throwing error by Mauer saw Edgar Renteria score, and when Granderson struck out in his second at-bat of the inning to end the top of the first Detroit was staked to a six-run lead.  But it's always darkest before the light.

Following the implosive first inning, Bonser found his groove.  It was a 45-pitch first inning, but the Tigers never found a way to get to Boof again as he followed up with pitch counts of five, 14, 10, 14 and 11.  His fastball looked good, the breaking balls snapped down and all the luck Detroit had (or was it bad luck on Minnesota's end?) in the first inning disappeared without a trace.  Boof Bonser could have collapsed, could have given in and thrown it away for lost after that nightmare of a first inning, but he didn't.  He came back strong, was effective, and he gave his offense a chance.

The offense didn't disappoint.

Justin Morneau singled following Mauer's double in the bottom of the fourth, making for the Twins first run.  The next inning, Nick Punto doubled in both Craig Monroe and Delmon Young to close the gap to three.  But it was with two outs in the bottom of the seventh that fireworks went off.

With Kenny Rogers still on the mound, Matt Tolbert took the seventh pitch of his plate appearance pulled a double into left field.  Nick Punto followed that up by rolling over on a changeup, but the Twins were getting all the bounces by this point.  Carlos Guillen, playing third base, let it get through his legs; runners at the corners, still two away.  The hiccup chased Rogers, who was replaced by Zach Miner.

Mauer2_mediumMiner peppered leadoff man Carlos Gomez with four straight fastballs.  On the fourth offering, Gomez swung and chopped a high bouncer off the plate.  Edgar Renteria charged and snagged the ball on the first hop, but he never had a chance.  Gomez reached, Punto advanced to second, and Tolbert scored.  6-4, Detroit; momentum was swinging.
 
Hitless on the afternoon, Brendan Harris put a charge into a changeup from Miner.  He drove it deep into left field, past the outstretched arm of Jacque Jones, and it bounced over the fence for a ground-rule double.  6-5, Detroit.

Then came Joe Mauer, with two runners in scoring position.  Bobby Seay had replaced Miner, but he couldn't stop the bleeding.  Mauer chopped a fastball up the middle, right over the mound.  Polanco and Renteria converged but the ball snuck through, and Mauer's seeing-eye single scored two.

It was a fantastic comeback for the Twins, and the victory keeps them in first place.  In the stretch of these five wins, Minnesota has outscored their opponents 29-12, and the bats have been more impressive than they've been most of the year.  The picture is far from perfect, but it's working for the moment, and it's one hell of a lot of fun to see.

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Highlights In Photos

It's as easy as 1-2-3.

Kubel042908_medium
Jason Kubel hit a 2-run shot in the fourth off Chicago starter Gavin Floyd, giving the Twins a 2-0 lead.  Michael Cuddyer, who had doubled directly in front of our new full-time designated hitter, was the other run.  Said Kubel about the upper-deck shot:

"I was just trying to get the runner over from second base, and he left it down the middle," Kubel said. "I was trying to pull it and ended up putting a lot of backspin on it. And I got it up and out."

Floyd agreed, admitting leaving a fastball down the middle was a mistake to a hitter like Kubel.  The towering blast was Jason's fourth home run of the season, and while it's early puts him on pace for more than 20 bombs in 2008.  His .247/.268/.398 line to this point isn't anything to write home about (in fact it's disappointing), but there aren't many position players off to good starts for the Twins.  As the season rolls along, Kubel should find his stride.

Boof042908_medium

Bonser was like a man possessed, taking out the Chi-Sox early on the fastball before mixing in his breaking balls.  Seven strong innings, eight strikeouts, a walk and only six hits.  Joe Crede's solo shot in the seventh was his only damage.  Gardenhire was impressed:

"He set a nice tone. I think you saw some really good breaking balls. His curveball was going down hard. He had a nice slider. And he mixed them all in there. But it all starts with locating the fastball early in the ballgame and setting it up."

  Joeandjoe042908_medium

While Pat Neshek and Dennys Reyes combined for a scoreless eighth, it was Joe Nathan came on and pitched a perfect ninth inning.  There's nothing like finishing a vicotry with a double-shot of Joe!  Twins win, 3-1.

With Tuesday's win the Twins improve to 12-14, which puts them in a tie for second place with the Royals.  While many of Minnesota's upcoming opponents will are early favorites for October runs, hopefully the Twins can take advantage of having 15 of their next 21 games at home.

Other Highlights

*  The 1 and 2 hitters for the Twins were 0-for-8.  His hitless night left Brendan Harris' OBP at .344, still second best on the team.

*  Joe Mauer was 1-for-3, with a triple and a walk.  He's now hitting .306/.362/.400.

*  Delmon Young was 2-for-2 with a walk and a pair of stolen bases, giving him six in seven attempts.  While there's still no power, Delmon is 10-for-27 in his last seven games.  Hopefully this means he's heating up.

*  In his last two starts, Bonser has pitched 13 innings and allowed three runs and just nine hits.  BOOOOFFF!!!

*  Pat Neshek has held opponents scoreless in his last six appearances (5.1 IP, 3 H, 3 K).  His ERA is under 4 for the first time since being lit up by the Royals on April 4th.

*  Dennys Reyes:  LOOGY extraordinaire.  11 appearances, 8.2 innings pitched, 4 hits, 4 strikeouts, 2 walks, 0 runs allowed.

*  Joe Nathan's eighth save ties him for third in baseball, behind something named George Sherrill and Francisco Rodriguez.

See you tonight!!

Poll
Boof Bonser, 2008: 185 IP, 4.25 ERA, 145 K
  • Over/Better than that
  • Under/worse than that

  51 votes | Results

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Sweeney Homers, Ass-Bats Return

Eminem says:  Hip-hop The offense is in a state of 9-1-1.

I don't want to say I called it (actually, I don't mind), but I did:  Mike Sweeney hit his first home run of 2008 against the Twins on Wednesday.  While Oakland already had all the runs it would need to come away with the win, Sweeney's shot in the bottom of the eighth played through my visions like so many other of Sweeney's hits in his tenure with the Royals.  At 34 and seemingly a walking injury waiting to happen, he's still a good hitter.

After a disturbing start to the game, Boof Bonser ended up giving the Twins six quality innings.  Only 56% of his pitches went for strikes, and in the process he walked four.  Three hits allowed, none out of the park, kept the game close; when Bonser left Minnesota was only down 2-0.  He attributed his initial lack of effectiveness to "mechanical problems" and being "rusty", but also said the number of walks he issued were unnacceptable.

On the other side of the hill, Oakland starter Chad Gaudin completed seven innings in just 84 pitches, walking none and striking out four.  Allowing just four singles, his fourth start of the year was a far cry from the first pair, as each saw him lit up to the tune of eight earned runs in just 10 innings.  He'd also allowed 17 base runners between the two starts, but the man we saw on Wednesday night was an entirely different pitcher, and now has allowed just one run in his last 14 innings.  Against the Twins he executed superb command and a very good breaking ball, inducing a lot of ground-ball outs.

Offensively for the Twins, the only real threat of the night came on Kubel launching a ball deep into right field.  With Delmon Young on base it would have tied the game at 2-2, but it veered out of fair territory.  Craig Monroe would seal the inning's fate with a pop-up to strand runners on second and third.  Only Joe Mauer tallied an extra-base hit; a useless double in the top of the ninth.  His effort was wasted as again, Minnesota couldn't string together a series of hits.

Starting in center field on Wednesday was Denard Span, who went 1-for-3.  Carlos Gomez was given the night off, as going 1-for-18 in the last four games had indicated that his recent skid isn't just a slump, but that he's currently over-matched.  24 strikeouts and two walks in 87 at-bats is a miserable start, and since hitting .326/.356/.465 in his first ten games has hit .136/.136/.159 in his last ten.

How bad does it have to get, and for how long, before the Twins pull a u-turn on their plans for Carlos Gomez?  There's merit in just throwing a player into the fire, not just to see how he responds but to give him the experience necessary and to let him take his lumps.  But at certain junctures the philosophy can take on some negative qualities in regards to the player's development.

I'll get into that tonight.

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