Varland struggles as Saints end up on wrong side of history this time in loss to Toledo

posted in: News | 0

The Saints continued to make history on Sunday at CHS Field, only this time it was a record they could have done without.

After extending their winning streak to a franchise-best 11 games on Saturday, the Saints set a team mark for runs allowed in a game in a 20-9 loss to the Toledo Mud Hens.

“They always end funny,” Saints manager Toby Gardenhire said of the winning streak. “You never know how it is going to go. Sometimes you get walked off, sometimes you give up a
hundred runs. We gave up a hundred.”

Saints starting pitcher Louie Varland had a miserable afternoon, allowing 12 runs — 11 earned — in 2 1/3 innings. The Mud Hens touched him up for 11 hits, including five home runs.

After Varland gave up the three runs in the first inning on a pair of home runs, he was given a reprieve when the Saints scored five times in their half of the inning. But Varland gave up two more home runs in the Mud Hens’ five-run second.

Varland declined to speak with reporters after the game.

“I got nothing for you guys today,” he said as he left the clubhouse. “Too emotional.”

Gardenhire wasn’t surprised.

“Any time you have a start like that — for a guy like Louie, who has been so good — you’re going to be emotional,” Gardenhire said. “It’s not easy for these guys. This is their job, this is what they live to do.

“You’re only pitching once a week, and when you go out there and have a tough one like this, it’s going to be tough.”

Saints pitching coach Pete Larson said Varland’s location of his pitches was not an issue.

“He threw strikes, he got ahead of guys,” Larson said. “They got the better end of it today. They came out swinging and they didn’t really miss.”

Added Gardenhire: “Everybody’s due for a tough one once in a while. They were on just about everything he threw. We were hoping he could figure it out for a couple innings and end on a high note, but it just didn’t happen.”

Varland made his first start since having two solid outings with the Twins, which made Sunday’s performance all the more surprising.

“It was awesome to see him have success up there,” Larson said. “He needed that after the little bit of a rough start he had at the beginning of the year. And everything he’s been working on here, he threw up there, and it was well executed.

“So we’ll adjust on the game plan and move forward next week.”

The Mud Hens did most of their damage in the first four innings, scoring three in the first, five in the second, four in the third and seven in the fourth. They put a quick end to any thoughts the Saints had of sweeping a second straight six-game series.

But the Saints left for their last road trip eager to string some wins together, and they likely exceeded their own expectations by winning 11 in a row.

“We got some guys healthy, we got some guys back,” Gardenhire said. “And we’ve got some guys swinging the bat well. It was fun. You don’t get many streaks where you win 11 games in a row.

“But we were going on all cylinders for a long time — pretty much the whole road trip in Louisville and then the whole homestand until today. Everything was great. Hopefully, one game
like this won’t be a complete setback.”

Briefly

Burnsville native Aaron Rozek, just called up from Double-A Wichita, replaced Varland and surrendered six runs in 1 1/3 innings of work. … Second baseman Edouard Julien, who has struggled offensively since being sent down by the Twins, reached based five times, with three walks, a double and a single.

Related Articles

Sports |


Cranked to 11: Saints beat Toledo 9-7 to continue winning streak

Sports |


Wallner homers again as Saints win 10th in a row

Sports |


Saints are big fans of new ball-strike challenge system

Sports |


Saints rally behind Brooks Lee’s three doubles for eighth straight win

Sports |


Saints’ Kemp hoping to make quick return to majors

Pablo López dominates as Twins shut out Athletics

posted in: News | 0

OAKLAND, Calif. — Rocco Baldelli was hesitant to reveal too many of the details before the game, but, he said, Pablo López had a meaningful week in between starts working on a couple of mechanical tweaks.

“I think he had some real pointed ideas about what he was trying to accomplish in between his outings,” Baldelli said before the game.

Mission accomplished.

López, who entered the day with a 9.69 ERA in the month of June, was simply spectacular on Sunday. The starter retired the first 17 batters of the game before allowing a hit, dominating the Oakland Athletics in the Twins’ 3-0 win in the series finale at the Oakland Coliseum.

With the way he was throwing, it looked as if López had a serious chance to write his name into the history books. But with two outs in the sixth inning, after striking out the first two batters of the inning, Lawrence Butler lined a single to right, disrupting López’s bid for perfection.

He allowed just two hits in his eight-inning effort and struck out 14 batters, matching his career high. In the process, he fanned every single Athletics (29-51) batter.

With his pitch count at 102, López did not get the chance to finish off the game, as Bailey Ober did a day before. But eight innings of sheer dominance worked just fine for the Twins (43-35).

López pitched with a lead for much of the day after Byron Buxton hit his fifth home run of the season in the second inning off lefty Hogan Harris.

Harris kept the Twins mostly quiet for much of the game before running into trouble in the seventh. Carlos Santana and Willi Castro started the inning with back-to-back singles before Buxton brought home the team’s second run of the game with a double.

The Twins scored another run on Kyle Farmer’s fielder’s choice, and those three runs were more than enough offensive support for López and Griffin Jax, who completed the shutout with a scoreless ninth for his seventh save.

Related Articles

Minnesota Twins |


Bay Area native Twins bid farewell to Oakland Coliseum

Minnesota Twins |


Twins starter Chris Paddack battles through dead arm period

Minnesota Twins |


Bailey Ober throws complete game as Twins wipe out Athletics

Minnesota Twins |


Late home run dooms Twins in loss to Athletics

Minnesota Twins |


Wallner homers again as Saints win 10th in a row

Bay Area native Twins bid farewell to Oakland Coliseum

posted in: News | 0

OAKLAND, Calif. — In retrospect, Joe Ryan  — who hails from nearby Marin County — is very happy that that he pushed to make a start at the Oakland Coliseum last year. It would be his first and last opportunity to pitch at the old ballpark, which the Athletics will vacate after this season.

“I definitely would have been frustrated if I’d never gotten that,” Ryan said. “I’m really happy that I did.”

Following this season, the Athletics will say goodbye to their long-time home — they have played at the facility since 1968 — and head northeast to Sacramento, where they are expected to play at least the next three seasons. After that, they plan to relocate to Las Vegas.

That meant this weekend marked the Twins’ final chance to say goodbye to the park.

“I don’t know if that’s really hit me, but I definitely feel like it’s kind of sad,” Bay Area native Trevor Larnach said. “I’m hearing the next three years are in Sacramento and I feel for the players, I think, honestly, cause I’ve played over there, too. It’s not going to be the same at all.”

The Athletics decision to relocate came after years of sagging attendance in the aging facility and attempts to reach a deal to stay in the city.

Though Ryan grew up cheering for the San Francisco Giants, he vividly remembers coming to a game as a child, sitting in the third deck and watching the Athletics take on Derek Jeter and the Yankees. In high school, he came to watch his future Twins’ teammate, Sonny Gray, start for the Athletics.

“Tickets were so cheap. So you could sit — I think we sat right next to the dugout,” Ryan said. “It was sick. Always fun. So, it’ll definitely be sad to not come back.”

Larnach, who is from Walnut Creek, was happy to start and hit third on Friday night, in his first major league game in the Bay Area. He returned to Oakland with the Twins in 2022 but was on the injured list, so he didn’t play in that series.

Though he grew up watching Barry Bonds and the Giants, he remembers coming to some games as a kid and watching former Athletics third baseman Eric Chavez.

“I would have loved to have seen this place get packed because I feel like it could be loud, crazy, but it’s been a while,” Larnach said.

It sure has.

And that part of the reason why on Sunday, the Twins said their last farewells to the old ballpark.

“This place is different, but I would say this place does have a soul,” manager Rocco Baldelli said. “I don’t know if I would say that about every single ballpark that I step into, but I think I can say it about the Coliseum. I’ll miss the Coliseum. I’ll miss all the great stuff and the not-so-great stuff. I’ll miss all of it.”

Briefly

The Twins will have Monday off before taking on the Arizona Diamondbacks in Phoenix. Ryan, Simeon Woods Richardson and Chris Paddack are lined up to start in that series. … Royce Lewis served as the Twins’ designated hitter on consecutive days in Oakland rather than taking the field because he was under the weather, Baldelli said. … The beginning of the game on Sunday was slightly delayed as the Athletics honored their 1974 World Series winning team.

Related Articles

Minnesota Twins |


Twins starter Chris Paddack battles through dead arm period

Minnesota Twins |


Bailey Ober throws complete game as Twins wipe out Athletics

Minnesota Twins |


Late home run dooms Twins in loss to Athletics

Minnesota Twins |


Wallner homers again as Saints win 10th in a row

Minnesota Twins |


Mr. 2,000: Carlos Santana reaches milestone 2,000 games played

Armed militants in Russia kill priest and police in attacks on churches, synagogue and police post

posted in: Politics | 0

MOSCOW — Armed militants attacked two Orthodox churches, a synagogue and a traffic police post in Russia’s southern republic of Dagestan, killing a priest and six police officers, Russian state news agency RIA Novosti said Sunday.

Russia’s National Anti-Terrorism Committee said in a statement that a Russian Orthodox Church priest and police officers were killed in the “terrorist” attacks.

Dagestan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs said a group of armed men fired at a synagogue and a church in the city of Derbent, located on the Caspian Sea. The attackers fled and a search was underway for them, the statement from the ministry said. The ministry said two militants were “eliminated.”

Almost simultaneously, reports appeared about an attack on a traffic police post in the capital of the largely Muslim region, Makhachkala. According to RIA Novosti, six policemen were killed and 12 more were injured.

Shamil Khadulaev, deputy chairman of the public monitoring commission of Dagestan, cited by RIA Novosti, said a priest in Derbent and a church security guard in Makhachkala were killed.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, but some officials in Dagestan blamed Ukraine and NATO.

“There is no doubt that these terrorist attacks are in one way or another connected with the intelligence services of Ukraine and NATO countries,” Dagestan lawmaker Abdulkhakim Gadzhiyev wrote on Telegram.

Ukrainian officials did not comment immediately on the attacks.

“What happened looks like a vile provocation and an attempt to cause discord between confessions,” President Ramzan Kadyrov of neighboring Chechnya said.

Related Articles

World News |


Russia obliterates Ukraine’s front-line towns faster with hacked bombs and expanded air base network

World News |


Minnesota officials weigh options as federal regulators threaten to rescind partnership between Delta Air Lines, Aeromexico

World News |


Muslim pilgrims resume symbolic stoning of the devil as they wrap up Hajj pilgrimage in deadly heat

World News |


Netanyahu dissolves influential war Cabinet after key partner bolted from government

World News |


Britain’s July 4 election is fast approaching. Rishi Sunak is running out of time to change the tune