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Will the Twins offense be able to overcome the bad bullpen play?
The Minnesota Twins dropped their fourth game out of five on Saturday, falling 8-5 to the Colorado Rockies at Target Field in a game that once again put a spotlight on the team's biggest problem.
Colorado catcher Hunter Goodman launched three home runs off Minnesota pitching, and manager Derek Shelton did not hold back afterward when talking about what the bullpen needs to do.
"At some point, we're going to have to have one guy, two guys, three guys step up and pitch well consecutively," Shelton said. "Right now, we're just not there."
Starter Mike Paredes gave the team a solid outing through 5.1 innings, holding Colorado to three runs, but once the bullpen took over, the game fell apart fast.
Kody Funderburk allowed a three-run homer to Goodman after failing to put him away on a 1-2 count, and the loss dropped Minnesota to 39-45 in the AL Central.
Saturday's collapse came one night after the bullpen nearly blew a seven-run lead in a game the Twins barely survived on a walk-off single from Royce Lewis.
Those back-to-back outings tell the full story of a relief unit that has posted a 7.34 ERA in June with no signs of turning things around.
Beyond the few arms Shelton trusts like Yoendrys Gómez and Andrew Morris, every current bullpen arm carries an ERA of 4.87 or worse, and the front office has already cycled through multiple relievers like Justin Topa, Luis García, and Justin Lawrence without finding the right fit.
The bullpen situation is even more painful because the Twins' offense has been one of the better lineups in the American League.
Byron Buxton has been carrying the middle of the order with 25 home runs, and the lineup has done enough to keep Minnesota in games on most nights.
"We have to find consistency in games we're down 3-1, 4-1 and keeping that close," Shelton said, "because our offense will continue to do things."
That is exactly the problem.
The Twins can rally in close games, but the bullpen keeps turning tight deficits into blowouts before the bats ever get a chance.
With potential reinforcements like Cole Sands and Kendry Rojas still weeks away, Shelton does not have many options outside of hoping somebody in the current group figures it out.
The harder truth is that the bullpen has been a known weakness since the start of the season, and their approach of shuffling arms in and out has not produced a reliable group.
Now, Anthony Banda could be on the shelf after leaving Sunday's game with an injury to his side, leaving even more questions.
Eleven different pitchers have recorded a save this year, and there are still no defined roles for the late innings.
For a team trying to stay in the wild card race, the margin for error is shrinking fast with the trade deadline approaching.
Unless someone steps up soon, the Twins' strong offense is going to keep being wasted on nights where the bullpen cannot keep things close enough for a comeback.
Continue reading...
The Minnesota Twins dropped their fourth game out of five on Saturday, falling 8-5 to the Colorado Rockies at Target Field in a game that once again put a spotlight on the team's biggest problem.
Colorado catcher Hunter Goodman launched three home runs off Minnesota pitching, and manager Derek Shelton did not hold back afterward when talking about what the bullpen needs to do.
"At some point, we're going to have to have one guy, two guys, three guys step up and pitch well consecutively," Shelton said. "Right now, we're just not there."
A Bullpen Without Answers
Starter Mike Paredes gave the team a solid outing through 5.1 innings, holding Colorado to three runs, but once the bullpen took over, the game fell apart fast.
Kody Funderburk allowed a three-run homer to Goodman after failing to put him away on a 1-2 count, and the loss dropped Minnesota to 39-45 in the AL Central.
Former #MNTwins relievers are thriving elsewhere at the halfway point of 2026:
• Jhoan Duran (PHI closer): 1.63 ERA, 0.94 WHIP, 14.31 K/9, 1.7 WAR
→ Twins received: Mick Abel (out for elbow surgery), Eduardo Tait (AA)
• Louie Varland (TOR closer): 0.82 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 12.07… pic.twitter.com/nheqxhPAy8
— Talkin' Twins (@TalkinTwins) June 27, 2026
Saturday's collapse came one night after the bullpen nearly blew a seven-run lead in a game the Twins barely survived on a walk-off single from Royce Lewis.
Those back-to-back outings tell the full story of a relief unit that has posted a 7.34 ERA in June with no signs of turning things around.
Beyond the few arms Shelton trusts like Yoendrys Gómez and Andrew Morris, every current bullpen arm carries an ERA of 4.87 or worse, and the front office has already cycled through multiple relievers like Justin Topa, Luis García, and Justin Lawrence without finding the right fit.
The Offense Can Only Do So Much
The bullpen situation is even more painful because the Twins' offense has been one of the better lineups in the American League.
Byron Buxton has been carrying the middle of the order with 25 home runs, and the lineup has done enough to keep Minnesota in games on most nights.
"We have to find consistency in games we're down 3-1, 4-1 and keeping that close," Shelton said, "because our offense will continue to do things."
More trouble for the #MNTwins.
Anthony Banda is forced out of the game due to injury after plunking the first batter of the 9th inning, immediately signaling for trainers before exiting.
A sudden and costly injury to a bullpen that simply cannot afford to lose another arm at… pic.twitter.com/9U7NEAWL9n
— Talkin' Twins (@TalkinTwins) June 28, 2026
That is exactly the problem.
The Twins can rally in close games, but the bullpen keeps turning tight deficits into blowouts before the bats ever get a chance.
With potential reinforcements like Cole Sands and Kendry Rojas still weeks away, Shelton does not have many options outside of hoping somebody in the current group figures it out.
Why This Problem Is Not Going Away
The harder truth is that the bullpen has been a known weakness since the start of the season, and their approach of shuffling arms in and out has not produced a reliable group.
Derek Shelton said he stuck with left-hander Anthony Banda to begin the ninth inning because he wanted to keep lefty bats Jake McCarthy and Mickey Moniak on Colorado's bench.
But then Banda hit the leadoff man and exited with an injury to his side. No further word on that yet.
— Aaron Gleeman (@AaronGleeman) June 28, 2026
Now, Anthony Banda could be on the shelf after leaving Sunday's game with an injury to his side, leaving even more questions.
Eleven different pitchers have recorded a save this year, and there are still no defined roles for the late innings.
For a team trying to stay in the wild card race, the margin for error is shrinking fast with the trade deadline approaching.
Unless someone steps up soon, the Twins' strong offense is going to keep being wasted on nights where the bullpen cannot keep things close enough for a comeback.
Continue reading...