The top of the ninth inning showed how quickly things can run off the rails against the Kansas City Royals, one of the hottest teams in baseball.
After homers from Jose Miranda and Trevor Larnach propped the Twins with a five-run lead, reliever Cole Sands recorded two outs and allowed three hits. Jhoan Duran hit a batter and gave up two run-scoring infield singles — all in two-strike counts — while another run scored on Willi Castro’s throwing error from third base.
Duran stranded the tying run at third base with a comebacker to the mound, securing a 6-5 victory Monday at Target Field, but the wild ninth inning highlighted starter Joe Ryan’s dominance. Ryan, pitching with extra velocity on his fastball, permitted four hits and one run in seven innings.
“It’s not just like he’s throwing hard,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “He’s locating his pitches, he’s putting them in great places, and that’s a good combination for him.”
It took Ryan only two batters to settle into his outing. Twins right fielder Max Kepler made a sliding catch for the game’s first out, snaring a line drive, and Bobby Witt Jr. followed with a single. Ryan retired the next 14 batters with just one ball leaving the infield.
When the Twins acquired Ryan from Tampa Bay at the 2021 trade deadline, sending Nelson Cruz to the Rays for half a season, Ryan was known for the unique movement on his 91-mph fastball. That same fastball, on Monday, was up to 96.6 mph.
Kansas City hitters took 12 swings against Ryan’s fastball through the first three innings when he was consistently hitting 95-96 mph with his fastball. They accumulated nine whiffs and three foul balls, completely overwhelmed by Ryan’s primary pitch.
“He’s a different animal when he’s throwing that hard,” catcher Ryan Jeffers said.