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Perkins wins first as Twins batter Rangers
MINNESOTA 11, TEXAS 4
 

By Anthony Maggio
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

MINNEAPOLIS (Ticker) -- Former first-round draft pick Glen
Perkins was not pleased when he was sent to Class AAA Rochester
after spring training. But he heeded the team's advice and it
paid off for him on Tuesday.

The lefthander threw 6 1/3 strong innings and was buoyed by a
seven-run third-inning outburst from his teammates as the
Minnesota Twins topped the Texas Rangers, 11-4, at the
Metrodome.

Perkins (1-1) allowed three runs - two earned - on six hits with
no walks and three strikeouts en route to his first major
league victory - the second straight night a Twins pitcher
accomplished the feat.

Bobby Korecky won his first big league game against Texas on
Monday.

"I think they had a plan - they laid it out for me when I was
there and I didn't really believe them. I didn't want to
believe them," Perkins said of the Twins hierarchy. "I knew
that I could pitch here and knew that I would pitch here again.
It's just a matter of being that guy when they needed somebody.

"The only way to do that was to pitch well. I wasn't going to
get back here if I didn't pitch well and I knew that."

The Twins wanted Perkins to stretch out his arm in the minors
before returning to the parent club as a starter.

Perkins, who had pitched strictly in relief in parts of the
previous two seasons, apparently learned to trust his changeup,
which was his most effective pitch and kept the Texas hitters
off-balance.

"He's locating the ball a lot better, his changeup that's the
best changeup we've seen him have here," Minnesota manager Ron
Gardenhire said. "We've always seen the deception and now
you're seeing the breaking ball and changeup along with it.
It's development. He's getting there. He's throwing the ball
very well for us and that's huge."

While Perkins was cruising, Texas righthander Doug Mathis was
having an evening to forget.

Making his first major league start, Mathis (1-1) got little
help from his defense and threw just 38 of his 70 pitches for
strikes before being sent to the showers after just 2 1/3
innings.

Mathis, who was also making his first major league appearance on
the road, allowed nine runs - six earned - on eight hits with
four walks.

His first pitch of the game turned into a triple by Carlos
Gomez, and things didn't get any better from there.

"He was nervous," Texas manager Ron Washington said. "You could
see it after that first triple."

Alexi Casilla followed with an RBI single and Joe Mauer doubled
to put runners on second and third with no outs. Casilla was
thrown out at home on Michael Cuddyer's fielder's choice, but
Jarrod Saltalamacchia threw wildly to third trying to throw out
Mauer, allowing him to score on the error.

After getting out of the second inning unscathed, things quickly
unraveled in the third for the Rangers.

Casilla, Mauer and Justin Morneau all singled to start the
inning - with Morneau's hit plating Casilla - and Cuddyer
snapped an 0-for-10 slump with an RBI double to push the lead to
4-0.

"The few pitches he made that were good pitches, they hit them,"
Washington said. "Especially that one Cuddyer hit. I don't
know how he hit that."

Jason Kubel then walked to load the bases and Delmon Young
followed with a tailor-made double-play grounder to Ian Kinsler.
But the Rangers' second baseman couldn't field the ball
cleanly, allowing another run to score and everyone to reach
safely.

Mike Lamb drilled an RBI single and Adam Everett hit an RBI
fielder's choice that forced Lamb out at second for the first
out of the frame. But Mathis followed with a five-pitch walk to
Carlos Gomez and got the hook from Washington.

Franklyn German came on and walked Casilla to force in another
run before Mauer's sacrifice fly and Morneau's flyout ended the
inning. The seven runs scored were a season high in one inning
for the Twins.

"The one error out there, we took advantage of that," Gardenhire
said. "Got us a nice lead and kind of a relaxing evening after
a long night (12 innings) last night that was back and forth."

Perkins made sure the evening would remain stress-free,
scattering three hits among the first 12 batters he faced and
then setting down nine in a row before he hit Milton Bradley
with a pitch to lead off the seventh inning.

An error by Casilla on David Murphy's one-hopper that should
have started a double play opened the floodgates, as Perkins
then gave up singles to three of the next four batters, with
German Duran's first-pitch single ending Perkins' night.

Kinsler hit an RBI single off Brian Bass to add to Perkins' run
total, but he still went a career-best 6 1/3 innings.

Minnesota tacked on two more in the bottom half of the seventh
on Young's RBI triple and Lamb's sacrifice fly. Lamb was the
only Twins starter who didn't score at least one run, but he
joined Young and Casilla with two RBI.

Josh Hamilton drove in a run in the top of the ninth inning, but
the Rangers still lost their third straight game - their
longest losing streak since dropping seven in a row from April
18 through April 24.

Losers of two in a four-game series against the Twins, Texas
failed in its bid to win eight consecutive series, which would
have tied the club record.


 
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