
Twins Top Mariners 10-1 After Spark From Woods Richardson's Strong Start And Larnach's Homer
Trevor Larnach homered with three RBIs after Simeon Woods Richardson started with five scoreless innings, and the Minnesota Twins beat the Seattle Mariners 10–1 on Thursday after a rain delay of 4 hours and 22 minutes.
Brooks Lee led off an eight-run sixth against reliever Zach Pop with a home run. Then came RBI doubles from Byron Buxton and Willi Castro, a two-run single by Carlos Correa, and a two-run homer from Matt Wallner in the highest-scoring inning for the Twins since a nine-run outburst in the first at New York on April 13, 2023.
Woods Richardson (3–4) produced a superb follow-up to the six scoreless innings Joe Ryan threw in a 2–0 victory on Wednesday, helping the Twins (39–42) win consecutive games for the first time since taking three straight from June 3–5. They lost 15 of 18 after that.
Emerson Hancock (3–4) started with four scoreless innings for the Mariners before Larnach's two-run shot in the fifth.
Mariners catcher Mitch Garver left in the fifth inning when Wallner fouled a ball off his mask, forcing star Cal Raleigh to finish behind the plate in forfeiture of the designated hitter.
Key moment: Woods Richardson bent low to snag a screaming line drive leading off the fourth, flashing a big smile back at an impressed Julio Rodriguez.
Key stat: The longest rain delay in Target Field's 16 seasons lasted 4:50 on June 22, 2017, before the Twins lost 9–0 to Chicago.
Up next: Seattle starts a three-game series at Texas on Friday, the last stop on a 10-game road trip. Mariners RHP Logan Gilbert (2–2, 3.12 ERA) pitches against Rangers RHP Nathan Eovaldi (4–3, 1.56).
The Twins start a three-game series at MLB-leading Detroit on Friday, considering an opener for RHP David Festa (1–2, 6.39) as they did during his last turn in the rotation. RHP Sawyer Gipson-Long (0–0, 4.58) will pitch for the Tigers.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
32 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Zach McKinstry and Riley Greene both hit homers in Tigers' 10-5 win over the Twins
Zach McKinstry had three hits, including one of Detroit's four home runs, and the Tigers went on to beat the Twins 10–5 on Saturday afternoon. Riley Greene, Kerry Carpenter, and Gleyber Torres also homered for the Tigers. Casey Mize (8–2) gave up two runs on five hits and one walk in 6 2/3 innings. He struck out five as he improved to 5–0 with a 2.00 ERA in six starts at home this season. Bailey Ober (4–6) took the loss, allowing seven runs on 11 hits, including all four home runs. He walked one and struck out five. The Tigers took a 1–0 lead in the second when Spencer Torkelson doubled and scored on a sacrifice fly. After Minnesota went ahead 2–1 on Buxton's two-run homer in the third, Detroit tied the game in the bottom of the inning on Carpenter's homer. Colt Keith made it 3–2 in the fourth with a sacrifice fly, and Torres followed with a two-run homer. Greene led off the fifth with Detroit's third home run to move the lead to 6–2, and McKinstry's lead-off homer in the sixth made it a five-run game. Carlos Correa hit a two-run homer in the eighth, but Wenceel Pérez hit a two-run double in the bottom of the inning. Key moment: The Twins nearly took the lead in the second inning, but Carpenter leaped to keep a fly ball from Ryan Jeffers from clearing the left field fence. Key stat: Buxton homered and stole a base in the same game for the 15th time, tying Gary Gaetti for third place on the Twins' career list. Up next: The teams finish the three-game series in the first Sunday night game at Comerica Park since 2017. Twins RHP Chris Paddock (3–6, 4.64) faces Tigers ace LHP Tarik Skubal (9–2, 2.29), who is 9–0 in his last 14 starts.


Al Arabiya
32 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Search and Annoy: Harrington, NBC's Maltbie Caught in Tiff Over Lost Ball at US Senior Open
A video of Padraig Harrington arguing with NBC on-course reporter Roger Maltbie for not helping him look for a lost ball during his opening round is generating buzz at the US Senior Open. 'Never on a golf course stand and look at somebody looking for a golf ball,' Harrington is seen telling Maltbie on video captured by a local TV reporter outside the scoring area. 'You've played golf all your life. You understand.' The argument stemmed from Thursday's round when Harrington teed off into a thicket of trees on the 15th hole. After about a dozen people unsuccessfully searched for the allowed three minutes, Harrington went back to the tee box for his third shot. He ended up saving bogey and went into the weekend tied for the lead. Maltbie, the longtime on-course reporter who played on the PGA Tour in the 1970s and '80s, was in the area. He told on Saturday he was being asked to report on the scenario and couldn't step away from his job to help in the search. A day after the episode, Harrington and Maltbie aired out their differences near the scoring area. Maltbie can be heard telling Harrington, 'So I should have disobeyed my producer?' In the interview with he said: 'I was very close to saying, 'All these years, all these checks I've gotten from NBC, your name isn't on any of them.' '


Al Arabiya
an hour ago
- Al Arabiya
Red Sox's Cora says Yoshida set to start rehab assignment at Triple-A
The struggling Boston Red Sox could be getting some offensive help soon. Manager Alex Cora said Masataka Yoshida would start a rehab assignment with Triple-A Worcester on Tuesday. The 31-year-old DH/outfielder has been out the entire season following surgery on his right shoulder in October. 'He'll go on a rehab assignment. We'll see how many at-bats he needs,' Cora said Saturday before the Red Sox faced the Toronto Blue Jays at Fenway Park. 'He's moving well, the swing feels great, the throwing has been a lot better. He's been able to bounce back, so we just have to map it out and see how we're going to do it.' Cora said he'd also play some games in the outfield. Last season he was primarily the DH, getting into left field only once in 108 games. In his first season in 2023 after signing a $90-million, five-year free agent deal with the team, he played 85 games in left. On Saturday, Yoshida was shagging fly balls during batting practice in right field, ran the bases while others were hitting, and took BP. Also, third baseman Alex Bregman, who has been sidelined since late May with a strained right quad, ran lightly in the infield and took grounders at third, throwing across the diamond before the Red Sox took BP. 'He's just finishing taking ground balls,' Cora said. 'It was a good day for him and Masa.' When he was injured, Bregman was one of the club's most productive hitters, batting .299 with 11 home runs and 35 RBIs in 51 games. Cora recently said the 31-year-old Bregman isn't expected to return until after the All-Star break. Boston entered Saturday on a season-high six-game losing streak, its longest since September 2022. The Red Sox dropped the opener of a three-game series against Toronto 9–0 on Friday night. The Red Sox signed Bregman as a free agent to a $120-million, three-year contract in mid-February.