Finally, at .500, striped twins seize giants

A .500 record may not be too visible for an observer of the rankings.
However, for the minnesota twins, the .500 sign is significant and this season provides optimism.
After starting 7-15 and a little longer a week ago, after a record of 13-20, Minnesota won seven consecutive matches in 2025 to reach .500.
Gemini will try to continue the winning lines when they play San Francisco Giants in the final of a three -game series in Minneapolis in the afternoon Sunday afternoon.
Minnesota will try his second series in a row after overthrowing Baltimore Orioles in three flat games at the beginning of the week.
“It makes you feel great,” the twin right -handed Joe Ryan said. “Vibes is really good. Streaky doesn’t feel. We beat good teams and beat them with quality baseball. So he just adds another layer of confidence.”
San Francisco is eager for a spark on the plate after losing the 2-1 serial opener on Friday 3-1 and then on Saturday. The giants have only five runs in the last three matches after winning 11 shots against Chicago Cubs after scoring 14 goals on Tuesday.
“I felt a little more energy (Saturday),” Giants Melvin said. “There were times when I thought we could overcome it, but we couldn’t.”
Right-handed LANDEN ROUPP (2-3, 4.89 ERA) will try to help save a game for giants in the serial final. ROPP lost games one after the other, including the latest trip, where on Monday, five strokes (two wins) Cubs with 9-2 losses.
ROPP never met twins in her career. In seven matches against its competitors (three starters), Interleague is 2-0 with ERA.
The Gemini will resist with the right-hand Pablo Lopez (3-2, 2.18 ERA), which plans to start the seventh of the season on Sunday. Lopez has 37 strikes in 33 strokes.
At the beginning of the last beginning, Lopez held Orioles on Monday, two strokes in two strokes. He walked one and went to the highest level of the season with a 9-1 victory.
Lopez went to 0-1 with 2.10 ERA and launched five careers against giants.
Gemini Third Master Royce Lewis hopes to get rid of a collapse that has hunted it since last week from a stretched hamstring. Lewis went to 0 to 0 on Saturday and was 13 to 13 for the season.
Twin manager Rocco Baldelli said he saw good signs to indicate that he could end his cold start from 25 -year -old Lewis.
“He finds his timing and finds his swing, and he works hard every day to do it, and now he’s here.” He said. “We have seen good transitions and good transitions from him, and now he’s just stacking each other.
“Finding this consistency on the plate.
-FELD level media