
Twins vs. Brewers Tickets, First Pitch Time for Saturday, June 21
Twins vs. Brewers Tickets, First Pitch Time for Saturday, June 21
Kody Clemens and the Minnesota Twins will try to defeat Jackson Chourio and the Milwaukee Brewers at Target Field on Saturday, June 21 at 2:10 p.m. ET (airing on MNNT and FDSWI).
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Twins vs. Brewers Game Info
Game day: Saturday, June 21, 2025
Saturday, June 21, 2025 Game time: 2:10 p.m. ET
2:10 p.m. ET TV channel: MNNT and FDSWI
MNNT and FDSWI Live Stream: Watch LIVE with Fubo! (Regional restrictions may apply)
Watch LIVE with Fubo! Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota Stadium: Target Field
Target Field Twins Starter: TBA
TBA Brewers Starter: TBA
Twins vs. Brewers Tickets For Sale
Twins vs. Brewers offensive insights
The Twins' 51 home runs rank 23rd in Major League Baseball.
Fueled by 144 extra-base hits, Minnesota ranks 22nd in MLB with a .376 slugging percentage this season.
The Twins' .237 batting average ranks 21st in the league this season.
The Brewers average 0.8 home runs per game to rank 25th in MLB action with 48 total home runs.
So far this year, Milwaukee has the third-lowest slugging percentage in baseball (.353).
The Brewers have the 24th-ranked batting average in the league (.232).
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Twins' top hitters
Trevor Larnach is batting .247 this season, with a .318 on-base percentage and a .399 slugging percentage. He has seven home runs and 23 RBI, plus 29 runs scored. His strikeout rate is 21.7%, and his walk rate is 8.6%.
So far this season, Ty France is hitting .254, with a .319 on-base percentage and a .358 slugging percentage. His strikeout rate is 14.6%, and his walk rate is 4.7%. He has four home runs and 30 RBI, plus 20 runs scored.
Harrison Bader is hitting .276, with five home runs and 21 RBI, plus 18 runs scored and six steals on nine attempts. He has a .792 OPS (.359 on-base, .433 slugging). His strikeout rate is 21.6%, and his walk rate is 8.5%.
The Twins' Ryan Jeffers is hitting .253, with a .349 on-base percentage and a .387 slugging percentage. He has three home runs and 18 RBI, plus 15 runs scored. His strikeout rate is 19.8%, and his walk rate is 11%.
Brewers' top hitters
Chourio is hitting .241/.270/.415 this season with a walk rate of 3.6% and a strikeout rate of 21.8%. Additionally, he's swatted eight homers while driving in 29 runs and scoring 31 times. Plus, he's stolen nine bases on 12 attempts.
In 209 plate appearances, Sal Frelick is hitting .294/.362/.401 this season with a walk rate of 8.1% and a strikeout rate of 12%. Additionally, he's slammed three home runs while driving in 18 runs and scoring 22 times. Plus, he's swiped 10 bags on 12 tries.
This season, William Contreras sports a .233 average to go along with a .351 OBP and .344 SLG in 225 plate appearances. He's also swatted five dingers with 24 RBI and 31 runs, including five stolen bases, while putting up a 19.6% strikeout rate and 15.6% walk rate.
At the plate, Brice Turang is hitting .268/.342/.351 this season with a walk rate of 9.9% and a K rate of 22%. Additionally, he's cracked four home runs while knocking in 22 runs and scoring 36 times. Plus, he's stolen 14 bases on 17 attempts.
Twins' injuries
Matt Wallner: 10 Day IL (Hamstring), Danny Coulombe: 15 Day IL (Forearm), Luke Keaschall: 60 Day IL (Forearm), Michael Tonkin: 60 Day IL (Shoulder), Byron Buxton: 7 Day IL (Head)
Brewers' injuries
Garrett Mitchell: 10 Day IL (Oblique), Brandon Woodruff: 15 Day IL (Shoulder), José Quintana: 15 Day IL (Shoulder), Robert Gasser: 60 Day IL (Elbow), Nestor Cortes: 60 Day IL (Elbow), Blake Perkins: 60 Day IL (Shin), Connor Thomas: 60 Day IL (Elbow)
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New York Times
25 minutes ago
- New York Times
Twins' minor-league adventure: Tampa, Sacramento trips marked by ‘difficult' playing conditions
WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The risk simply wasn't worth it for Carlos Correa. Recognizing the soreness developing in the middle of his back after two days of slipping and sliding in a rock-hard batter's box at Sutter Health Park, the Twins shortstop elected to sit out the final two contests of a four-game series at the new, temporary home of the Athletics. Advertisement In abandoning Oakland to spend three seasons in the California state capital before they move to a new ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip, the A's made a controversial decision by voluntarily relocating to a Triple-A stadium they're sharing with a minor-league affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. While the refurbished facility's amenities drew rave reviews from every Twins player interviewed by The Athletic, including Correa, several noted a number of 'minor-league' issues with its playing surface. After playing in West Sacramento and at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, the temporary home of the Tampa Bay Rays and spring training facility for the New York Yankees, during their recent three-city road trip, the Twins have a fresh perspective on Major League Baseball's minor-league issues as the weather heats up. From Tampa's oppressive heat and humidity to its poor outfield lighting and short foul poles to a batter's box in Sacramento multiple players described as akin to hitting on cement and a rigid pitcher's mound that's drawn the ire of hurlers across the league, the Twins experienced the full range of challenges these parks present in playing seven away games against the Rays and A's since May 26. Correa's experience with the batter's box represents one of the bigger hardships Twins players faced during their minor-league adventure. 'It's the worst box I've ever stepped in,' Correa said. 'I like (the park). The ball travels very well. The facilities are good. They did it right. The plate is the only problem. … I'm not going to sacrifice two months of my season because of a couple of at-bats here.' How the clubhouses at both temporary stadiums are arranged isn't an issue. But the playing conditions are a different story. In Sacramento, the dirt and the disconnected dugouts create difficulties for the home and visiting players. Both teams' clubhouses are located beyond the left-field fence at the ballpark, which means players and trainers are often commuting across the field between innings. Advertisement Athletics pitcher Luis Severino voiced his frustration with his home stadium last month. During a typical start, Severino reportedly likes to retreat to the clubhouse between innings to watch film and move around, something he can't do at Sutter Health Park. This season, Severino, who signed a multi-year contract with the A's in free agency, has a 0.87 road ERA and a 6.99 ERA at home. Before their four-game series began Monday, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli joked about how awkward it would be to get ejected, as he did in Seattle on Saturday night. Noting fans described the potential scenario as a walk of shame, Baldelli suggested he'd be worried about how his stride would look with such a long walk. Still, Baldelli determined if an ejection occurred, he'd make the most of it. 'It's the march of triumph,' he said. The batter's box and mound, which are pored over by the grounds crew daily to handle a combined 156-game schedule for the Athletics and Triple-A River Cats, also have been heavily criticized for their firmness. When he pitched in Sacramento on May 24, Philadelphia Phillies starter Zack Wheeler struggled to dig a hole on the mound in front of the rubber with his foot because of the hard clay used. Wheeler said he couldn't 'get into the dirt to drive' through his pitches, which left him throwing 'all arm.' Wheeler's phrasing stuck with Twins pitcher Joe Ryan, who wondered aloud if a firm mound played a role in the significant injury suffered by teammate Pablo López this week in Sacramento. Coming off a daytime start in which he pitched in 100-degree temperatures in Tampa, López suffered a Grade 2 teres major muscle strain on Tuesday and is expected to miss eight to 12 weeks. Ryan is perplexed by how a teammate as fit and process-oriented as López — 'he spends hours a day (warming up) to go play catch' — could suffer such an injury. Advertisement 'The first thing I thought of was Wheeler saying, 'I was all arm when I was here,'' Ryan said. 'Does that play into that? Someone was mentioning it. We're in the big leagues and we have these amenities for a reason. It's to get prepared and go inside if you need to for a second. Whatever your routine is, you can't do that here. You can't do that in Tampa. As (Lopez's) teammate, it makes it sting a little bit more. I don't think Pablo is the kind of guy that's going to say (the mound was the issue), but I'll say it.' During his May 28 start in Tampa, López called a timeout in the first inning for groundskeepers to fix the mound. Ryan also took issue with the mound in Tampa and said it was much different than the one he warmed up on in the bullpen before his start. 'Tampa was a fricking sh– box and they have a massive mound in the bullpen before,' Ryan said. 'It's a huge contrast.' According to players, the issues in Tampa — which is scheduled to be used by the Rays for only the 2025 season after Hurricane Milton destroyed the roof of Tropicana Field last September and caused massive flood damage — include poor outfield lighting, a short porch in right field and short foul poles. The miniature poles likely cost Aaron Judge a home run in an April 20 game as the ball appeared to incorrectly be ruled foul. Poor lighting seemed to hamper Twins outfielder Trevor Larnach's ability to track fly balls in a May 26 loss to the Rays. 'I could see better at Tampa at the beginning of the game and then at night it was really difficult for me,' Larnach said. '(In a regular park), the lights are bright and you see the ball a tad bit better, whether it be in the outfield, at the plate or whatever.' Lighting doesn't seem to be an issue at Sutter Health Park, which has a berm beyond the fence in right field with trees that offers fans a unique way to catch a major-league game. But the lack of a third deck in both stadiums allows wind to impact the ball in different ways. The ball carries extremely well in Sacramento, which Baseball Savant ranks as tops in the majors — tied with the Baltimore Orioles' Camden Yards — in Park Factor, meaning it is the most hitter-friendly park in baseball. Advertisement Athletics outfielder Lawrence Butler hit a three-run homer Monday, a 100.9-mph, 28-degree fly ball, which Ryan and Byron Buxton swore would have been an out at the Twins' home ballpark, Target Field. However, Buxton also benefitted at the plate as the wind turned what likely would have been an out into a two-run double. By comparison, Steinbrenner Field currently is playing as a neutral venue, according to Baseball Savant's Park Factor. 'Big-league stadiums, you don't have the ball dancing like these balls are moving here,' Buxton said of Sacramento. 'My double, fly out, wind takes it, almost takes it out and it's like, 'What?' … (Butler's) ball, I'm (normally) catching at the warning track.' Players described the wind in Tampa as swirling and unpredictable. Twins outfielder Willi Castro raced toward the left-field foul line during a May 27 game, only for the wind to spin the ball back into play — well out of his grasp — for a double. Even the view of left field from the visiting dugout in Tampa is deceiving. From his perch atop the dugout, Baldelli couldn't see any plays that occurred in left field. The park's configuration is such that the visiting dugout juts out into the field of play with the left-field foul pole situated about 15 feet behind where Baldelli stands. 'Every ball that's hit down the left-field line, we think it's foul by like 100 feet,' Baldelli said. 'It looks like it's foul off the bat, like the hitters not even hitting it, and it's getting blown up, and they're fair.' Both parks are expected to heat up like a microwave as summer arrives. The heat issues in Tampa are concerning enough that MLB scheduled the Rays away from home for a 10-game road trip in July and a 12-gamer to the West Coast in August. Despite pitching at night in Tampa on May 27, Twins starter Chris Paddack went through four baseball caps and jerseys as well as multiple undershirts. For the teams' May 28 day game, the temperature was sweltering as Twins players scrambled for minimal shade in the visiting dugout. Advertisement 'I was sweating a ton right after (batting practice),' Twins infielder Royce Lewis said. 'Sweating through batting gloves and stuff. The heat for some guys definitely played a part. To stand out in the sun for hours is depleting.' Still, it's not all bad. Although the layout of the visitors locker room, weight room and cafeteria at Steinbrenner Field is unlike almost any other ballpark in the majors, the two batting cages for visiting teams were lauded by nearly every Twins hitter. Staffers also noted there was ample space to perform their different activities. 'We're finding our bearings,' Baldelli said. 'We're finding meeting rooms and weight rooms. It's not set up where it's all in one space, like guys are typically used to, but it's nothing that we can't get familiar with and figure out.' Similarly, players raved about the behind-the-scenes setup at Sutter Health Park. Multi-million dollar offseason upgrades at the stadium included a renovated visiting clubhouse, a revamped scoreboard and a new playing surface. Though MLB originally wanted the Athletics and River Cats to play on synthetic turf, a decision was made to use real grass. Buxton described the outfield grass as playing faster than the grass at most parks, while Baldelli described the turf as squishy. Stadium officials plan to re-sod the playing surface during the middle of July to help combat dead spots during a stretch where temperatures are expected to soar above 100 degrees. As much as each stadium has its drawbacks, nothing compares to Sacramento's hard dirt, several Twins hitters said. Throughout their four-game series, Twins hitters could be seen slipping in the batter's box when swinging at pitches. Correa slipped during his first at-bat Monday (a double) and tried to improve his footing by changing into catcher Ryan Jeffers' metal spikes. After dealing with plantar fasciitis in each foot over the past two seasons, Correa ditched metal spikes in favor of moldings, comfortable shoes that don't grip the ground as well. But he quickly rid himself of Jeffers' spikes because they began to hurt his feet. Advertisement Over the next two days, Correa's back began to hurt. He experienced back issues earlier in his career and could tell the new soreness was in a different location. He believed it was related to slipping in the batter's box and overcompensating with his back. To test and confirm his hypothesis, Correa hit on flat ground in the indoor batting cages and felt fine each time. At that point, Correa determined he would sit out the final two games of the series rather than risk a severe back injury. 'The plate here is killing me right now,' Correa said. 'It's very slippery. … For us that play with moldings, it's a tough time getting grip on the plate, but it's better than your feet hurting.' (Top photo of Twins reliever Jonah Bride pitching at Sutter Health Park: Scott Marshall / Associated Press)


Newsweek
40 minutes ago
- Newsweek
How to Watch Arizona vs North Carolina: Live Stream College Baseball Super Regionals, TV Channel
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Super Regionals in college baseball have arrived. In the day's first matchup on Friday, Arizona and UNC meet in the Chapel Hill Regional, looking to get off to a good start. The super regionals are a best-of-three series. Game 2 will be played on Saturday, and if necessary, Game 3 will be held on Sunday. Mason White #24 of the Arizona Wildcats celebrates with Aaron Walton #11 after a two run home run in the first inning against the Mississippi State Bulldogs in the Astros Foundation College Classic at Daikin... Mason White #24 of the Arizona Wildcats celebrates with Aaron Walton #11 after a two run home run in the first inning against the Mississippi State Bulldogs in the Astros Foundation College Classic at Daikin Park on March 01, 2025, in Houston, Texas. More Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images How to Watch Arizona vs North Carolina Date: Friday, June 6, 2025 Time: 12:00 PM ET Channel: ESPN2 Stream: Fubo (Try for free) After winning the ACC Tournament in consecutive games, the Tar Heels earned the No. 5 national seed and hosted the Chapel Hill Regional. They took down Holy Cross in the first game of the regional, before matching up in the second game with Oklahoma. They dominated in the win and faced off against Oklahoma the next day, but lost. In a win-or-go-home game of the regional, the Tar Heels took down Oklahoma for a second time. Gavin Gallaher was named the MVP of the Chapel Hill Regional after going 8-for-13 with three home runs and 10 RBIs in the four games for the team. The Wildcats have won their last eight games. They won the Big 12 Tournament with three straight wins. They beat BYU, 4-1, followed by a dominant 12-1 win over West Virginia. In the championship game, they took down TCU 2-1. They entered the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 seed in the Eugene Regional and beat Cal Poly in the first game, 3-2, followed by a 14-4 win over Utah State to qualify for the championship game. They turned around and beat Cal Poly a second time to win the regional. Mason White was the regional MVP. On the season, White has 19 home runs and 70 RBIs. Live stream the Arizona vs UNC game on Fubo: Start your free trial now! Regional restrictions may apply. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
FSU baseball vs. Oregon State prediction, odds, for Game One of Corvallis Super Regional
FSU baseball vs. Oregon State prediction, odds, for Game One of Corvallis Super Regional FSU baseball is playing in its second consecutive Super Regional and the 19th in program history this weekend. The Seminoles have made the cross-country trek to Corvallis, Oregon, and will play the Oregon State Beavers in the Corvallis Super Regional for a spot in the College World Series. Both teams are looking to snap a postseason drought. The Seminoles are looking for that elusive first national championship, and the Beavers have not been to Omaha since 2018, when they won their third national championship. FSU is riding a six-game winning streak in Super Regionals, sweeping Houston State (2017), LSU (2019), and UConn (2024). The LSU series was on the road, and it is the only time FSU has won a Super Regional as the road team. Oregon State has lost its last two Supers, including at home against Auburn in 2022. Here is a look at the updated odds from FanDuel for Game One of FSU vs. Oregon State, and a prediction for the game. The Odds Oregon State Beavers: -120 FSU Seminoles: -106 The Seminoles are slight underdogs against the Beavers, who are riding a four-game winning streak where they outscored their opponents 50-6 and never trailed. Oregon State's Statistical Leaders Batting Average: Aiva Arquette/Gavin Turley (.352) Aiva Arquette/Gavin Turley (.352) Slugging: Aiva Arquette (.670) Aiva Arquette (.670) Home Runs: Aiva Arquette/Gavin Turley (18) Aiva Arquette/Gavin Turley (18) RBI: Aiva Arquette (65) Aiva Arquette (65) Stolen Bases: Easton Talt (10) Florida State's Statistical Leaders Batting Average: Alex Lodise (.405) Alex Lodise (.405) Slugging: Alex Lodise (.736) Alex Lodise (.736) Home Runs: Max Williams (18) Max Williams (18) RBI: Alex Lodise (67) Alex Lodise (67) Stolen Bases: Chase Williams (18) Advice and Prediction Best Bet: Oregon State -120 The Beavers are playing their best baseball of the season and should come out hot to start the series. The Seminoles will keep it close throughout thanks to their offense, but Oregon State wins Game One and sets up an elimination game Saturday for the Seminoles. How to watch, listen to Friday's game Time: 6 p.m. ET Channel: ESPN2 Streaming: ESPN+ Radio: WFLA 100.7 FM or Seminole Sports Network The series between FSU and Oregon State will start Friday at 6 p.m. ET at Goss Stadium at Coleman Field in Corvallis, Oregon. The matchup will be streamed on ESPN+ on Friday with Roxy Bernstein and Devon Travis on the call. The Seminoles are 12-6 on the road this season, Oregon State is 21-3 at home. Follow us @FSUWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida State news, notes, and opinions.