It wouldn't be possible for the better moment for the twins to come in considering they've lost three straight games to the last team and entered the playoffs with the 11th best record in the U.S. League. But even if the twins abandoned some players on the trade deadline, receiver Ryan Jeffers said their chances weren't over yet.
“The Tigers at the same location last year, seemed to be in the playoffs,” Jeffers noted. Indeed, Detroit opened the game with a .500 and 12-game advantage in three games in the second half, almost the same as today's twins. “They came back and put a very good second half after the sale [players at the trade deadline]. … [It] It doesn't mean you can't go there to win a lot of baseball games and make things fun. ”
Especially balls like Ryan. The right hand beat Manny Machado and Kyle Tucker in the All-Star perfection five days ago, based on his reputation that opened in the second half of the season. He allowed five hits, and although three were extra bases, including Minnike's third-inning home run, Ryan never allowed the Rockies to throw multiple runners-ups on a per-inning basis.
“Everyone played well today,” Ryan said, sharing credibility with the team's offense and defense and erased a pair of Rocky Runners at the base. “I think it's a much easier environment, just free kick.”