Both Shane Bieber and Jose Berrios are talented young righthanders. Both were All-Stars last season and are the unquestioned leaders of their respective rotations.
But on a pleasant Thursday evening during a matchup of two teams expected to battle it out for AL Central supremacy, Bieber stood out as Cleveland downed the Twins 2-0 in the first game of a four-game series between the rivals at Target Field.
After striking out 14 batters on Opening Day against the Royals, Bieber moved up in weight class, took on the Bombasquad and punched just as hard.
Over eight innings, Bieber shut out the Twins on three hits, walked none and struck out 13.
"I don't think we figured him out," Twins third baseman Josh Donaldson said. "I feel like he did a great job. On a scouting scale of 20-80, that was like 70 command tonight with the heater."
With 27 strikeouts in his first two starts, Bieber tied a major league record set by Karl Spooner in 1954. In a short season, Bieber's dominance is a reminder to the Twins how tough Cleveland can be. The Indians won last year's season series 10-9 and now have landed the first blow in the first of 10 games between the clubs this season.
Berrios was outgunned in this matchup, falling behind hitters and running his pitch count up to 96 over five innings.
Signs of trouble flashed for Berrios in the second inning, when he needed 27 pitches to get three outs. That inning included a wild pitch that allowed Franmil Reyes to advance to second and a pitch that plunked Domingo Santana on the wrist.