The Twins have a comfortable, but not a commanding lead in the American League Central. It shrunk from six and eight games to five and seven, respectively, over the Guardians and Tigers when Minnesota let a game get away in the sixth inning Tuesday in Milwaukee while their two nearest competitors won.
In explaining a key decision that led to Milwaukee's five-run sixth inning, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said Bailey Ober's overall workload this season was a factor.
Though he only conceded that Ober's inning total this season between Class AAA and the majors was "maybe a little bit" of the reason the 6-9 righty didn't come out for the sixth inning, even that much of an admission is troubling to me, as I talked about on Wednesday's Daily Delivery podcast.
While it's true that Ober is at 136⅓ innings this season — after never topping more than 107 in any pro or college season — these things are also true:
*That's not an absurd number of innings. Even if we imagine Ober should make roughly six more starts this season, that would put him at 165 to 170 for the year.
*Ober was pitching well. He had settled down after a shaky first inning to retire the final eight batters he faced. He had allowed just two hits and was sitting at 78 pitches. Ober himself fully expected to go out and pitch the sixth inning based on those facts.
*But most importantly, the Twins need to win now. They aren't at a point where every game is make-or-break, but they are at a point where not maximizing chances to win can make things more uncomfortable than they need to be in the future.
I'm old enough to remember the Twins completely falling apart in a season. Frankly, anyone over the age of 1 has lived through it because it happened in 2022.