The Michael Pineda suspension put the Twins in a real bind when it comes to their postseason rotation. Then again, the hallmarks of this 2019 team – aside from massive amounts of home runs – have been resiliency and a creative use of the pitching staff.
Resiliency was on display once again Tuesday, when the Twins rallied twice in extra innings for a 9-8 victory over the White Sox that reduced their magic number to seven.
And the combination of resiliency and creative use of pitching was perhaps never more evident than this past Saturday, when the Twins swept a doubleheader from Cleveland despite not having a traditional starting pitcher in either game. Those throwing in relief in both games combined for 11.1 shutout innings, keying the victories.
At the risk of putting too much emphasis on a small sample size and falling prey to recency bias, I'm starting to think the Twins' ideal postseason rotation isn't so much a rotation at all but a collection of arms designed to maximize the chance to get 27 outs with the least damage. Assuming the Twins go on to win the division, which they seized control of with that doubleheader sweep, they will face either the Yankees or Astros in the division series. Both are extremely tall orders and will require every possible optimization.
Here's my 12-man postseason pitching staff:
Jose Berrios; Jake Odorizzi; Martin Perez; Taylor Rogers; Trevor May; Sergio Romo; Tyler Duffey; Zack Littell; Brusdar Graterol; Devin Smeltzer; Kyle Gibson; One of these two — Randy Dobnak or Lewis Thorpe.
Here's how I would line it up pitching-wise against either opponent in a five-game series:
Game 1: Jose Berrios. He's still your best chance at a deep start and to match another team's ace. He gets the ball in Game 1. If he's on, you ride him for 6-7 innings and hope to only use 2-3 relievers to finish the game.