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Cruz homers twice, Twins rout Tigers

Minnesota Twins designated hitter Nelson Cruz (23) is greeted by Luis Arraez, left, and Andrelton Simmons after his grand slam during the second inning of a baseball game against the Detroit Tigers, Monday, April 5, 2021, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

DETROIT (AP) — Nelson Cruz hit a drive just foul down the line in right field, narrowly missing a grand slam.

The play was reviewed and the call was upheld — but Cruz could have saved everyone some time if he’d known what would happen on the very next pitch.

Cruz cleared the bases with a home run — this time pulling the ball to left — and the Minnesota Twins were well on their way to a 15-6 rout of the Detroit Tigers on Monday.

“I think a lot of guys hit foul homers and then get emotional,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “You don’t normally see guys do that back to back.”

Cruz added a solo homer and a double, and Matt Shoemaker held Detroit hitless into the fifth inning.

Akil Baddoo hit a grand slam for the Tigers in the ninth, but by then the game was well out of hand. The 22-year-old made his big league debut Sunday and homered on the first pitch thrown to him.

Cruz came up with the bases loaded in the second and the Twins already up 2-0. After his near miss, he connected to cap a five-run inning. Minnesota added five more runs in the fifth, when Cruz hit his solo shot.

Limited to pinch-hitting duty in Minnesota’s opening series at Milwaukee, Cruz was back in his normal role with the return of the designated hitter to the Twins’ lineup. After hitting his two homers, he doubled and scored in the sixth.

Cruz hit a towering fly in the ninth that was caught on the warning track.

Tiger infielder Harold Castro pitched a hitless ninth.

“That was the cleanest inning we had,” Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said.

Detroit scored five with two outs in the bottom half on a solo homer by Victor Reyes and the slam by Baddoo.

“The at-bat before, kind of was seeing the ball well. Realized I just missed a pitch,” Baddoo said. “I was going into my next at-bat just thinking, ‘Hey, think left-center and make sure you stay through it.'”

Shoemaker (1-0) held the Tigers without a hit until Wilson Ramos homered with two outs in the fifth. He allowed three hits in six innings with five strikeouts and earned his first victory since April 9, 2019, before he was beset by injuries.

Shoemaker, a Michigan native, has dominated the Tigers in his career, going 5-1 with a 0.79 ERA in seven starts against Detroit.

JosÈ UreÒa (0-1) lasted only three innings in his Tigers debut. The right-hander allowed five earned runs, four hits and four walks with five strikeouts. He threw 66 pitches in the first two innings alone.

Randy Dobnak, who entered with the Twins up 15-1, allowed those five runs in the ninth but was credited with his first save of the season after pitching the final three innings.

Since saves became an official stat in 1969, Dobnak was the sixth pitcher to earn one while giving up at least five earned runs, according to SportRadar. It hadn’t happened since Jerome Williams of the Los Angeles Angels did it in a four-inning save against Texas on July 30, 2012.

The game was delayed by rain for 52 minutes at the start, and when it began it moved slowly — when the Twins were batting, at least. Minnesota finished with 14 hits and drew 11 walks. Detroit’s six pitchers did combine for 13 strikeouts. The Tigers threw 215 pitches in the game.

“When that happens, we’re all on the same page. They don’t throw anything to hit, let’s walk,” Cruz said. “Be patient and just wait for the right pitch to hit.”

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