Austin American-Statesman

Berrios strikes out 12 as Twins blank Rangers

Career-best outing in seven innings holds Texas to three hits, ends threegame losing streak by Minnesota.

- By Brian Hall

Once Jose Berrios escaped a jam MINNEAPOLI­S — in the first inning, the rest of the day belonged to the ace right-hander.

Berrios struck out a career-best 12 in seven innings, helping the Minnesota Twins beat Bartolo Colon and the Texas Rangers 2-0 on Sunday.

Shin-Soo Choo jumped on Berrios’ first-pitch fastball for a leadoff double, but Berrios settled down before the Rangers could grab an early lead.

“Yeah, he surprised me,” Berrios said through an interprete­r. “I threw a fastball right down the pipe and he obviously connected, as you guys know. That kind of gave me a heads up like, ‘Oh, OK, game on here.’”

Eddie Rosario had two hits for the Twins, who snapped a three-game losing streak. Bobby Wilson and Robbie Grossman each singled in a run.

Berrios (8-5, 3.15 ERA) surrendere­d just three hits while improving to 3-0 in June. Trevor Hildenberg­er pitched a perfect eighth and Fernando Rodney finished the three-hitter for his 17th save.

The Rangers had won seven in a row and missed out on a chance for a perfect six-game road trip. Colon (4-5, 4.72) yielded two runs and seven hits in seven innings.

“I think I pitched a great game, but I have to give credit to Berrios because he also pitched a great game too,” Colon said through an interprete­r.

Choo reached base safely for the 37th straight game with the leadoff double. He advanced to third on Adrian Beltre’s two-out single to left, but didn’t try for home with Rosario charging the ball. Berrios then struck out Rougned Odor to end the inning.

No other Texas runner reached second against Berrios. Only four batted balls left the infield, three coming in the first.

“Sometimes you’ve got to tip your hat to a guy that throws the ball extremely well,” Rangers manager Jeff Banister said. “We saw him last year, very similar stuff, electric fastball, very loose arm, hard to pick up the release point off of him mixed with a solid breaking ball and changeup, just kept us off balance.”

Getting in a groove

Berrios retired 14-of-16 batters at one point and struck out at least two batters in each of the first four innings. Berrios has allowed eight earned runs over his last 34⅓ innings (2.10 ERA).

“Every time when I warm him up before the game, I have in my head that it’s going to be a special day,” said Wilson, who was behind the plate for the Twins. “He’s just that electric of a pitcher and has that good of stuff. You just have a good feeling every time you see him on the mound. His pure stuff is elite in the game.”

Notes: There were no further incidents after an intriguing sequence during Texas’ 9-6 win on Saturday. Jurickson Profar stole second base in the fourth inning with a 9-2 lead. Profar was later hit on the leg by reliever Addison Reed with a pitch that appeared intentiona­l. The interactio­n drew a quip from Twins manager Paul Molitor when he was asked before Sunday’s game about the three hit-by-pitches for Profar . ... Joey Gallo was back in the lineup after leaving Saturday’s game with left hamstring tightness. Gallo said the injury has lingered for much of the season but he has played through it. He was at designated hitter on Sunday after playing first base on Saturday.

Up next: LHP Cole Hamels (4-6, 3.41) starts on Monday as Texas returns home against the San Diego Padres. Hamels has a 2.89 ERA over his past seven starts and has pitched into the seventh inning in five of the appearance­s. San Diego counters with LHP Joey Lucchesi (3-3, 3.86).

 ?? HANNAH FOSLIEN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Texas’ Joey Gallo, who left Saturday’s game with left hamstring tightness, returned to be the Rangers’ designated hitter Sunday. He went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts, lowering his batting average to .192.
HANNAH FOSLIEN / GETTY IMAGES Texas’ Joey Gallo, who left Saturday’s game with left hamstring tightness, returned to be the Rangers’ designated hitter Sunday. He went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts, lowering his batting average to .192.
 ?? PHOTOS BY HANNAH FOSLIEN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Ronald Guzman of the Rangers tags out the Twins’ Eddie Rosario on a fourth-inning pickoff play initiated by pitcher Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Rosario had led off the inning with a single to center.
PHOTOS BY HANNAH FOSLIEN / GETTY IMAGES Ronald Guzman of the Rangers tags out the Twins’ Eddie Rosario on a fourth-inning pickoff play initiated by pitcher Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Rosario had led off the inning with a single to center.
 ??  ?? Robbie Grossman gets congratula­tions from his Twins teammates after he scored in the fifth inning on Bobby Wilson’s single to left, breaking a scoreless tie. In the next inning, Grossman’s RBI single to left put Minnesota ahead 2-0. It was one of eight Minnesota hits; Grossman finished the day 2 for 3.
Robbie Grossman gets congratula­tions from his Twins teammates after he scored in the fifth inning on Bobby Wilson’s single to left, breaking a scoreless tie. In the next inning, Grossman’s RBI single to left put Minnesota ahead 2-0. It was one of eight Minnesota hits; Grossman finished the day 2 for 3.

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