Twins vs Rangers Recap: Larnach, Kreidler power Minnesota to 9-3 win

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Minnesota Crushes Texas in Revenge Matchup
The Twins rolled into Arlington looking for payback. The night before, they'd blown out the Rangers 12–2, and now they wanted more. Texas came in struggling at 35–38, while Minnesota sat at 35–40 but had won three straight. Starter Joe Ryan took the mound for the Twins, ready to keep the hot streak alive. Jack Leiter pitched for the Rangers. You could feel the tension in the air. This was Minnesota's chance to bury Dallas deeper in the standings. The final score told the whole story: Twins 9, Rangers 3. Let's dive into how this dominant performance unfolded from the opening pitch.
First Inning Explosion Sets Tone Early
Minnesota struck lightning fast. Josh Bell stepped up with two outs and ripped an 90 mph changeup to right field. Larnach came flying home. One-nothing Twins. But Minnesota wasn't done. Brooks Lee crushed the next pitch over the right field wall. Two runs scored on that 365-foot bomb. The Rangers were already down 4–0 and the game was barely started. In the fourth inning, Trevor Larnach launched a 419-foot missile to center field, sending Keaschall home. Minnesota kept pounding. The Twins' bats were absolutely alive. Ryan pitched five innings of pure dominance, giving up just three hits and zero runs while striking out seven Rangers.
Rangers Rally Falls Short Against Twins Onslaught
Texas finally woke up in the sixth inning. Wyatt Langford crushed a 366-foot home run to left field off Justin Lawrence. Ezequiel Duran followed with a 374-foot blast of his own. Suddenly it was 7–2. The Rangers had some fight in them after all. But Minnesota answered right back. In the eighth, Ryan Kreidler smashed a 397-foot rocket to right-center. Two more runs scored and Minnesota stretched the lead to 9–2. Texas got one final run in the ninth when Justin Foscue hit a 429-foot solo shot. But it was too little, too late. The Twins walked away with a 9–3 victory. Minnesota improved to 35–40 while Texas fell to 35–38.
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