Minnesota

Detroit Tigers’ Kenta Maeda hammered in 7-inning 12-3 loss to Minnesota Twins

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MINNEAPOLIS — Detroit Tigers second baseman Colt Keith swung so aggressively that his helmet didn’t stay on his head. As a result, he hit the ball 426 feet, into the second deck in right-center field for the fifth home run of his rookie season.

Keith jogged around the bases without his helmet.

The Fourth of July fireworks from Keith looked pretty, but a deluge of runs, and then an actual deluge, left the Tigers with an ugly 12-3 loss to the Minnesota Twins in Thursday’s finale of the three-game series at Target Field, all because right-hander Kenta Maeda struggled again.

Maeda had already been tagged for multiple runs when the rain started falling in Minneapolis, but the umpires kept the game going into the seventh inning. Eventually, they stopped it, and after a brief rain delay, the game was called with two outs in the bottom of the seventh.

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With Thursday’s loss, the Tigers (39-48) have dropped seven of their past eight series. Also, the Tigers haven’t won two games in a row since winning three in a row from June 2-4. Since then, they’ve lost 18 of 26 games.

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Maeda signed a two-year, $24 million contract with the Tigers, owed $14 million in 2024 and $10 million in 2025. President of baseball operations Scott Harris expected Maeda to help the young pitchers learn to command their pitches.

He owns a 6.71 ERA in 15 starts.

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This time, the 36-year-old allowed nine runs on nine hits and three walks with three strikeouts across 3⅔ innings, throwing 88 pitches. The 36-year-old continues to increase his fastball velocity, but he can’t command any of his pitches.

Maeda squandered a three-run lead to the Twins.

Keith, whom the Tigers signed to a six-year, $28.6 million contract before his first MLB game, provided a 1-0 lead when he turned on a middle-in slider from right-hander Bailey Ober for a solo home run with two strikes and one out in the first inning. The distance of 426 feet marked the longest homer of his career.

In 50 games beginning May 1, Keith is hitting .281 with all five of his home runs.

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The Tigers tacked on two more runs in the second inning for a 3-0 advantage, thanks to a two-strike, two-out double from Jake Rogers.

From there, everything fell apart for the Tigers.

Kenta Maeda struggles

The Twins torched Maeda, who pitched for the Twins from 2020-23, for two runs in the second inning, three runs in the third inning and four runs in the fourth inning.

In the third inning, the Twins took a 4-3 lead when Max Kepler delivered a two-run single with two outs. An ensuing infield single from Manuel Margo pushed the Twins’ lead to 5-3 in the third.

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The Twins broke open the game in the fourth inning after Maeda retired the first two batters. He then walked two batters, opening the door for Jose Miranda’s two-run double off Maeda’s slider and Ryan Jeffers’ two-run home run off Maeda’s splitter.

The score was 9-3 when Maeda walked off the mound.

Miranda finished 5-for-5 with three RBIs, posting three doubles and two singles. Jeffers went 3-for-4 with four RBIs and Kepler went 2-for-4 with two RBIs, providing the other multi-hit performances for the Twins.

Maeda, meanwhile, generated 11 whiffs on 41 swings — a 26.8% whiff rate — with five sliders, one splitter, two sinkers, one sweeper and two cutters. He entered Thursday’s start averaging a 22% whiff rate in his first 15 outings, much worse than last year’s 28.2% whiff rate in 21 games.

More bad pitchers

Left-handed reliever Joey Wentz replaced Maeda in the fourth inning and covered 2⅓ innings. He surrendered two runs (one earned run) on three hits and three walks with one strikeout.

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The Twins grabbed an 11-3 lead with Jeffers’ two-run single on a ground ball to Wentz. Only one runner should’ve scored, but Wentz threw the ball away, which allowed the second runner to score on the play.

Right-handed reliever Shelby Miller gave up one run in the seventh inning, making it 12-3, and hit a batter in the head because a pitch slipped out of his hand. After that, the game entered its terminal rain delay.

Wentz has a 5.11 ERA; Miller has a 6.41 ERA.

Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.

Listen to our weekly Tigers show “Days of Roar” every Monday afternoon on demand at freep.com, Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. And catch all of our podcasts and daily voice briefing at freep.com/podcasts.

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