Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and best bet for today’s baseball game between the Minnesota Twins and the Kansas City Royals.
Kansas City and Minnesota return to Target Field after Thursday’s opener captured both teams’ current volatility. The Royals won 8-6 after a 67-minute rain delay, scoring three runs in the ninth after Minnesota had finally moved ahead. Kansas City has won two straight, including Wednesday’s 5-2 victory over Cincinnati, but still carries the shape of a flawed road team. Minnesota has lost seven of its last nine, yet Thursday did not look like a dead offense. The Twins hit four solo homers, with Byron Buxton launching a 430-foot leadoff shot, Kody Clemens going deep twice, and Victor Caratini adding a homer, double, and two RBI. The series opener left a clear afterimage: power is present, lead protection is suspect, and both teams can drag the game away from the starters. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Minnesota Twins and the Kansas City Royals.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
Michael Wacha gives Kansas City the sturdier starting profile, though the edges have softened. He enters 4-3 with a 3.23 ERA, 1.12 WHIP, and 65 strikeouts across 75.1 innings. Before Sunday, Wacha had stacked five consecutive quality starts, then Texas reached him for six runs, eight hits, and four walks over five innings. His road work also leaves room for Minnesota pressure: 35 innings, 30 hits, 16 earned runs, five homers, 16 walks, and a 4.11 ERA across six starts away from Kauffman Stadium. The contact-management numbers remain solid, with 88.6 mph average exit velocity allowed, a 38% hard-hit rate, 7.2% barrel rate, .295 wOBA allowed, and .314 xwOBA allowed. Wacha can still win with sequencing and soft contact, but his recent command leak matters against a lineup that just hit four balls over the wall.
Zebby Matthews brings a more deceptive line for Minnesota. His 1-3 record and 4.63 ERA make him look vulnerable, but the expected profile is better than the surface. He owns a 9.26 K/9, 1.54 BB/9, 3.01 FIP, 4.60 xFIP, and 3.72 SIERA through 23.1 innings. Matthews has also held hitters to a .308 wOBA, .276 xwOBA, .337 xwOBAcon, 36.9% hard-hit rate, and 89.5 mph average exit velocity. That is a credible command-and-contact foundation. The damage problem is more concentrated. Matthews has allowed 1.93 HR/9 with a 12.3% barrel rate, and Kansas City’s confirmed order gives him little room for elevated mistakes. Carter Jensen, Bobby Witt Jr., Vinnie Pasquantino, Salvador Perez, and Jac Caglianone give the Royals five immediate chances to turn one bad pitch into two runs.
Minnesota’s confirmed lineup lost some heft without Josh Bell, but it did not lose its damage path. Buxton leads off with 18 homers, 28 RBI, and an .871 OPS, and Thursday’s first-inning blast reinforced the danger of treating him like a mere table-setter. Clemens now becomes more important in the three-hole after a two-homer night, especially with his recent extra-base run also including a May 29 homer, May 30 double, and May 30 triple. Trevor Larnach keeps another left-handed bat in the top five, while Caratini gives the bottom half a fresh pulse after going 3-for-4 in the opener. The order of Buxton, Brooks Lee, Clemens, Austin Martin, Larnach, Luke Keaschall, Caratini, Ryan Kreidler, and James Outman is imperfect. It still has enough left-handed lift and recent power to make Wacha work deep into counts.
Kansas City’s offensive case is less efficient, but not empty. The Royals are hitting .238/.313/.380 against right-handed pitching, with 71 doubles, three triples, 45 homers, 174 RBI, and 158 walks. That split explains why their run production can stall, even when the ball comes off the bat well. Witt is the exception who can bend any matchup. He owns a 93.5 mph average exit velocity, 52.7% hard-hit rate, 13.2% barrel rate, .357 wOBA, and .391 xwOBA. Massey is the immediate form piece, despite batting seventh. He went 2-for-4 with a homer Thursday, drove in the go-ahead run Wednesday, and is 11-for-25 with three homers, seven RBI, a .440 average, and an .840 slugging percentage over his last seven games. One lineup spot trims his plate-appearance ceiling. It does not erase how well he is seeing the ball.
Royals vs. Twins pick, best bet
The late innings are the easiest place to distrust order. Kansas City’s relief group has carried one of baseball’s worst season-long bullpen ERAs, and Lucas Erceg’s 6.45 ERA has done little to stabilize the ninth. The Royals have mixed and matched for recent outs, but the group still invites stress when Wacha leaves traffic behind. Minnesota’s bullpen enters with fresher damage. Taylor Rogers allowed the go-ahead runs Thursday, and the Twins’ relief group has posted a 6.75 ERA over the last seven days. The setting adds another complication. Thursday’s game already lost rhythm to rain, and Target Field again carries storm risk in the evening window. Any interruption that shortens starter length or changes bullpen deployment matters in a game with two compromised relief bridges.
The best bet is Over 8.5 runs (-111). Minnesota’s team total had appeal before the confirmed lineup, but Bell’s absence and Martin hitting cleanup make that route narrower. Kansas City’s team total is live, though the Royals’ weaker right-handed split and Massey’s seventh spot add volatility. The full-game total keeps more paths in play. Wacha brings road walk and homer cracks. Matthews brings better expected numbers, but also a high barrel rate and nearly two homers allowed per nine. Minnesota just showed immediate power across multiple lineup pockets, while Kansas City brings Witt’s contact quality, Massey’s heater, and enough left-handed pressure to punish mistakes. Add two shaky bullpens and weather-related starter-length risk, and the game has more scoring outlets than the number suggests.
Best bet: Over 8.5 runs (-111)
Projected score: Twins 5, Royals 4
Best bet: Twins vs. Royals o8.5 total runs (-110)
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