Minnesota at Cleveland, Friday night, and the matchup card tells you everything you need to feel uneasy if you're a Twins fan. Parker Messick is sitting on a 2.40 ERA with a 0.92 WHIP and opponents hitting .193 against him. Connor Prielipp is 1-0 with a 3.86 — fine, but he's got a grand total of a few weeks of MLB service time after getting called up April 22.


The Guardians snapped a 3-game skid before this one and are right at .500, which feels low for a team getting this kind of pitching. Messick's only real hiccup of the year was a 3-homer afternoon in Oakland on May 3 — before that he ran a 1.73 ERA through April and pitched his way into actual ace conversations. The Twins, meanwhile, are 16-22 and the rotation is held together with athletic tape.

- Day-To-DayCory Lewis SP — no
- Day-To-DayJulian Merryweather RP — no
- Day-To-DayMatt Canterino SP — no
- Day-To-DayWalker Jenkins CF — no
- 15-Day-ILCody Laweryson RP — no
- 15-Day-ILGarrett Acton RP — no
- 15-Day-ILCole Sands RP — no
- 15-Day-ILMick Abel SP — no

- Day-To-DayCarlos Hernandez RP — no
- 10-Day-ILGabriel Arias SS — no
- 15-Day-ILAndrew Walters RP — no
- 15-Day-ILShawn Armstrong RP — no
That injury card is brutal. Pablo Lopez and David Festa are on the 60-day. Mick Abel and Cole Sands are on the 15. Walker Jenkins is day-to-day. Cleveland is dealing with stuff too — Gabriel Arias at short, a few bullpen arms — but nothing close to what Minnesota is navigating. It's why a rookie lefty is making this start in the first place.
Prielipp is the real story for the Twins side. Top pitching prospect, struck out 6 in 4 innings in his debut against the Mets, and the stuff plays. But this is a different test: a Guardians lineup that, even without Arias, has Jose Ramirez anchoring it at home, and a ballpark that doesn't tend to bail out young arms who miss spots.
The market lines up with the eye test. Cleveland is a -143 home favorite, the run line sits at -1.5, and the public money on DK is leaning home pretty heavily on both the spread and the moneyline. Total is a tidy 7.5 with juice to the under at Pinnacle. None of the EVs are screaming value — this is a clean, efficiently-priced game.
Bottom line: if Prielipp pitches to his ceiling, the Twins steal one and the AL Central gets interesting in a hurry. If he pitches like a rookie making his third start, Messick eats them up and Cleveland gets back above .500 going into the weekend. Lean is obvious, but baseball, so.
