Final
Minnesota leads 3-2 (as of 10/5)
| Game 1: Tuesday, October 1 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Minnesota | 7 | Final |
| Oakland | 5 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 2: Wednesday, October 2 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Minnesota | 1 | Final |
| Oakland | 9 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 3: Friday, October 4 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Oakland | 6 | Final |
| Minnesota | 3 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 4: Saturday, October 5 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Oakland | 2 | Final |
| Minnesota | 11 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 5: Sunday, October 6 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Minnesota | 5 | Final |
| Oakland | 4 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
1:00 PM ET, October 5, 2002
Mall of America Field, Minneapolis, Minnesota
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- As the Oakland Athletics are finding out, the Minnesota Twins are a tough team to eliminate.
The team that baseball couldn't get rid of flustered Tim Hudson with a seven-run fourth inning, Eric Milton shut down the A's and the Twins forced a decisive fifth game in the American League Division Series with an 11-2 victory Saturday.| Game 4 at a glance | |
HeroA.J. Pierzynski started Minnesota's two-run rally in the second with a leadoff single and then drew a crucial walk off Tim Hudson, when he fouled off two pitches with two strikes, in the seven-run outburst in the fourth.Goats Shortstop Miguel Tejada and first baseman Scott Hatteberg both made throwing errors on routine plays in the fourth (all five runs off Hudson in the inning were unearned).Key move Art Howe's strategy to use a three-man rotation didn't pay off, as Hudson, while undone by his fielders, was not sharp. Mark Mulder will pitch Game 5 on three days' rest, while the Twins will start Brad Radke on four days' rest.Key stat Zero. Number of career starts Mulder has made on three days' rest.Looking ahead Mulder was 1-1 with a 2.16 ERA in three starts vs. the Twins this year and then held them to one run in six innings in Game 2. He lost Game 5 of the Division Series to the Yankees last season. Radke gave up three runs in 15 innings against the A's in the regular season, but gave up five runs (one earned) in Game 1. |
Given new life when the owners' contraction plan was blocked in court just before spring training, Minnesota is one victory away from the AL Championship Series.
''With this group, it seems like our backs have been against the wall since we were born,'' said first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz, who went 3-for-4 with a two-run homer. Game 5 is Sunday afternoon in Oakland, with Game 2 winner Mark Mulder pitching for the A's against Brad Radke. ''That's what we needed,'' center fielder Torii Hunter said. ''I think we do have a little momentum going. We've got another crack at Mulder -- now we'll see what we can do with him.'' Most Valuable Player candidate Miguel Tejada gave Oakland an early lead with a two-run homer, but his throwing error started the fateful fourth and led to another early exit by Hudson. ''It just started snowballing,'' Hudson said. ''They did a great job of taking advantage of our miscues. That's what they're good at.'' Oakland was forced to a fifth game in the opening round for the third consecutive year. The A's, eliminated by the New York Yankees the past two seasons, lost for the fifth time in a row when they were one victory away from the ALCS. ''We can't worry about that,'' Minnesota left fielder Jacque Jones said. ''They're a great team -- they're still dangerous.'' Hudson frequently went deep in the count and wound up throwing 90 pitches in 3 1/3 innings -- his shortest outing since lasting three innings on Sept. 19, 2001, against Texas. The starter in both of Oakland's defeats this series, Hudson allowed seven runs (two earned), five hits and two walks and has given up 11 runs in 8 2/3 innings of the series. He got a no-decision in Game 1. Milton (1-0) gave up six hits, two runs and a walk while striking out three. ''We weren't able to do anything against him,'' A's first baseman Scott Hatteberg said. ''He shut us down.''
Luis Rivas scored on Scott Hatteberg's throwing error in the fourth.
Game notes
Jack Morris, a Minnesota native who threw 10 shutout innings in the Twins' 1-0 Game 7 victory over Atlanta in the 1991 World Series, threw out the ceremonial first pitch to Twins third base coach Al Newman -- an infielder on the '91 team. ... Mientkiewicz became just the second player to get two hits in an inning during a division series. Chuck Knoblauch did it for the New York Yankees in 2000 against Oakland. ... The Twins' seven-run fourth was the most by any team in a division series, but then the Angels scored eight in an inning later in the day against the Yankees. ... Milton was the first Twin to survive the first inning without a run this series.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press
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Scoring Summary
| OAK | MIN | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3rd | M Tejada homered to left, S Hatteberg scored. | 2 | 0 | |
| 3rd | C Guzman grounded out to shortstop, A Pierzynski scored. | 2 | 1 | |
| 3rd | D Ortiz hit a ground rule double to left, J Jones scored, C Koskie to third. | 2 | 2 | |
| 4th | A Pierzynski scored, L Rivas to third on wild pitch by T Hudson. | 2 | 4 | |
| 4th | C Guzman grounded into fielder's choice to first, L Rivas scored on throwing error by first baseman S Hatteberg, J Jones to second. | 2 | 5 | |
| 4th | C Koskie singled to center, J Jones scored, C Guzman to third. | 2 | 6 | |
| 4th | C Guzman scored, C Koskie to second on wild pitch by T Lilly. | 2 | 7 | |
| 4th | T Hunter doubled to left center, C Koskie scored. | 2 | 8 | |
| 4th | D Mientkiewicz singled to left center, T Hunter scored. | 2 | 9 | |
| 7th | D Mientkiewicz homered to right, T Hunter scored. | 2 | 11 | |
| View complete Play-By-Play | ||||


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