After allowing a two-run homer to Bryce Harper in the first inning, Ober allowed a leadoff single to Bryson Stott in the second -- and that was it. From that point forward, Ober faced the minimum through the end of his seven innings, with the only other baserunner he allowed coming on a leadoff walk to Trea Turner in the sixth, which was immediately erased by a Harper double play.
“I feel like the biggest thing, when stuff’s going right, is the mental side,” Ober said. “You’re on the current pitch, and then when that one’s over, you’re on to the next one. Nothing else is really going through your mind, you’re just in that kind of flow state of getting outs and executing pitches -- and right now, I’m feeling pretty good.
Couple this sort of outing with, say, Ober’s 89-pitch, 10-strikeout complete game in Oakland on June 22, and he certainly looks in line for a more prominent role this season than last, when he was on a short leash as the option behind the clear front two in López and Sonny Gray.
With López trying to right the ship in the second half, a reliable Ober and Joe Ryan (four earned runs in six innings against the NL Central-leading Brewers on Sunday) become even more significant -- as does whatever help could potentially be on the way. The challenge is that the Twins’ tricky payroll situation looms. They cut entering this year and their television contract again expires at the end of the season, which could limit their ability to take on more without, say, trading more prospect capital to get their trade partner to eat salary.
The Twins have shied away from rental starters in the past -- such as Jack Flaherty or Yusei Kikuchi in this year’s crop -- but that profile could perhaps make more sense this season due both to the longer-term payroll questions and the fact that the Twins’ top seven rotation options this year remain under contract next season.
With that said, Minnesota is always looking for controllable players, Falvey said, and it remains open to more creative need-for-need deals, if those possibilities arise.
“There is never a situation where we’re not keeping some eye on the future while we’re keeping it on the present,” Falvey said.
But whatever happens, don’t expect much until the 11th hour.
“The reality, in our sport, is a lot of this comes down as close to the end,” Falvey said. “I know it feels proximate to the Deadline, but in baseball hours and terms, it's an eternity between now and then.”