MINNEAPOLIS -- The last time Tarik Skubal gave up a home run to a left-handed hitter, Freddie Freeman took him deep to right-center field at Comerica Park. It was July 12, 2024, the Friday before last year’s All-Star break. When Twins first baseman Edouard Julien got a 95.1 mph sinker at the top of the strike zone and crushed it a Statcast-projected 410 feet to the right-field concourse Thursday night at Target Field, it marked just the second lefty-lefty home run Skubal had given up since the start of last season and the first since Freeman.
Thirty-nine days before that, then-Astros reliever Rafael Montero tossed a scoreless eighth inning in relief before Houston rallied against the Cardinals to earn Montero the victory. It was his last Major League win until he took the mound Thursday with two outs in the 10th inning, the potential winning run on base and Byron Buxton at the plate.
Montero had been outrighted to the Minor Leagues and traded twice since his last win, including to the Tigers two weeks ago. With the final four outs of Thursday’s 4-3 win in 11 innings over the Twins, the former World Series champion had his first big moment as a Tiger.
“This is a big shot of trust in myself,” Montero said through translation by Tigers manager of Spanish communications and broadcasting Carlos Guillen. “I started the season pretty bad, and we’ve been working and [trying to] get better and better.”
Skubal got his second straight no-decision. But by holding the Twins scoreless after Julien’s home run fueled a three-run third inning off him, he not only gave the Tigers a chance to rally, he gave himself a chance to make adjustments to find out what had gone awry early.
“Just kind of been fighting myself a little bit physically, probably mentally, too,” Skubal said. “Said some things to myself that I won’t say on camera, but went out there and just tried to be aggressive and go out there and compete. I just feel like I haven’t been executing pitches at the clip that I’m accustomed to, and that’s frustrating.”