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There were no moves made on Wednesday.

The Saints won a breezy opening game of their doubleheader.

Andrew Morris remains peripheral agnostic. He does not care. Walks. Strikeouts. The man only cares about one thing: outs, and he’ll claim them regardless of what nerdy FIP or FIP-adjacent stat you throw at him. Wednesday was maybe his magnum opus: three walks, five hits, two strikeouts, and—critically—zero earned runs. Majestic.

Mickey Gasper continued his AAA tear with a 1st-inning two-run blast, the first of three runs scored by the Saints to start the game. Carson McCusker drove in the concluding run with a double.

(And it was ripped, because it was Carson McCusker and that’s the only way he lives life.)

Brady Fiegl and Richard Lovelady combined to work the final three frames, holding Indianapolis scoreless with just two harmless baserunners.

Mike Ford capped the scoring with an absolute skyscraper into right field, a 45-degree behemoth that may have spooked a bird, or a low-flying aircraft.

MLB.com’s 76th overall prospect, Thomas Harrington , started for Indianapolis. He allowed five runs across four innings.

The knuckleball looked unfavorably upon Cory Lewis. Back to starting, if just for a short time, the righty ran into early trouble, allowing a pair of homers in the games' opening frames to fall into a 3-0 deficit. Unfortunately, the home run issue is a sticking point from his last appearance; Lewis has now allowed six long balls across his two most recent outings.

St. Paul’s bats offered tepid support of their starter, with Anthony Prato singling home a run in the 2nd. Then, in the 3rd, Indianapolis pulled their starter in favor of reliever Drake Fellows —otherwise known as OVO—and Carson McCusker singled to call in a second run.

That proved insufficient, as the Saints offense never woke up, and Indianapolis scored one more run before eventually claiming the win.

Pittsburgh’s 5th-ranked prospect, Nick Yorke , went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts.

The Wind Surge won in an extra-inning walk-off on Wednesday.

Lefty Christian MacLeod made a triumphant return to Wichita. The Hunstville native cruised in three frames, shutting out the Cardinals with five punchouts. He threw 44 pitches. He has not given up a run in seven innings to start the season.

Evidently, Springfield experienced a renewed vigor the second they saw MacLeod exit the game, because Wichita’s next two pitchers had a far less fun afternoon. Angel Macuare was walloped for three runs in a single inning; John Klein suffered the same (two earned) across 3 ⅔ innings.

The good news is that Wichita’s offense was primed and ready to score some runs. Kala’i Rosario summoned home a pair with a 4th inning double, marking the beginning of a three-inning drought. Then, staring at a 6-2 deficit, they erupted for two in the 8th, two more in the 9th to tie the game, and a final, Manfred-Man-scoring knock off Kyler Fedko ’s bat to deliver the win.

Ricardo Olivar stood at the heart of the offensive supernova, exploding for four hits—two doubles—and three RBIs. He even threw a guy out at home. Sometimes, everything just goes right.

Wind Surge pitchers struck out 14 batters in the game.

Springfield is an affiliate of St. Louis, typically a talented system. Their top prospect—2024 first rounder, J.J. Wetherholt—is on the team, but did not play on Wednesday. Instead, Chase Davis , ranked 9th, in the system, served as their finest youngster. He singled and struck out thrice in five trips to the plate.

Ty Langenberg pitched a fine ball game. The righty out of Iowa was nearly flawless; a 2nd inning single immediately erased by a double play proved the only jab the Timber Rattlers were able to land on him. Every out except one came via a strikeout or groundout. With just 40 pitches, Langenberg put forth an early submission for most efficient start of the year amongst Twins minor leaguers.

Kernels’ bats started dormant, but woke up in the 5th. Khadim Diaw plated the opening run of the game by stealing 2nd before dashing home on a wild pitch/catcher throwing error combo. Two more runs scampered home off a Danny De Andrade double the following frame.

Steals helped fuel the scores, and they were a consistent theme all night for the Kernels: they ended up swiping four bases, including Kyle DeBarge ’s ninth of the season.

The Timber Rattlers scored a final 9th inning off a groundout. Strangely, both runs scored by Wisconsin were via a groundball, giving them the unique distinction of going 0-for with runners in scoring position despite scoring two runs.

2nd baseman Jadher Areinamo ranks as the Brewers’ 23rd-best prospect. He doubled in four at-bats.

The Mighty Mussels came up short on Wednesday.

Hitting was at a premium for Fort Myers. Their starting nine could only muster three hits—none of which went for extra bases. Augured by five walks, though, and a pair of stolen bases Angel Del Rosario , they were able to plate a trio of runs, perhaps more than they “deserved” given the meager inputs. RBI credits go to Jose Rodriguez for walking with the bases loaded, and the aforementioned Del Rosario, who singled in two in the 7th.

2024 draftee, Eli Jones, did not have his best stuff. A pair of scoreless frames to begin the game portended an extended, laborious 3rd for the Birmingham-born Jones, in which he walked two, allowed a pair of singles, and ushered home a run with a wild pitch. A 5th inning solo shot capped his allowed damage. The University of South Carolina product topped out at 94.2.

Fort Myers was able to put the tying run in scoring position in the 9th, but Byron Chourio did not play the hero; he grounded out to end the game.

The Threshers are the A-ball affiliate of the Philadelphia Phillies. Their 4th-ranked prospect, Eduardo Tait , DH’d, singling once in four at-bats.

Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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