Brewers 2, Twins 1: Prielipp Service
May 16, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Connor Prielipp (61) throws to the Milwaukee Brewers in the first inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images | Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images The Twins got a career-best start from Connor Prielipp, who struck out eight Brewers and held them to three hits in a six-inning start, but could only prop up a single run despite outhitting the visiting Milwaukee victors. After squandering a second-inning opportunity with two men in scoring position and nobody out — then a one-out, bases loaded situation — the Twins were able to touch Logan Henderson in the third, when Trevor Larnach welcomed himself back to the batting order by smacking a homer just over the right-field wall.
The lead, unfortunately, proved short-lived. After a single and a walk set up a scoring chance for the Crew, it was a left-side bouncer getting past Royce Lewis that allowed Brice Turang to rush home and tie the game. But it was an unearned run, and the hit that put Turang on the basepaths was the only knock allowed by rookie Connor Prielipp through the first five innings of another rock-solid start.
At right around 70 pitches, Prielipp was trusted with entering the sixth inning for the first time in his big-league career. Jackson Chourio decided to call that decision into question immediately, blasting his first dinger of the year into left-center field, and putting Milwaukee up 2-1 on only their second hit of the ballgame. Prielipp stayed locked in through the rest of his start, striking out two more batters in the sixth to bring his line up to eight on the evening.
So far, he’s done what it says on the tin; a strong xBA and an ability to generrate chase and swing-and-miss has rewarded him with a 2. 88 ERA to open up his Baseball Reference table. With the bullpen able to hold the score tonight, the Twins’ best chance to tie the game came in the seventh, when James Outman’s one-out triple put him 90 feet away from home; unfortunately for him, a bloop flyout snagged by Chourio and a 3-1 groundout that saw reliever Chad Patrick beat Brooks Lee to the bag ended the threat.
So, with the game improbably held by a combination of Eric Orze and Yoendrys Gomez, Minnesota remained down by a 2-1 score heading into the bottom of the ninth. For Milwaukee, Chad Patrick effectively piggybacked with Henderson, taking over in the sixth and going the distance in a 50-pitch relief appearance. A pop-out from Kody Clemens and a rather rough swinging strikeout by Royce Lewis set the stage for Tristan Gray to line out softly to short, and send the mostly-Wisconsinite crowd home happy.