The decisive moment

With the margin razor-thin, the Twins leaned on their relief corps to protect a one-run cushion in the late innings. Milwaukee threatened in response but could not deliver the equalizer, leaving the tying run stranded as Minnesota walked off with the 5-4 win.

By the numbers

  • Final score: Minnesota 5, Milwaukee 4
  • Margin: 1 run — a classic one-run nail-biter
  • Venue context: 2026 season MLB Regular Season interleague matchup
  • Minnesota bullpen depth tested with multiple day-to-day arms unavailable

Every at-bat carried weight in a contest where neither side could pull away. The Twins' ability to manufacture just enough offense proved to be the difference in a tightly contested affair.

What it means

For Minnesota, the win is a meaningful confidence boost as the club navigates a thinned-out pitching staff, with Julian Merryweather, Cory Lewis, and Matt Canterino all listed as day-to-day. Squeezing out a one-run victory under those conditions speaks to the resilience of the roster and the depth being asked to step up. For Milwaukee, the loss stings in a close game the Brewers had every chance to steal, especially as the club continues to absorb significant pitching setbacks of its own.

The Brewers entered the day already navigating long-term absences, including Gerson Garabito (four months following foot surgery) and J.B. Bukauskas (9-to-10 months after lat surgery), while outfielder Akil Baddoo remains on the 60-day injured list with a quadriceps issue. In a one-run loss, those missing contributors loom even larger when every roster spot matters.

What to watch next

Minnesota will look to build on the late-game execution that secured this win, while Milwaukee searches for the timely hit that eluded them on Sunday. Both clubs return to action with the bullpen workload and lineup construction firmly in focus across the next series.