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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Andrew Joseph

Twins closer Jhoan Duran threw a 92 mph curveball that was so filthy, it forced Keibert Ruiz into clock violation

It’s honestly a minor miracle that players are capable of getting hits off Twins closer Jhoan Duran. When he’s on his game, there aren’t many pitchers with filthier stuff in all of baseball.

The Washington Nationals learned that the hard way on Sunday.

Duran needed just 11 pitches to preserve the Twins’ 3-1 win at Target Field, and every single one of those pitches looked like something out of a video game. He got the second out of the inning by throwing a 102 mph fastball (with 15 inches of break!) past a swinging Luis Garcia. And then a first-pitch curveball the following at-bat to Keibert Ruiz had the Nationals catcher so rattled, that he took an automatic strike before he could see a second pitch.

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I wish we had video of the automatic strike, but that’s just a devastating array of pitches that any hitter has to deal with while facing Duran. Curveballs are not supposed to move like that with that kind of velocity.

You can almost forgive Ruiz for needing a few extra seconds to collect himself after he nearly fell over on a wild swing. After all, that pitch looked over the plate before breaking sharply towards his feet. That bordered on humiliation — two strikes for one pitch. Ruiz would ground out to end the game.

Fans were also in awe with Duran’s pitches on Sunday.

This was how Twitter reacted

He’s very good.

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