Minnesota’s Morneau Out for Year Online Sportsbook

Online sportsbook numbers on the Minnesota Twins are going to drop as the team is now without slugger Justin Morneau for the rest of the season. The Twins won on Monday in Internet sportsbook odds as they beat Cleveland 6-3 but the news was not all good as Morneau was found to have stress fracture in his lower back and will miss the rest of the online sportsbook season.

Online sportsbook has Morneau being out for a few months but he should be ready for next season. The Twins are really almost out of the American League Central race as they trail the Detroit Tigers by 5.5 games with time winding down in the online sportsbook baseball season. “Tough news when you lose your first baseman and MVP guy,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. Internet sportsbook stats show that Morneau is batting .274 with 30 homers and 100 RBI. “It’s been bugging me for a while,” Morneau said, “It’s one of those things where you can play through the pain if you feel like you’re doing something to help your teammates win ballgames, but when you go out there and you don’t feel like you’re helping anyone, that’s when you take a step back and go, ‘All right, maybe I’m doing more harm than good.”’

There’s more bad sports betting news for the Twins in online sportsbook odds. Third baseman Joe Crede is also out for the rest of the online sportsbook season with a lower back problem. He struck out four times on Sunday as online sportsbook stats had it and said he just didn’t feel right. “He didn’t feel very good swinging,” Gardenhire said to Internet sportsbook fans. “We knew he would be a little behind because he hasn’t had many at-bats. But he was having pain in his lower back and into his legs and, as he said, ‘It just didn’t bode well.’ He couldn’t swing the way he wants to swing. He couldn’t let it go. He tried.”

Crede is hitting only .225 with 15 home runs and 48 RBI in 90 online sports betting games. It has been a disappointing Internet sportsbook season for Crede. “He wanted to get back out there,” Gardenhire said. “He wasn’t going to be 100 percent, but he wanted to get out there and see if he could help out.”