(Sports Network) - The Minnesota Twins and Toronto Blue Jays will meet up on Sunday in the finale of a three-game series at Rogers Centre. Both of these teams have been on either side of a shutout in the first two games of the series. On Friday, the Blue Jays were powered by Mark Buehrle and Jose Bautista and earned a 4-0 win. On Saturday, the tables turned as the Twins rolled to a 6-0 victory. Mike Pelfrey was strong for the Twins as the starting pitcher and he tossed six shutout innings while allowing three hits and as many walks. Brian Dozier was the star on the offensive side and went 2-for-4 with a home run and four RBI. The Twins snapped a six-game losing streak with the win. Maicer Izturis went 3-for-3 for the Blue Jays, but the rest of the team was a combined 1-for-25 without any extra base hits. R.A. Dickey made the start for Toronto, but let up six runs on seven hits in seven innings of work to take the loss, the fourth in the last five games for the Blue Jays. Coming off his best start in almost a month, Scott Diamond will try to keep the success going when he starts for the Twins on Sunday. Diamond, who is 5-7 with an ERA of 5.18 on the campaign, pitched 6 2/3 solid innings against the Yankees last Monday. Diamond allowed three runs, two of which were earned, while tying a season-high with five strikeouts. The Twins still lost the game, 10-4, but it was the first time since June 2 that Diamond held an opponent to fewer than four runs. This start will mark the third start of Diamonds career, and first of this season, against the Blue Jays. In the first two starts, Diamond has split the decisions while positing an ERA of 1.50 in 12 innings of work. Todd Redmond will make his first start of the season on Sunday when he gets the ball for the Blue Jays. Redmond was recalled from Triple A on July 3 after Chien-Ming Wang was designated for assignment. This will be his second appearance since that call up. In the first outing on Wednesday Redmond pitched three scoreless innings of relief in a 6-2 loss to Detroit. When he makes the start on Sunday, it will be his first since August 18 of last season when Redmond pitched 3 1/3 innings for the Cincinnati Reds in his first career appearance. Redmond has never faced Minnesota. Cheap Nike Air Vapormax . Ryan Garbutt had a goal and two assists as Dallas snapped a six-game losing streak with a 5-2 victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday night. Cyber Monday Nike Air Vapormax . -- Anaheim Ducks captain and leading scorer Ryan Getzlaf has been scratched from Sunday nights game against the Vancouver Canucks because of an upper-body injury. https://www.fakevapormaxwholesale.com/ . After slipping from the summit during the week, the Gunners overcame struggling Crystal Palace 2-0 on Sunday thanks to Alex Oxlade-Chamberlains second-half brace. Fake Nike Air Vapormax . Inter president Erick Thohir says in a club statement on Wednesday that Vidic is "one of the worlds best defenders and his qualities, international pedigree, and charisma will be an asset. Discount Nike Air Vapormax . Zvonareva, who won the tournament in 2009 and 10, couldnt handle her opponents big groundstrokes in only her third event back after 17 months out with a shoulder injury. Zvonareva made her comeback in January in Shenzhen and played in the Australian Open but lost her first matches at both tournaments. Welcome to the new and improved MLB Future Power Rankings! Weve decided to change our approach since the last time we updated these last November. We tweaked the categories and their weights in our total score for each team. We added a few relevant notes per team (such as best year to win a championship and worst contract). And we even changed the writer/ranker; master projector Dan Szymborski and his ZiPS system now provide the rank and snapshot of each franchise.So what are the Future Power Rankings? Simply put, theyre an attempt to measure how well each team is set up for sustained success over the next five years.We obviously cant project yet which team will be the best in baseball in 2030, but the near future is reaped from the seeds sowed in the present. Whats to come is always uncertain, but after a century and a half of organized professional baseball, we have a pretty good idea what factors commonly lead to future success. To get an estimated score for each team, we distilled the information available into four main categories:Current talent (25 percent of total score): This category focuses on the in-organization performance that teams are projected to have available from now until the end of the 2017 season. This is the easiest to gauge because of the shorter time horizon involved. A clubs 2016 performance may not necessarily be around in 2020, so current talent is not as heavily weighted as future talent, but players who contribute now can bring in future performance.Future talent (45 percent): This covers every bit of projected performance that teams have in their organization from 2018 onward, from veterans under contract to young major leaguers to this years draftees. With more uncertainty, computer projections are more fallible than in the near term; to take this into consideration, Ive also implemented Keith Laws farm system rankings.Financial support (20 percent): Poor teams -- or more accurately, less-rich teams -- can in fact compete, but it would be naive to pretend that its not trickier to keep a team like the Pittsburgh Pirates or Tampa Bay Rays in contention than the Los Angeles Dodgers. This category was developed with an index that includes historical team payrolls relative to team revenue, revenue streams and market size.Front office (10 percent): This is a small weight, both because of the subjective nature of ranking them and because a lot of a front offices abilities are naturally going to be reflected in the current talent, future talent and, at least indirectly, the teams recent revenue. Also, building a team is more than just making a lot of good moves; its also about having a coherent plan and using creativity and flexibility to further those plans.Overall score: We basically rank the categories from 1 (the best) to 30 (worst), then apply our category weights. So a perfect score would be 30 (first in all four categories).Tiebreaker: When two teams ended up with the same overall score, we used the best rank in the Future talent area to determine which team should be ranked higher.No previous rank? Because so much has changed, from the categories to the category weights to even the ranker, weve decided not to compare these to the November rank. However, one thing remains the same between the two sets of rankings ...Cubs retain top spotWhile its not the landslide it was in the November rankings, the Cubs are still numero uno. The objective for all big league front offices is to build the strongest possible organization. Thats exactly what the Cubs have done.Lets start with the major league roster. Even after missing out on the top free-agent pitchers this past offseason and losing their starting left fielder to a season-ending knee injury beefore the season even began, the Cubs have the strongest case for the best major league talent right now.dddddddddddd ZiPS has their current roster with the best true-talent winning percentage in baseball from here on out, at .611, which is the best performance by any roster by ZiPS estimation since the 2011 Yankees. Considering the Cubs have the best winning percentage so far, thats not exactly a computer giving counterintuitive analysis. But believe it or not, theyve actually underperformed their run differential; an argument can be made that theyve played more like a .700 team this year.Whats truly amazing about the Cubs is they have done this all without being an ancient team that sacrificed its future for present gains. Sure, Arodys Vizcaino would look nice in their bullpen right now, as would Zack Godley, but the Cubs built this roster retaining essentially all of their young talent. In fact, all top 10 players from Keith Laws top Cubs prospects heading into 2015 remain in the organization, as do eight of the 10 players on Laws 2014 list (Vizcaino and Arismendy Alcantara are the only ones missing). And thats just the farm system. In the majors are many graduated prospects with long major league careers ahead of them, players like Kris Bryant, Addison Russell, Javier Baez and the injured Kyle Schwarber.Supporting this bevy of current and future talent is an organization that has shown every indication that it will provide ample financial support to maintain its juggernaut status. When the Ricketts purchased the Cubs, many soothsayers predicted gloom and doom, saying they would never invest in the team. Turned out they werent cheap; they were patient. Since the Cubs started to shift aggressively from rebuilding mode to contention after the 2014 season, theyve brought in Jason Heyward, Jon Lester, Ben Zobrist, Miguel Montero, Dexter Fowler?and John Lackey, among others.President of baseball operations Theo Epstein built his reputation dispelling one curse in Boston, and now hes working on lifting the hex from the Cubs. Even as a much bigger name starting his Cubs career than his Red Sox career, Epstein started off not by being flashy, but by patiently taking the long road, ignoring the people who wanted quick fixes, and implementing the rebuilding process that is paying dividends today.Cubs, Cubs, Cubs ... Well be hearing about them aplenty over the next five years.With that, here are the Future Power Rankings:Go to:?1-5 | 6-10 | 11-15 | 16-20 | 21-25 | 26-30?No, they have not won a World Series yet. But yes, the Cubs are the strongest organization in baseball right now. World Series championships are decided every fall based on a few breaks going one way or the other. An organization cannot build around those chances, but what an organization can do is build the best roster possible. Thats what the Cubs have -- the strongest roster in baseball.But what gives the Cubs the top spot here isnt just the roster they have, but the legs their roster has. Players like Kris Bryant and Addison Russell are still at the beginning of their careers, and the team retains an excellent farm system, even if its no longer as deep as that of teams like the Braves or Twins. Add in a willingness to spend money -- the people claiming that the Ricketts family would never spend money have had to eat a hefty helping of crow -- and a front office head (Theo Epstein) who already broke one curse in Boston, and you have the most dangerous team in baseball over the next several years. Whether the Cubs win a championship or not is in the hands of baseballs oft-cruel gods. ' ' '