Bob Sacamento Verified Member Posted August 3, 2015 Posted August 3, 2015 As a baseball fan who lives close to several Spring Training Complexes as well as Florida State League teams, I get to see many of the organizations' "behind the scenes" scouting and how the Twins' still evaluate their players is quite interesting and perplexing to me. Whether it's intentional or not, the club still seems very old school in terms of MiLB and draft analysis much more than their counterparts. Case in point, Baltimore and Houston use state of the art evaluation equipment of spin rate out of the pitcher's hand, exit velocity out of the pitcher's hand as well as off the bat. This is the same equipment, that Trackman uses when scouting Perfect Game Tourneys (high school kids). TrackMan MeasurementsPitch Release -- Extension -- Release Slot --Angles --Classification --Velocity Pitch Movement -- Spin Rate Breaks --Spin Axis/Tilt --Trajectory Plate Location -- Time Of Flight Approach Angles --Location --VelocityBatted Ball -- Distance Velocity --Position at 110 feet --Launch Angles -- Exit Speed --Trajectory --Bearing --Hang Time --Spin RateIn comparison, the only quantitative measure I've ever seen out of Twins' head of scouting Mike Radcliff, Scouting Director Deron Johnson, and a few other Twins' scouts are stopwatches and Radar Guns. Elsewise it's strictly the eye test and trusting your scouts. Guess that's what happens when you have basically the same crew running the show the past 20 years. Am I the only one who seems to be bothered by this?
Mike Sixel Old-Timey Member Posted August 3, 2015 Posted August 3, 2015 You probably won't be the only one disappointed in the Twins' progress in this area, no. It also is NOT surprising at all, if true.
Seth Stohs Site Manager Posted August 3, 2015 Posted August 3, 2015 As Steve Buhr pointed out a couple months ago, there is Trackman at Cedar Rapids, and I assume there is in Ft. Myers too. Not sure if they use it in the GCL or E-Town.
ShouldaCouldaWoulda Verified Member Posted August 4, 2015 Posted August 4, 2015 As Steve Buhr pointed out a couple months ago, there is Trackman at Cedar Rapids, and I assume there is in Ft. Myers too. Not sure if they use it in the GCL or E-Town.Seems like the investment in as much technology and data as possible at ALL levels would be worth it, and save us money in the long run.
Bob Sacamento Verified Member Posted August 4, 2015 Author Posted August 4, 2015 As Steve Buhr pointed out a couple months ago, there is Trackman at Cedar Rapids, and I assume there is in Ft. Myers too. Not sure if they use it in the GCL or E-Town.I can tell you for certain there isn't one in GCL and I'm fairly certain there isn't one in Hammond Stadium (Ft. Myers) at least as of yet but I'll confirm with Florida Operations Manager Brian Maloney this weekend.
Guest Guests Posted August 5, 2015 Posted August 5, 2015 I can tell you for certain there isn't one in GCL and I'm fairly certain there isn't one in Hammond Stadium (Ft. Myers) at least as of yet but I'll confirm with Florida Operations Manager Brian Maloney this weekend.This is the first year Trackman has been used in Cedar Rapids. I was told early in the season that the Twins used it at high A last season and that Hammond got new technology as part of the remodel down there in FtM. CR then supposedly got the Trackman equipment that had previously been used in FtM and that the Twins now use it at all full-season levels.
Mike Sixel Old-Timey Member Posted August 5, 2015 Posted August 5, 2015 This is the first year Trackman has been used in Cedar Rapids. I was told early in the season that the Twins used it at high A last season and that Hammond got new technology as part of the remodel down there in FtM. CR then supposedly got the Trackman equipment that had previously been used in FtM and that the Twins now use it at all full-season levels. Thanks! Good news.
whydidnt Verified Member Posted August 5, 2015 Posted August 5, 2015 I'd be curious to hear if the equipment is used. Is it installed at Hammond, but the scouts ignore it and rely on their eyes and radar guns? Kind of like how the Major league team has an analytic staff but we don't really see much use of their work (other than Molitor's shifts this year).
drjim Provisional Member Posted August 6, 2015 Posted August 6, 2015 I'd be curious to hear if the equipment is used. Is it installed at Hammond, but the scouts ignore it and rely on their eyes and radar guns? Kind of like how the Major league team has an analytic staff but we don't really see much use of their work (other than Molitor's shifts this year).I heard the scouts still use slide rules.
Rosterman Verified Member Posted August 6, 2015 Posted August 6, 2015 Some even put on their glasses when they watch the game.
TRex Provisional Member Posted August 6, 2015 Posted August 6, 2015 I heard the scouts still use slide rules.... and abacussessesss, or abaci, or however you conjugate abacus!
whydidnt Verified Member Posted August 6, 2015 Posted August 6, 2015 Joke all you want, but I think it was a legitimate question, considering the original post and the organization's history regarding "new school" thinking.
diehardtwinsfan Old-Timey Member Posted August 6, 2015 Posted August 6, 2015 I'd be curious to hear if the equipment is used. Is it installed at Hammond, but the scouts ignore it and rely on their eyes and radar guns? Kind of like how the Major league team has an analytic staff but we don't really see much use of their work (other than Molitor's shifts this year). I doubt that they spent the money to install it so they wouldn't use it. It's likely one more data point that goes into a player's file/evaluation.
ShouldaCouldaWoulda Verified Member Posted August 7, 2015 Posted August 7, 2015 Joke all you want, but I think it was a legitimate question, considering the original post and the organization's history regarding "new school" thinking. I agree. Questioning things like this is due to past history and an urgency for becoming a top organization in areas that a mid market team NEEDS to be good at.
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