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Posted

Fans were largely frustrated with the Twins' offensive inconsistency and, especially, their ineptitude over the last month and a half of the season. Let's take a look at how they fared against the four most common pitch types they saw in 2024.

Image courtesy of © Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

I used a search query on Baseball Savant to find the four most frequent pitches Twins batters faced, and looked at a variety of stats you’ll see referenced throughout. For those unfamiliar with some of Savant’s more advanced stats, I wanted to provide some definitions from their site. Weight On-Base Average (wOBA) takes into account outcomes on contact, walks, and strikeouts. Run value is the run impact of an event based on runners on base, outs, and ball-and-strike count. Alright, let's get into it.

Fastball - 31.4% of pitches seen
The Twins were a good team against four-seam fastballs in 2024, ranking in the top 10 in batting average, slugging, and wOBA against the offering. Byron Buxton led the way with a run value of 12, a slugging percentage of .657, and a wOBA of .440, and finished second on the team with eight home runs – four behind Carlos Santana. Carlos Correa batted .338 on the pitch, 28th-best in all of baseball, while Buxton finished second on the team at .324. Kyle Farmer was the worst fastball hitter on the team, with a -9 run value and .189 batting average. He saw the pitch a team-leading 37.6% of the time. Pitchers had a scouting report on Farmer, and he wasn’t able to confound it.

Slider - 22.3% of pitches seen
The Twins actually performed better against sliders, ranking in the top seven in the following categories: run value, batting average, slugging percentage, and wOBA. Despite their success, opposing pitchers fed them sliders 22.3% of the time – good for 6th-most in all of baseball. Correa was the team leader in batting average (.386), slugging percentage (.579), wOBA (.438), and run value (12), and was one of the best hitters in all of baseball against the offering. Carlos Santana was the worst hitter, sporting a .158 batting average, a .263 slugging percentage, and -6 run value, despite seeing the 3rd-fewest sliders on the team and all those sliders breaking toward him, as a switch-hitter.

Sinker - 13.5% of pitches seen
The Twins' biggest weakness this year was handling the sinker, or two-seam fastball. Fortunately, they saw the offering the second-fewest times in all of baseball, as they ranked in the bottom nine teams in run value, batting average, slugging percentage, and wOBA. Interestingly enough, the team whiffed on just 14.1% of the sinkers they saw. Their lousy production, then, indicates poor contact. The team's limited success came from a variety of sources, with Trevor Larnach batting .395 and posting a .420 wOBA against the pitch; Royce Lewis slugging .590; and Correa accruing a run value of 7. Ryan Jeffers struggled mightily, posting a run value of -12--twice as damaging as the next-worst production of -6, by famed pinch-hitter Manuel Margot.

Changeup - 11.2% of pitches seen
The Twins finished in the middle third of teams against the changeup, with a .240 batting average (11th), .386 slugging percentage (19th), and .287 wOBA (13th), but did finish ninth with a run value of 14. Jeffers found the most success, with a team-leading .718 slugging percentage, a .443 wOBA, and a run value of 7, tied with Santana for the best on the roster. Manuel Margot led the way with a .333 batting average. Larnach had the most troubles when opposing pitchers pulled the string, with a .210 batting average, .242 slugging percentage, .209 wOBA, and a run value of -5. That said, Byron Buxton wasn't much better. He posted the worst batting average against cambios, at .175, and ranked toward the bottom of the team in all other categories.

Overall, the Twins finished with the 10th-highest batting run value in all of baseball. That, in addition to their relative success against 64.9% of the pitches they saw (four-seam, slider, and changeup), would suggest their offense wasn't bad. In fact, it was pretty darn good. Even against all other offerings, including ones not addressed in this article, they finished 12th in run value. There's still room for valid frustration with their lack of offensive consistency, as the Twins had the third-highest standard deviation of runs scored on a game-by-game basis. The old adage tells us that “hitting is contagious”, and that’s ultimately what defined the 2024 Minnesota Twins offense. In terms of talent, though, it's good to remember that there's lots of room for hope.

 


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Posted

"Other than that, how was the play?"

 

Some analytics are corroborated by the eyeball test, aka anecdotally. Yea to the sinkerball failures feat. Tarik Skubal. Of course to the fastball successes re Trevor Larnach and Byron Buxton.

Posted

The one thing the batters need is a better approach at hitting  , their guessing game of pitches are terrible and their terrible with discipline and can't lay off an outside pitch,  they guess wrong way to often  ( where are the scouting report's and are they accurate when giving them to the players )...

Last but not least is they can't beat the better teams because they can't get hits and runs , but the worst teams they seem to hit and score double digit runs that muddy up these stats to make the twins look productive ....

Just my eye test verses the stats ...

Where are the 200 hit batters , the 100 rbi and 100 run scorer players , this all matters and if the twins keep playing this kind of baseball ( swinging for the fences or their eyes closed )  , you can forget any player will make the hall of fame  ...

Posted

Overall they were good but too streaky. Averaged just over 3 runs per game when they were losing (beginning and end of season) and over 5 runs per game when they had one of the best records in baseball. 

Posted
8 hours ago, Blyleven2011 said:

The one thing the batters need is a better approach at hitting  , their guessing game of pitches are terrible and their terrible with discipline and can't lay off an outside pitch,  they guess wrong way to often  ( where are the scouting report's and are they accurate when giving them to the players )...

Last but not least is they can't beat the better teams because they can't get hits and runs , but the worst teams they seem to hit and score double digit runs that muddy up these stats to make the twins look productive ....

Just my eye test verses the stats ...

Where are the 200 hit batters , the 100 rbi and 100 run scorer players , this all matters and if the twins keep playing this kind of baseball ( swinging for the fences or their eyes closed )  , you can forget any player will make the hall of fame  ...

I totally agree. When they start beating good teams, we can start getting excited. Until then, ho hum. I think the biggest mistake for this offense was trading away their best hitter (Arraez). No one has come close to setting the table since he left.

Posted
59 minutes ago, rv78 said:

I totally agree. When they start beating good teams, we can start getting excited. Until then, ho hum. I think the biggest mistake for this offense was trading away their best hitter (Arraez). No one has come close to setting the table since he left.

But, But-- we have Lewis.

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