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Posted

While the Minnesota Twins are familiar with recent free agent addition Danny Coulombe. A lot has changed for the left-hander in his two seasons in Baltimore. 

Minnesota Twins fans are familiar with Danny Coulombe in the sense that he has put on a Twins jersey in the recent past. Even though the last time Coulombe was with the Twins club was as recent as spring training to begin 2023, he has developed into a considerably different pitcher in two short seasons.

The lefty spent those seasons establishing himself as one of the better left-handed bullpen options in baseball. Seeing his strikeout ability take a noticeable jump posting a 10.17 and 9.71 K/9 in 2023 and 2024 respectively after being below 9 strikeout per nine in 2021 and 2022 in Minnesota. Coulombe’s K% also jumped to 27.6% and 29.9% in Baltimore while he posted a 23.7% at his best while in Minnesota. 

Those results helped Coulombe account for a 1.9 fWAR over his two seasons in Baltimore. He also accounted for 0.83 WPA in 2023 and a 1.77 WPA last season. It wasn’t just the results that changed for the now 35 year old. He made some considerable changes to his pitch mix and arm angle over the last several seasons. 

In Coulombe’s time with the Twins he leaned most prominently on a slider and four seam fastball as his primary pitches. Last season his two most used pitches were a cutter and a sweeper. The cutter is completely new to Coulombe since leaving Minnesota and the sweeper he just started throwing in 2022. A total of 15 times that season Coulombe employed the sweeper. Those two pitches accounted for 58.5% of the lefties' pitches in 2024. 

The sweeper over the past two seasons has resulted in a 32.3% whiff rate in 2023 and 38.2% in 2024. The cutter was similarly effective with a 31.4% whiff rate in 2023 with a dip to 26.2% in 2024. The development and employment of these two pitches at the rate in which Coulombe uses them helps to explain the uptick in his strikeout and strike throwing ability the past two seasons. While it does help explain the improvements, it also feels like a fairytale that a MLB pitcher could completely retool himself in that way while performing at such a high level. 

Along with adding the new pitches, Coulombe also raised his arm angle slightly. Traditionally he had been between a 50-52 degree arm angle. Since leaving Minnesota that angle has increased to 56 degrees in 2023 and 58 degrees last season. 

While this is technically the same guy that fans have seen before, he is returning with a very different look. As long as Coulombe can avoid any lengthy injury stints, he will help lock down the back end of the bullpen as presumably the primary left-hander with a bit more strikeout ability than we saw his last time in a Twins uniform. 


 


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Posted
21 minutes ago, whosafraidofluigirussolo said:

I like this signing, but it says something about the Twins' offseason and about our eagerness for action, that there are 3 front-pages news stories about Coulombe within a few hours of the signing being announced.

They are trying to set a new record for how many different way they can say the same thing.  They still have a few more bloggers to go. 

Posted
4 hours ago, nicksaviking said:

I don't think LOOGYs have a place in the game any longer.  IF they miss getting the left handed hitter out, they're forced to stay in there to get slaughtered against the right handed hitters. You HAVE to be able to get either handed hitter out.

Checking splits.......OK, yeah, I like this one.

Hardly any different than for batters.  Be productive against opponents from one side, don't be unplayable against those from the other.

Posted
8 minutes ago, ashbury said:

Hardly any different than for batters.  Be productive against opponents from one side, don't be unplayable against those from the other.

Agree, but thus far there aren't rules against pinch hitting.

Though Baldelli sure seems to be pushing it to the point where the league may WANT to make a rule about it.

Posted
53 minutes ago, nicksaviking said:

Agree, but thus far there aren't rules against pinch hitting.

Though Baldelli sure seems to be pushing it to the point where the league may WANT to make a rule about it.

AKA the Margot Line.  "To pinch hit, you must be hitting better than the guy you are replacing."

Posted

He was my #3 choice, as I stated elsewhere today, but still a good addition. I wish we had kept him 2 years ago. But maybe we're getting a better pitcher back than he was then. Sure seems like it.

Just hoping we can keep him healthy for the full year. The pen feels more complete now.

Posted

The Twins just improved an already really good bullpen by signing lefty Coulombe.  If the Twins keep Jeffers and Vasquez (smart, experienced, catchers) and C-4 plays his usual sterling SS and somebody is placed at 1B who can catch errant throws  from 3B and 2B ,and Buck plays CF then  all the starting pitchers for the Twins should be rejoicing.

Posted
19 hours ago, jmlease1 said:

that's the biggest reason to like this one: while he's death on lefties, he's still quite effective against righties. Okert did the job very well last season against lefties, but gave it all back against righties. I agree with you: the LOOGY is dead (and it will not be missed, IMHO).

Let's just hope he stays on the field. Missing nearly 3 months makes me nervous, and I'm guessing Balto felt the same way or they would have brought him back. But when he pitches, he's a quality bullpen piece.

(it is a little sad that Danny Coulombe is the most interesting thing we have to write/talk about here these days though)

It does seem curious that Baltimore did not pursue him at this relatively small $$ amount. Why?

Posted
1 hour ago, JD-TWINS said:

It does seem curious that Baltimore did not pursue him at this relatively small $$ amount. Why?

Two things to remember are that he's 35 coming off arm surgery and that he has no options--he can't be taken off the roster without being exposed to being claimed. If he is the second lefty in a 'pen, having flexibility is important. That was his situation in Minnesota and when the Twins wanted him to start out in St. Paul (on a minor league contract) to start '23, he took advantage of the upward mobility clause in his contract. 

Posted
1 hour ago, JD-TWINS said:

It does seem curious that Baltimore did not pursue him at this relatively small $$ amount. Why?

It might be pride effin' with Coulombe too. Balto balked at the $4M (YMMV on whether that was good or not) and after the rejection he may not have wanted to come back ("screw those guys!") even if the money was similar. This happens a fair amount when teams decline to offer arbitration or pick up an option, I think.

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