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Posted
Right-handed pitching prospect Paulshawn Pasqualotto began his 2026 campaign with High-A Cedar Rapids, operating as the Kernels' primary closer. Through 18 innings pitched, the 25-year-old generated a 1.50 ERA, 1.96 FIP, and 44.1% strikeout rate, while netting four saves. He was promoted to Double-A Wichita, where he took on a setup role, netting a 3.94 ERA, 3.57 FIP, and a 24.3% strikeout rate over 16 innings pitched before being promoted to Triple-A St. Paul on July 2.
 
It took Pasqualotto only 34 innings pitched before he took the substantial jump from High-A to Triple-A, signaling Minnesota Twins decision-makers are rushing the 12th-round pick through the high-minors, seemingly with intentions to convert the former starting pitching prospect into a viable major league relief option. The young righty made his Triple-A debut against the Buffalo Bisons on July 3, striking out three in a scoreless inning, earning his first save as a Saint.
 
Pasqualotto’s ascension isn’t unique, as fellow former starting pitching prospects Mike Paredes, Alejandro Hidalgo, and CJ Culpepper have been promoted aggressively this season, with eyes on them impacting the major league pitching staff in some capacity (obviously, Paredes already has). Yet, Pasqualotto has been promoted the most aggressively, potentially signaling that Twins decision-makers might view him as an arm that could soon become a member of the scuffling parent club’s eight-pitcher relief collective.
 
Right now, Minnesota has the fifth-worst bullpen in baseball, according to Wins Above Replacement at FanGraphs (fWAR). Yoendrys Gomez and Andrew Morris have developed into viable late-inning arms. None of Taylor Rogers, Travis Adams, Eric Orze, Kody Funderburk, Marco Raya, or Woo-Suk Go can be trusted in high-leverage roles, however. That being the case, Derek Shelton is often forced to use inconsistent arms in high-leverage situations, which has led to multiple late-game collapses for the Twins.
Obviously, it would be malpractice to suggest Pasqualotto would immediately become a reliable late-inning arm. He has less experience and is of a lower prospect stature than the young arms that presently populate the bottom of Minnesota’s bullpen in Raya and Go. Given how dire a state Minnesota’s bullpen is in, however, Pasqualotto could soon earn a 40-man roster spot and join the club’s eight-pitcher relief unit, especially if he can build off his impressive Triple-A debut.
 
Pasqualotto has excelled at pounding the zone between Double-A and Triple-A, sporting a near-elite called plus swinging strike rate (CSW%), zone contact rate, and whiff rate between the two levels. The right-handed arm’s stuff isn’t particularly eye-popping, with his four-seam, slider, and cutter grading out as slightly below average. As noted earlier, however, he locates his pitches incredibly well, mixing his two fastball variants and slider with his change, which operates as his out-pitch against left-handed hitters. His slider functions as his out-pitch against righties.
 
Sitting around 96 MPH, Pasqualotto’s four-seam functions as his foundational pitch, which he throws against hitters of either-handedness. The young righty has utilized his four-pitch mix to produce an impressive 34.7% strikeout rate between Double- and Triple-A this season, signaling he has the potential to miss bats in the majors. He does struggle with walks, evidenced by him netting a 14.8% walk rate this season. Still, Pasqualotto has impressed while being promoted aggressively this season, missing bats with his four-pitch mix in short relief spurts at three different levels. Minnesota’s bullpen is in dire straits and in need of young, high-upside internal options to fill out the bottom half of the unit. That being the case, Pasqualotto could soon be handed an opportunity.

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Posted

Batting lead off, I will take a swing.....WHO?

Gomez has worked out, and Morris seems to be.
What if Raya does, and what if Go is another win, then Pasqualotto?

With magic like this, the Twins would not only appear in the postseason, they might win a series.

 

Posted

I remember the days when Pasqualatto had a hard getting outs and had a high ERA.  He's really refined his stuff and looked good this year.  He was their stopper at High A this year.  I haven't really watched him pitch so no idea what he looks like, but the numbers are good this year.  

Probably a smart move to get him to AAA ASAP and see if his stuff plays there and they will have to make rule V decisions on Pasqualatto, Culpepper and Hidalgo. Not going to add them all so will need to figure out which one(s) might make sense to add.

Here's hoping he can be a dependable arm at the MLB level.  The Twins need as many as they can find.

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