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As the Minnesota Twins made their pivot from “impact pitching” to an impact Bringer of Rain, something became glaringly obvious. With Michael Pineda and Rich Hill not starting the season in the rotation, as the roster stands, two rotation spots are going to be open for one of the young guys to grab hold of.
There is still time for the Twins to add another pitcher to bring that number down to one, whether through a trade or a nice little nonroster-invite signing like say, Taijaun Walker. There is no guarantee either of those things will happen or work, so in how bad condition are the Twins regarding their rotation?
Michael Pineda has another 39 games to serve on his suspension as 2020 kicks off. If we divide 39 games by five rotation spots we get a nice round 7.8 games. For our purposes let’s round it and make it 8 games per rotation spot or 16 games total the fourth and fifth rotation spot may be responsible for before Pineda joins the team.
Every year, to survive the dog days of summer, teams end up having to find games from outside their planned five starters. So how many of those did the Twins need in 2019? Exactly 16 games. They came from Devin Smeltzer (6), Randy Dobnak (5), Lewis Thorpe (2), Kohl Stewart (2), and Cody Stashak (1). The good news for 2020 is that three of those five names are the first three in line to get starts again. They’ve been there.
The Twins were incredibly healthy for 2019, with 26 starts from Pineda being the lowest number among their preferred five starters.
In 2018 the Twins needed to find 35 starts from outside of their preferred five. And we all know how that went. The 2018 Twins were given the relatively late blow that Ervin Santana was hurt and would not be able to start the season.
That resulted in a heavy dose of Fernando Romero as the fifth starter and six games opened by Gabriel Moya. Trevor May, Zack Littell, Tyler Duffey, Stephen Gonsalves, Adalberto Mejia, Chase De Jong, Aaron Slegers, and Phil Hughes also recorded starts.
The difference between 2018 and 2020 seems to be twofold. First, the Twins are currently walking into the season prepared to fill those fourth and fifth starter spots from within. And one of them for a determined period of time. The Santana injury in 2018 came out of nowhere and there was no clue exactly how long it would affect the right-hander.
Second, the Twins are now much better equipped to fill gaps even if something does go horribly wrong. Thorpe, Dobnak, and Smeltzer are much more battle-tested. Jhoan Duran and Jordan Balazovic don't seem far away. Also Brusdar Graterol has been declared an MLB player for 2020. While the bullpen is his destination, maybe early in the season he fills some sort of opener-type roll.
That is 16 games not counting any snow or rainouts or the ability to skip spots in the rotation. This team seems built to withstand 16 games. Ultimately some of those early season starts may help the Twins later in the summer as others need to skip a start and take some maintenance rest. That said, a trade for an impact starter would absolutely be welcomed right now. If it doesn’t happen until later at the trade deadline, the Twins should be fine.
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