Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins News & Analysis

    Eight Weeks In: Twins Trends And Tidbits


    Nick Nelson

    On Monday, the Minnesota Twins endured their worst loss of the year, melting down after Ervin Santana left with a six-run lead on the way to an embarrassing 16-8 loss against Houston.

    Still, they are 26-21, in first place, and miles ahead of their pace from a year ago. Let's run through some of the latest noteworthy trends and attention-grabbing tidbits – both good and bad.

    Image courtesy of Brad Rempel, USA Today

    Twins Video

    Bullpen Blowout

    Yep, that was a spectacular implosion from the Twins relief unit in front of the home crowd. Ryan Pressly, Craig Breslow, Matt Belisle and one-day call-up Drew Rucinski combined to remarkably allow 14 runs – all earned – on 13 hits and three walks while recording six outs. It came one day after a costly blown save from Brandon Kintzler.

    Pressly, initially tabbed as the club's top setup man out of spring training, opened the floodgates by entering in the eighth inning, up 8-2, and allowing five of six batters to reach. He's been a perplexing case this season.

    His elite velocity has been giving batters fits, as the righty owns a 31.8 percent K-rate that towers over his 18.3 percent career mark. At times he looks completely unhittable, including the stretch leading up to Monday's disaster. Over his previous five appearances, he allowed two knocks over 6 1/3 innings with 12(!) strikeouts. But on numerous occasions this season he has completely unraveled, and the latest is tough to forgive.

    I think Pressly has at least one option left, and perhaps a demotion or DL stint is in order. But at least there is enough there to be worth keeping around. I'm not sure I can say the same for Belisle.

    There have been no redeeming qualities in the veteran's performance. He was a contact-prone pitcher who relied on pinpoint command to get by, and now that's gone amiss. Through two months he has issued 13 walks, putting him on pace to more than double his career high as a reliever. In fact, his 15.5 percent BB rate ranks as one of the highest in the league.

    Belisle was either hurting or lacking Paul Molitor's trust over the two-week stretch between May 12th and 26th, during which he made only one appearance. In three outings since re-entering the fold, he has allowed two homers.

    It's time to move on, but to what?

    Searching For Relief

    They've made many good decisions since taking over, but the biggest blunder committed by Derek Falvey and Thad Levine as heads of the front office was their approach with the bullpen. Now, the team is hurting for it.

    Minnesota's sole major-league signing to address the unit, Belisle has ruled himself out as a reliable option in the late innings. Now, the Twins need to find a superior option to replace him. While they have some candidates in the minors worth trying out, there's no one that can be thrown straight into a setup role with any kind of expectation.

    For a more substantive fix, Falvey and Levine must look to the trade market, meaning they'll need to pay in talent rather than money. One wonders how quickly a move could come given the increasingly dire state of affairs.

    On one hand, it's tougher to find sellers this early with fewer teams feeling out of contention. On the other hand, if you're going to give up a prospect for an impending free agent, you might as well maximize the return.

    With Nick Burdi gone for the year, JT Chargois stuck in injury limbo, and Glen Perkins a poor bet to return and make an impact, the Twins can't afford to count on internal reinforcements to bail out this battered bullpen. They'll need to look outside.

    Santana's Stolen Spotlight

    The painful ending of Monday's game took away the headline from Ervin Santana, who should have cruised to his eighth victory by holding a potent Astros offense to two runs over seven innings (one of those runs owed to a head-scratching defensive gaffe by Eddie Rosario).

    Dating back to the start of last year, Santana has a 2.90 ERA over 258 1/3 innings. He continues to defy luck on batted balls in astonishing fashion.

    From Batting Cleanup to Clean Out Your Stuff

    Eleven days ago, Kennys Vargas enjoyed perhaps his biggest moment in a Twins uniform, clutching victory from the jaws of defeat with a game-tying two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth against Kansas City. He followed by batting .429 over six games, lifting his OPS to .837 on the season. On Sunday, he was filling Miguel Sano's customary spot in the starting lineup, sandwiched between Joe Mauer and Max Kepler.

    Then, he went 0-for-8 in a 15-inning affair, and found himself optioned to the minors following the game. Life comes at you fast, huh?

    It's an unfortunate break for Vargas, the victim of circumstance as the Twins needed extra arms having gone through nine in the game. But his perceived expendability speaks to the thin margin for error his profile entails.

    Vargas offers minimal defensive value and doesn't run well, so he needs to be carried by his power and patience combo. The former has been on display but he has fallen back into an old habit of chasing too often outside the zone, resulting in just three walks in 93 plate appearances. While the demotion surely had more to do with the roster crunch than his performance, the Twins are surely looking for Vargas to demonstrate better strike zone control in Rochester.

    More May Magic For Mauer

    The month of May has almost always treated Joe Mauer well, most notably in his MVP 2009 season when he put up a ridiculous .414/.500/.838 line with 11 homers. Now, he's wrapping up another great one: with June two days away, Mauer's line for the month sits at .351/.451/.545. He has gone hitless in a start only once since the end of April.

    If he finishes strong in the next couple of days, Mauer could complete a month with a four-digit OPS for the first time since 2013, when he put up a 1.026 mark in – you guessed it – May. His strong showing over the past four weeks comes on the heels of a terrible April, and carries several indicators that the first baseman is on top of his game. He's back to drawing walks (14.3 percent BB rate) and spraying liners to all fields.

    Say what you will about Mauer, but there's no denying this: the lineup is far more dangerous when he's going good. Lately he's looked like the vintage version and while time has told us that can be fleeting, I'll enjoy it as long as it lasts.

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    meanwhile busenitz, baxendale and hildenberger all have ERAs in the 2s at AAA, yet they are not getting a chance when these guys have 8 ERAs in the MLB, those guys have. I business being in a MLB roster with an 8 ERA through 2 months, give the guys who aren't getting any younger a chance to prove what they can do at a higher level

    Here are some people in the Twins organization.

     

    Chattanooga Bullpen

     

    Randy Rosario, ERA 1.90. WHIP 0.93

    Luke Bard, ERA 3.63. WHIP 1.43

    Mason Melotakis, ERA 2.37. WHIP 0.89

    John Curtiss, ERA 0.00. WHIP 1.13

     

    Rochester Bullpen

    Alan Busenitz, ERA 2.08. WHIP 0.78

    D.J. Baxendale, ERA 3.48. WHIP 1.16

    Trevor Hildenberg, ERA 2.33. WHIP 1.29

     

    That's seven relief pitchers waiting for a chance in the majors. The Twins aren't going anywhere this year so let's see what these guys can do before trading away prospects. The solution may be inhouse.

     

    Time to move on from Belisle, he's been awful. Pressly is worth giving more rope to.

     

    It's a shame that the injury bug has hit in the minors; I wasn't terribly concerned about the bullpen this year, despire there being some weaknesses, because it looked like there were several guys in the minors who were ready to get a long look. But with Chargois on the DL and Burdi done for this year and who knows how long after things have thinned out. That's too bad.

     

    I actually really like Kintzler as the "closer", because there really shouldn't be anything all that special about pitching the 9th with a lead and the bases empty, which is how most closers are used. Having Kintzler in that role allows potentially better arms to be pitching in higher leverage situations in the 6-8th innings.

     

    Very happy to see Mauer playing so well in May. He was pretty unlucky in April and it's nice to see things turn his way. Would love for him to have a hot summer as well, with judicious rest to keep him cooking; he's a really nice player to have hitting in front of Sano.

     

    When you're dabbling in minor league free agency, of course it's a crapshoot. And even that is giving it too much credit, what you're really hoping for is to get lucky. That one of the three AAAA guys you sign has a lucky year.

    But to say you can't sign quality bullpen pieces isn't true. They exist, you just have to be willing to pay the cost.

    And BTW, injury is zero reason to not sign anybody, except in the case of someone with a chronic injury. All pitchers are injury risks, including the minor league FAs you're depending on.

     

    I never said that they aren't out there... just that it's not really possible to know which one(s) will be good and which one(s) will fail. 

     

    Here are some people in the Twins organization. Chattanooga Bullpen Randy Rosario, ERA 1.90. WHIP 0.93 Luke Bard, ERA 3.63. WHIP 1.43 Mason Melotakis, ERA 2.37. WHIP 0.89 John Curtiss, ERA 0.00. WHIP 1.13 Rochester Bullpen Alan Busenitz, ERA 2.08. WHIP 0.78 D.J. Baxendale, ERA 3.48. WHIP 1.16 Trevor Hildenberg, ERA 2.33. WHIP 1.29 That's seven relief pitchers waiting for a chance in the majors. The Twins aren't going anywhere this year so let's see what these guys can do before trading away prospects. The solution may be inhouse.

    The problem is that only two of those guys are on the 40-man roster (R. Rosario and Melotakis). Somebody would need to be dropped to add one of those guys, and once they're added, taking them off the 40-man would expose them to waivers, so it's not like you can just shuttle them in and out on options.

     

    If Hughes' shoulder doesn't get any better, he might be an option for the 60-day DL, which would open up a spot, and they could always dump Tepesch, Rucinski and/or Wheeler (whom I'd like to see get a legit shot before he gets sent back down) to make room, and in that event, my first two choices from AA to add to the 40-man would probably be Curtis and Bard. I don't trust Busenitz (it takes more than flames at the top level) and Hildenberger needs more seasoning, and will likely be nothing more than that sidearm guy out of the pen every team seems to have (see Bradford, Chad).

     

    The problem is that only two of those guys are on the 40-man roster (R. Rosario and Melotakis). Somebody would need to be dropped to add one of those guys, and once they're added, taking them off the 40-man would expose them to waivers, so it's not like you can just shuttle them in and out on options.

     

    If Hughes' shoulder doesn't get any better, he might be an option for the 60-day DL, which would open up a spot, and they could always dump Tepesch, Rucinski and/or Wheeler (whom I'd like to see get a legit shot before he gets sent back down) to make room, and in that event, my first two choices from AA to add to the 40-man would probably be Curtis and Bard. I don't trust Busenitz (it takes more than flames at the top level) and Hildenberger needs more seasoning, and will likely be nothing more than that sidearm guy out of the pen every team seems to have (see Bradford, Chad).

     

    Belisle, Breslow, Haley and others are freely available to take their 8 ERAs off the 40 man.....

     

    This fear of losing bad players always baffles me.

     

    I agree with your basic premise, but there's nothing magic about pitch counts. Even the guy who's responsible for the mythical 100-pitch limit says it was never meant to be a limit. I've been a baseball fan long enough that I can remember when starting pitchers lasted 8 or 9 innings regularly and did it with 4-pitcher rotations and nobody counted pitches. The guy pitched until the other team started slapping him around whether it was 5th 6th, 7th, 8th or 9th inning. Now a complete game is a fluke. But we religiously count pitches and still wind up with more and more pitchers on the operating table undergoing TJ or things like thoracic nerve surgery. Something stinks in Denmark. And I believe the smell is coming from the weight room.

     

    "Saving bullpens" is an oxymoron; a tail wagging the dog sort of thing. Relievers have one purpose in life, saving the starter when he runs out of gas. If a guy can't handle throwing a couple dozen pitches every other day he's more of a dead weight than a reliever. He needs to get in shape. Not lifting weights shape, but conditioning and flexibility shape. In any case being a good reliever is more of a mental trait than a physical trait in my amateurish opinion.

     

    Okay. Now that I'm done ranting... for now, I agree with you; we need better pitchers at the back end of the rotation to take some pressure off the bull pen. But we also need a better bull pen. And we need to better develop both starters and relievers in the minors. And "better develop" doesn't mean leaving them to languish in the minors until they're old enough to collect Social Security... Use 'em or lose 'em.

     

    Yeah, I guess the high pitch count in the early innings is more of a symptom than anything else.  Too much nibbling, deep counts, wasted pitches, etc... It probably means the starter is just pitching badly and you need to go out with the hook and get him.

    Rzepczynski, Holland, Uehara, Storen.....or......Tepesch, Vogelsong, Breslow, Belisle. 

     

    If we were placing bets on which group would have a better year before the season started I think the favorite would've been clear. They're all on 1-2 year deals as well. Nobody is saying the Twins should drop $80 million on a relief pitcher (they shouldn't) but the idea that relief pitchers on the market are created equally and therefore signings are a total crapshoot just isn't true. Of course the market for those pitchers is volatile but the goal is to make signings that have the best chance of success. 

    Belisle, Breslow, Haley and others are freely available to take their 8 ERAs off the 40 man.....

     

    This fear of losing bad players always baffles me.

    Agreed. If this is an evaluation year, then the point is to shuffle through all of the options and discard bad players.

     

    If this is a contending year, then there's no room for those kinds of players anyway.

     

    The problem is that only two of those guys are on the 40-man roster (R. Rosario and Melotakis). Somebody would need to be dropped to add one of those guys, and once they're added, taking them off the 40-man would expose them to waivers, so it's not like you can just shuttle them in and out on options.

     

    If Hughes' shoulder doesn't get any better, he might be an option for the 60-day DL, which would open up a spot, and they could always dump Tepesch, Rucinski and/or Wheeler (whom I'd like to see get a legit shot before he gets sent back down) to make room, and in that event, my first two choices from AA to add to the 40-man would probably be Curtis and Bard. I don't trust Busenitz (it takes more than flames at the top level) and Hildenberger needs more seasoning, and will likely be nothing more than that sidearm guy out of the pen every team seems to have (see Bradford, Chad). 

     

     

    You say that like it's a bad thing.  I'd be pretty ecstatic if Hildenberger had a career like Bradford's or Neshek's.  Hildenberger is already 26.  He's only been in AAA for a couple months but that is largely because he's been slow-tracked at every step.  He was in low A too long in 2015 and was in AA too long last year.  At every step, his numbers have been solid to eye popping.  I don't think he needs any additional seasoning.  He's as ready as he's ever going to be IMO.  

    Baseball is a fickle and cruel mistress.   This is especially true when it becomes beholden to the darkly tragic and cruel financial/business side of the game.   We place so much of our hopes and dreams on, in my opinion, the greatest game on the face of the planet.   Add to this the human penchant for panic and over reaction and it is understandable that we often come to these feelings of woe and vitriolic hate.

     

    For those of us who played the game growing up and/or who now have our own children playing... this is what we should embrace.   That pure spirit, that childlike feeling of glee that indelibly placed our love of the game forever upon our soul.  

     

    This is the reason we keep coming back.   This is the reason we still believe and will always believe.

     

    So yes the Twins may very well implode.  More players will continue to get hurt.  The front office will still make head scratching decisions.

     

    But this is baseball, and despite that, the game is still pure.  If you don't believe me, think back to when you played, or look in your son's eyes when he takes the field.  This is why we come back.

     

    God created the Heavens and Earth, and after resting... He created baseball so that we might always remember that purity.

    This is a discussion that is more about our fan frustration than anything else.  We see what seems to be obvious and cannot do anything about it.  This FO supposed addressed the bullpen - what are their collective actions so far - Belisle, Breslow, Wilk, Justin Haley, Nick Tepesch, and Ryan Vogelsong -  all pitchers were added.  How did they work out?  We have a boatload of injured pitchers in the minors and do not seem willing to bring up those who aren't unless they are named Buddy Boshers. 

     

    Wheeler is brought up but not used - please start him instead of Gibson.  Gibson is retained and Vargas is sent down despite the fact that at a minimum Gibson would not pitch or contribute for four games. 

     

    I am looking for a Clue, but so far can only find Mr. Mustard with a hot dog in the bullpen. 

     

    And, by the way, I read about the bullpen overuse and it reminded me of a forgotten old Twin - Mike Marshall who three times pitched more than 90 games in a year. http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/marshmi01.shtml

     

    Or Al Worthington who averaged 50 games a year for us http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/worthal01.shtml

     

    You say that like it's a bad thing.  I'd be pretty ecstatic if Hildenberger had a career like Bradford's or Neshek's.  Hildenberger is already 26.  He's only been in AAA for a couple months but that is largely because he's been slow-tracked at every step.  He was in low A too long in 2015 and was in AA too long last year.  At every step, his numbers have been solid to eye popping.  I don't think he needs any additional seasoning.  He's as ready as he's ever going to be IMO.  

     

    One reason a guy like him gets "slowtracked" is the org usually wants him to go through the league a couple times and have multiple cracks at him to make sure the production is legit and not just a product of deception.

     

    He was also hurt late last year, might have slowed his schedule a little.

    One reason a guy like him gets "slowtracked" is the org usually wants him to go through the league a couple times and have multiple cracks at him to make sure the production is legit and not just a product of deception.

     

    He was also hurt late last year, might have slowed his schedule a little.

    It probably is a product of deception. That doesn't mean it won't play at the MLB level.

     

    It probably is a product of deception. That doesn't mean it won't play at the MLB level.

     

    I'm certainly not opposed to giving him a try considering the current dumpster fire residing out there.

     

    I also agree with you, it would be a great thing if he had a career like Bradford or Neshek.

    The arguement continues to revolve around what we have in AAA and I am afraid to tell you we really do not have anything that stands out. This discussion was brought up before about 3 months ago regarding how our minor league system is crap.

     

    I am a realist and refuse to be blinded by unrealistic hope regarding this team. The only and I mean the only thing this team can do to improve this team is trade away some veterans to get some prospects.

     

    Get rid of Dozier, Santana while he is still pitching well, and Vargas. We have to many holes that fans believe can simply be plugged by bringing medicore pitchers up from the minors.

     

    For the life of me I can't understand why anyone would care if the MN Twins were to hand out, say, four FA contracts over the winter over $4M, and, say half of them didn't work out.

    How in any way would that be worse for anyone involved?

    if that's too much money, fold up the franchise. Or be prepared to watch 550 losses over six years.

    Ricky Molasco and Phil Hughes haters say hello.  All the mentions of Mauer's contract. A lot of people seem to care where the money is spent because it does have an influence on the team. The point was about finding solutions to the bullpen issue. Year in year out consistency is hard to get.  The number of busts in the free agent market outweighs the success.  Analytics have not figured it out.

     

    Ricky Molasco and Phil Hughes haters say hello.  All the mentions of Mauer's contract. A lot of people seem to care where the money is spent because it does have an influence on the team. The point was about finding solutions to the bullpen issue. Year in year out consistency is hard to get.  The number of busts in the free agent market outweighs the success.  Analytics have not figured it out.

     

    My guess is that analytics would show that signing guys over 35, who haven't pitched well in several years, is not a good strategy...just a guess.

    Ricky Molasco and Phil Hughes haters say hello. All the mentions of Mauer's contract. A lot of people seem to care where the money is spent because it does have an influence on the team. The point was about finding solutions to the bullpen issue. Year in year out consistency is hard to get. The number of busts in the free agent market outweighs the success. Analytics have not figured it out.

    Signing a starter for 4-6 years at 8 figures per year, and signing a reliever for 1-3 years, at 7 figures per year, are not apt comparisons.

     

    Complaining about large sums of wasted money, and complaining about not possibly wasting modest sums of money, are not apt comparisons.

     

    Even if every single FA signed fails, you have your entire minor league system to count on, putting you in the same position as if you hadn't signed a single one. All you've lost is money, and innings. Personally I don't give a rip if ownership makes a few million less. That ain't my goal, and I hope it's not theirs.

     

    The point was, indeed, finding bullpen solutions. Arguing that free agency isn't one route is not supported by any argument I've heard put forth here or elsewhere.

     

    The arguement continues to revolve around what we have in AAA and I am afraid to tell you we really do not have anything that stands out. This discussion was brought up before about 3 months ago regarding how our minor league system is crap.

    I am a realist and refuse to be blinded by unrealistic hope regarding this team. The only and I mean the only thing this team can do to improve this team is trade away some veterans to get some prospects.

    Get rid of Dozier, Santana while he is still pitching well, and Vargas. We have to many holes that fans believe can simply be plugged by bringing medicore pitchers up from the minors.

    Dude! Sounds like your beer stein is half empty.  Ask any old dairy farmer; if you constantly skim off the cream all you'll have left is 2% milk.

     

    Dude! Sounds like your beer stein is half empty. Ask any old dairy farmer; if you constantly skim off the cream all you'll have left is 2% milk.

    I enjoy watching the Twins, I just get frustrated with the blind praise they get from people who believe that it is an easy fix.

     

    We have struggled with pitching for a long time and the management continues to do nothing except for picking up pitchers like Wilk.

     

    I would understand if they were still in the dome but they are not. They had a brand new stadium build with the promise of spending more to field a better team and that has not happend.

     

    I am tired of the same outcome every year and I am tired of people simply saying we are in a rebuilding phase. Our minor league team is so depleted that all we have is average players and the management believes we can build around that?

     

    It is time for the Twins to either rebuild by making trades for prospects or just have this season go down the drain again because of pitching.

     

    This team will not go anywhere unless somethings are changed and not simply by having a bandaid placed on it.

     

    I am tired of the same outcome every year and I am tired of people simply saying we are in a rebuilding phase. Our minor league team is so depleted that all we have is average players and the management believes we can build around that?

    It is time for the Twins to either rebuild by making trades for prospects or just have this season go down the drain again because of pitching.

    This team will not go anywhere unless somethings are changed and not simply by having a bandaid placed on it.

     

    We just hired a new President of Baseball Operations and General Manager what--six months ago? You're talking like it's the same leadership making decisions about things now that was making decisions over the past 6 years. And despite your doom & gloom...this team has right now a winning record!

     

    Maybe the right move is to blow it up and deal Dozier, Santana, Kintzler, etc but now is NOT the time to do it: no one is buying yet, so there's no market and selling off the team while you have a winning record torpedoes attendance. So not only would you get a poor return you'd also cost the team millions in revenue and more in negative PR? That would be awful management.

     

    Falvey & Co. deserve more than 6 months to get things redone around here. Yeesh.

     

     

    Breslow is overall pitching fine, so dumping him just to open up a 40-man spot is silly, but there are some other options if space of the 40-man is the issue. the real question is: who is ready to step up from the minors in the 'pen? Not sure it's clear with Chargois and Burdi hurt.




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...