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

    Is the Twins' Austin Martin Ready to Drive?


    Ted Schwerzler

    The Minnesota Twins face payroll constraints, as they try to build a division winner again in 2024. They need an outfielder with some versatility and athleticism, who can add right-handed offense. Is their best bet to turn to the centerpiece of one of their biggest trades in years?

    Image courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    When Derek Falvey decided to send Jose Berrios north (er, technically, east-southeast, but you get the idea) in a trade with the Toronto Blue Jays, many were impressed with how much Minnesota got back. They not only wrested away pitching prospect Simeon Woods Richardson, but netted former fifth overall pick Austin Martin. The value was considered substantial then, and Berríos needed a long-term contract.

    Fast-forward to where we are now: both players have seen their stock drop since joining the Twins organization. Woods Richardson has made his debut, but the results have been all over the place. Martin fell off Top 100 lists quickly, after topping out at 19th for Baseball America; a disappointing Double-A season in 2022 did most of that damage.

    By the end of last year, though, Martin was on a tear for the St. Paul Saints, and he even looked like a potential late-season option for the Twins. Playing in only 67 games as he navigated a potential Tommy John issue, Martin took some time to settle in. Ultimately, he posted a very strong .387 OBP with St. Paul, and his 43-to-36 strikeout-to-walk ratio could benefit Rocco Baldelli’s lineup.

    To this point, Martin’s power potential has not germinated. Minnesota attempted to make swing changes in 2022 with that in focus, but it led to disastrous results. Now, back to being a contact hitter with a remarkable ability to put the bat on the ball, he has never looked closer to making an impact at the highest level.

    Drafted as a shortstop, that is the position where Martin may now have the least amount of value. He has since become something of an up-the-middle specialist. Logging time at second base and even more in center field, his defense on the grass may be most valuable. That has plenty of room to work for a Twins team that constantly needs contingency plans around and behind Byron Buxton, no matter how optimistic they feel about him at the moment.

    It seems safe to assume that the offseason moves ahead include an outfielder capable of playing center. While Buxton hopes to be healthy this year, we haven’t seen that in some time. Michael A. Taylor got most of the starts there last year, but is looking for a new home on the open market. Nick Gordon and Willi Castro can play the spot as utility types, and Martin gives Minnesota a third option. As Hunter McCall wrote on Thursday, those three are the top candidates for a utility role the Twins love to cultivate and on which they depend heavily.

    Both Castro and Gordon remain with the Twins, having been offered contracts through arbitration. Gordon shouldn’t make much more than $1 million this season, and though Castro will be about three times that, he earned the bump with a very nice 2023 season. Martin isn’t going to replace either of them on the Opening Day roster, but he could challenge both early on in 2024.

    Across his final 37 games at Triple-A last year, Martin owned an .888 OPS with a almost perfect parity in his strikeout and walk rates, plus five home runs. The power was a fun development, but even if that doesn’t stick, Martin found the same process that produced high batting averages at Vanderbilt. Having shown great defensive chops in St. Paul, he could roughly replace Taylor's glove, with an opportunity to be an offensive upgrade.

    It might be unfortunate that Martin is no longer the star shortstop prospect, but if he becomes the next in the line of usable utility types for Minnesota, that also has plenty of value. The ability to play second base becomes a feather in his cap, but an ability to excel in center may be something the Twins need even more.

    Martin will come into spring training with an opportunity to impress. He’ll be given starts at Triple A, with the chance to push for more. How quickly he moves across town will depend on the results, but it shouldn’t be long, and he may wind up being just what Minnesota needs for a spark in 2024.

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Kaelen Culpepper

    St. Paul Saints - AAA, SS
    The Saints were down 5-1 in the 7th inning. Culpepper hit a 3-run HR (his 8th HR of the season). In the 9th inning, down one run with 2 outs and 2 strikes, KC singled in the game-tying run.

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    4 hours ago, arby58 said:

    If he's 27 years old and can't make the 26 man roster, the fact he is out of options strikes me as not particularly relevant. I'd expect most 27 year old marginal players to be out of options.  If you lose something of little particular value 'for nothing' there isn't really a loss, in the material sense of the word.

    Until Martin gets hurt or fails in his first go and then you're to the guy who would've been even further below. Martin is a marginal player at this point. We can be as excited as we want for him, but it doesn't mean he's guaranteed to ever succeed in the majors. Dropping even marginal players like Gordon to hand completely untested players like Martin opening day jobs is not good roster management. Unless Gordon looks completely lost in spring he's getting the job over Martin.

    5 hours ago, tony&rodney said:

    Gordon and Balazovic need to stick on the 26 person roster or they can be claimed.

    I have put Austin Martin in the lineup batting 9th in a number of iterations for the Twins in 2024. Martin is the one rookie who I hope can make a big contribution next season.

    I hope he can come up and claim a starting spot at some point, but I don't at all expect it to be opening day. I think our best hope, as of today with the current 40-man situation, is that Martin is the position player equivalent of Ober in 2023. He has a great spring and everyone is clamoring for him to go north with the big club, but he's sent to AAA as the first guy called when there's an injury. And I think that's probably the best way to manage the roster. 

    Then he can be the spark when he comes up and starts slashing the ball all over the field from the 9 hole so Julien and Lewis can drive him in from the top of the order and we can really start seeing the future come into view!

    17 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    Great job Ted! What has held Martin back isn't himself it has been miss evaluation. He was a 3B man at Vandy, normally prospects go down positional wise not go up, Yet Toronto & MN persisted him being a SS, they should have known right away the he wasn't  a SS, that took time away from him to learn CF. Martin has a natural line drive swing that could hit home runs. MN tried to covert him into a slugger, big mistake, it threw him off. When Martin reverted back to himself things changed. Even when he doesn't hit HRs he often stretches singles into doubles, double into triples (not sure if he has turned a triple into a HR but he surely can) by taking that extra base & stealing. He's an OB machine by not being afraid to get HBP or taking BBs.

    During AFL Martin was out hitting Julien until he got HBP. He still had a very good showing at the AFL also showcasing his potential of playing CF. IMO Martin will have a very good ST but knowing the Twins he'll be sent down. IMO Twins will be careful with Buxton & Buxton won't start out at CF & Castro & Gordon will cover there but Martin will be promoted soon not because Castro or Gordon would be that bad but Martin will shine at AAA. Martin has the talent, spunk & grit to play in the MLB & thrive. He's a classic lead off hitter.

    Agree 100%. A speedy sparkplug leadoff hitter who can play CF is exactly what the Twins need. I still think we should retain Farmer. Gordon we can do without.

    Sign Gurriel and trade Kepler & Polanco.

    15 hours ago, stringer bell said:

    Good questions Ash, as usual. I think Martin is unproven as an outfielder, but reading between the lines, the Twins seem to believe in his skill set to project him as  a plus major league outfielder. We shall see. I think the lack of experience in the outfield will get him a ticket to St. Paul, but he might not stay there long. 

    I can see a role for Martin as a center fielder, left fielder and second baseman. Those are precisely the positions that Nick Gordon has played for the Twins. It might come down to a battle between Gordon and Martin and I like what Martin has to offer much more than Gordon. (BTW, check sprint speeds and you will find that Nick is a 50th percentile runner, exactly average--he is not fast). 

    Having Martin available to play center and left and maybe get some starts at second against left handed pitching would give the Twins a bump in speed and contact and perhaps increase their production against lefties. I hold out hope that he wins a regular job with the Twins, but it is up to him to show that he deserves that much playing time.

    I agree with you Stringer that Martin could be a MLB OFer or 2B man. But like Lewis he could play 2B but they'd like to keep him at 3B, so he'd get established there. So I expect them to keep Martin in the OF until he gets established there. To be an utility player isn't easy because you have to be established in every position & it takes time. That's why Castro is such a valuable & underrated player. IMO Castro finally felt truly established as an utility player & that translated into confidence & his offensive prowess. Some project him to have regression, he might but IMO it'd be slight.

    Gordon on the other hand IMO in the MiLB wasn't that great as a INF. It wasn't until he was converted to the OF that he became a MLBer. Trying to reverse him back into the INF was a big mistake because not only his adaptation at those positions were bad his offense dropped off. I hope that with their analytics they can see it & keep him our out of the INF.

    2 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    I agree with you Stringer that Martin could be a MLB OFer or 2B man. But like Lewis he could play 2B but they'd like to keep him at 3B, so he'd get established there. So I expect them to keep Martin in the OF until he gets established there. To be an utility player isn't easy because you have to be established in every position & it takes time. That's why Castro is such a valuable & underrated player. IMO Castro finally felt truly established as an utility player & that translated into confidence & his offensive prowess. Some project him to have regression, he might but IMO it'd be slight.

    Gordon on the other hand IMO in the MiLB wasn't that great as a INF. It wasn't until he was converted to the OF that he became a MLBer. Trying to reverse him back into the INF was a big mistake because not only his adaptation at those positions were bad his offense dropped off. I hope that with their analytics they can see it & keep him our out of the INF.

    I also like Gordon in the outfield more than in the infield, and to my eye it seems like he more comfortable in the outfield, and as a result more productive. I understand all the negativity about his future and/or capability, but I sure would like to see him play one position all year with no health issues, and see what he can do. Okay, maybe we don't have the luxury of sticking with him for a full year, but at least give him three months and give him the chance to produce or not. As things stand, I don't see him as having much trade value, so I think the Twins to stick with him a bit longer and find out what he can do to help the team. 

     

     

    The scene is set in late winter of 21, early 22. No one knows for sure.

    MN Twins front office: Good. We fleeced those Canucks! We got a top twenty prospect for an expiring contract! Tell me, what did the Jays do to make him so good?

    Scout: Well sirs, they focused on his strength which is putting the ball in play and playing defense.

    Front office: What! Putting the ball in play?!? Contact hitters! An Elf might as well become a dentist for Heaven's sake! We gotta work with that kid and show him the necessity of striking out. Those are good at-bats! Not this baserunning mularky.

    Scout: I'll make sure to tell those minor league coaches that we'll have no more of it. It's strike out or get out!

    Front Office: Do it right away. And find out if there are any other Canadian teams that think hitting the ball is important. We don't need any more of those players on our roster!

     

    1 hour ago, Doctor Wu said:

    I also like Gordon in the outfield more than in the infield, and to my eye it seems like he more comfortable in the outfield, and as a result more productive. I understand all the negativity about his future and/or capability, but I sure would like to see him play one position all year with no health issues, and see what he can do. Okay, maybe we don't have the luxury of sticking with him for a full year, but at least give him three months and give him the chance to produce or not. As things stand, I don't see him as having much trade value, so I think the Twins to stick with him a bit longer and find out what he can do to help the team. 

    Good point Dr. Wu. Like Miranda we need to see what they can do at their natural position when healty. Both will eventually not stay with the Twins, but it'd be nice if they show their worth so at the trade deadline  or next off-season we can get their full worth in trade. Our best option will always be trade & we need to maximize our return.

    10 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    I hope he can come up and claim a starting spot at some point, but I don't at all expect it to be opening day. I think our best hope, as of today with the current 40-man situation, is that Martin is the position player equivalent of Ober in 2023. He has a great spring and everyone is clamoring for him to go north with the big club, but he's sent to AAA as the first guy called when there's an injury. And I think that's probably the best way to manage the roster. 

    Then he can be the spark when he comes up and starts slashing the ball all over the field from the 9 hole so Julien and Lewis can drive him in from the top of the order and we can really start seeing the future come into view!

    I would agree that as the roster stands right now that Martin would be the first callup in 2024. I would see this being the case even if Martin tears it up in ST, though that could potentially change things. But, do you think the possible trade of Kepler would elevate Martin to an opening day job? Provided he shows himself worthy in ST.

    Martin does excite me and intrigue me.

    11 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    Until Martin gets hurt or fails in his first go and then you're to the guy who would've been even further below. Martin is a marginal player at this point. We can be as excited as we want for him, but it doesn't mean he's guaranteed to ever succeed in the majors. Dropping even marginal players like Gordon to hand completely untested players like Martin opening day jobs is not good roster management. Unless Gordon looks completely lost in spring he's getting the job over Martin.

    Gordon has a 1.4 WAR over almost 700 at bats, he strikes out more than 5 times as many as he walks, he has little power and not a great throwing arm for the outfield. He also had a negative WAR last year - he is the epitome of a marginal MLB player. I don't 'get' why the Twins, if they have a need in centerfield (which is not a natural position for him anyway) can't find the equivalent  at about the same salary. This is not one of those 'in case of emergency break glass' situations.

    22 minutes ago, sweetmusicviola16 said:

    I would agree that as the roster stands right now that Martin would be the first callup in 2024. I would see this being the case even if Martin tears it up in ST, though that could potentially change things. But, do you think the possible trade of Kepler would elevate Martin to an opening day job? Provided he shows himself worthy in ST.

    Martin does excite me and intrigue me.

    I think a Kepler trade would mean they're handing Larnach a starting job, assuming Kepler is dealt for pitching or prospects and the rest of the 40-man stays as is, and Martin is still the first guy in line. Depending on who's replaced early in 2024, Larnach may actually be ahead of Martin in line for the spot. If Wallner or Kepler are the ones being replaced I'd bet Larnach gets the call before Martin, unless their performances are severely different.

    I don't think this regime is really open to handing any rookie who hasn't debuted yet a starting job out of camp. Miranda's 2021 season in the minors was better than anything Martin's ever done, and he wasn't handed a starting job opening day 2022. I actually don't mind that strategy when you're trying to contend. Handing opening day jobs to kids who've never seen a major league pitch is a really big gamble. My problem with their strategy is the end of year rookie usage, not the start of year usage.

    Why didn't Miranda get his feet wet at the end of 2021 in a season the team lost 89 games? Why was Jordan Luplow on the Twins September roster last year instead of Martin? I'd like to see them start getting guys who are likely to debut the next season a little taste in September. Especially when the season is either lost, or the division is wrapped up like 2021 and 2023.

    28 minutes ago, arby58 said:

    Gordon has a 1.4 WAR over almost 700 at bats, he strikes out more than 5 times as many as he walks, he has little power and not a great throwing arm for the outfield. He also had a negative WAR last year - he is the epitome of a marginal MLB player. I don't 'get' why the Twins, if they have a need in centerfield (which is not a natural position for him anyway) can't find the equivalent  at about the same salary. This is not one of those 'in case of emergency break glass' situations.

    I'm not arguing that Gordon should, or would, be the opening day CFer. But he'd get a roster spot over Martin if he's on the 40-man on opening day. Martin is an "in case of emergency break glass" situation, too, if he's the opening day CFer. Handing guys who have never seen a major league pitch an opening day job when you're trying to contend is not a move that you make if you can avoid it.

    Gordon, Castro, Farmer, and Vazquez are the Twins bench right now. Martin isn't taking any of their jobs on opening day if they're all still around by then. And none of them, including Martin, should be handed the starting CF job if Buxton can't do it. But Martin is below Buxton, Castro, and Gordon because, whether anyone likes it or not, options play a role in who gets jobs. 

    I've never been a big Gordon fan. He swings way too much. But his best season at the plate was better than Castro's season last year and everyone seems to love Castro. Castro brings better defense and speed, but some people are talking about him being an option as the opening day CFer. A 111 OPS+ in 136 games (Gordon in 2022) isn't nothing. That's a legit major leaguer, even if he's better served as a utility guy. Just like Jose Miranda's 114 OPS+ in 125 games that year wasn't nothing. Fans are way to year to year on things. Gordon played 34 games last year, and Miranda played 40, but people have decided neither is useful anymore. But they're also set on Lewis, Julien, and Wallner being established despite none of them playing as many games as  Gordon or Miranda did in their successful years.

    And for Martin vs Gordon, even outside the options situation with Gordon, there is certainly a case to be made for Gordon. Gordon had an .801 OPS in AAA at the age of 23 in 70 games. Austin Martin at the age of 24 had a .791 OPS in 59 games. And, as mentioned, Gordon had a 111 OPS+ in 136 games in the majors in 2022. I don't care if Gordon is sent packing today, but he's got every bit the resume Martin has. Martin doesn't K like Gordon, but he also has little power and not a great throwing arm for the outfield. And CF isn't a natural position for him either.

    3 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    I'm not arguing that Gordon should, or would, be the opening day CFer. But he'd get a roster spot over Martin if he's on the 40-man on opening day. Martin is an "in case of emergency break glass" situation, too, if he's the opening day CFer. Handing guys who have never seen a major league pitch an opening day job when you're trying to contend is not a move that you make if you can avoid it.

    A 111 OPS+ in 136 games (Gordon in 2022) isn't nothing. That's a legit major leaguer, even if he's better served as a utility guy. Just like Jose Miranda's 114 OPS+ in 125 games that year wasn't nothing. Fans are way to year to year on things. Gordon played 34 games last year, and Miranda played 40, but people have decided neither is useful anymore. But they're also set on Lewis, Julien, and Wallner being established despite none of them playing as many games as  Gordon or Miranda did in their successful years.

    Every year is something, and last year for Gordon was horrible. Yes, he had that 114+ OPS in 2022, but the problem with Gordon is he never was that great in the minor leagues either (the difference between he and Miranda). His best OPS in the minors was .801, and the rest were middle .700s and .600s. No power, bad strikeout to walks ratio. It makes 2022 look more like a fluke than a likely recurrence. There's a reason he's 27 and out of options.

    21 minutes ago, arby58 said:

    Every year is something, and last year for Gordon was horrible. Yes, he had that 114+ OPS in 2022, but the problem with Gordon is he never was that great in the minor leagues either (the difference between he and Miranda). His best OPS in the minors was .801, and the rest were middle .700s and .600s. No power, bad strikeout to walks ratio. It makes 2022 look more like a fluke than a likely recurrence. There's a reason he's 27 and out of options.

    But this thread is about Martin and his ability to overtake Gordon and Castro in part. And his best OPS in the minors is .796. My point is that if Gordon's numbers mean we shouldn't trust him then 24 year old Austin Martin who's never put up better numbers than Gordon shouldn't be someone we're saying should be counted on.

    4 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    But this thread is about Martin and his ability to overtake Gordon and Castro in part. And his best OPS in the minors is .796. My point is that if Gordon's numbers mean we shouldn't trust him then 24 year old Austin Martin who's never put up better numbers than Gordon shouldn't be someone we're saying should be counted on.

    Except Martin is three years younger and can be expected to improve. He's had three years in the minors - Gordon has had SEVEN. Also, if you total Gordon's various years OPS at AAA, it is less than Martin's last year. I just don't get why you want to ride this dog. If Martin isn't the answer, there is somebody out there better they can pick up who is better than Gordon.

    On 12/10/2023 at 9:58 PM, stringer bell said:

    Because the Twins have absorbed so many injuries in the past couple seasons, it is probably prudent to keep him. If everybody emerges from the spring healthy and Martin impresses, the Twins might then let him go, trying to get a prospect for him. 

    He's out of options - if there is really a team out there that wants him (I highly doubt it), they'll wait for waivers.

    4 hours ago, arby58 said:

    Except Martin is three years younger and can be expected to improve. He's had three years in the minors - Gordon has had SEVEN. Also, if you total Gordon's various years OPS at AAA, it is less than Martin's last year. I just don't get why you want to ride this dog. If Martin isn't the answer, there is somebody out there better they can pick up who is better than Gordon.

    As I said, I don't care if they cut Gordon tomorrow. The point is that if you're so anti-Gordon that you think he's completely useless and you can just grab anyone who's better than him during the season if Martin doesn't work out you shouldn't be projecting Martin to work out in the first place. The only difference between them is their K and BB rates. Certainly a real difference, but the idea that Martin should just be handed an opening day job when he hasn't significantly outperformed the guy you think is completely and utterly replaceable doesn't make sense.

    Austin Martin is going to be 25 before next season starts. Sure, that's 3 years younger than Gordon, but it's not like he's on some superstar path. I like him. I absolutely think it's possible that at some point next year he claims a starting spot. I am not fighting for Gordon in the sense that I think he's any sort of answer to the Twins problems. You claimed there was no reason to carry him over Martin to start the season and all I've been trying to do is show that Martin hasn't significantly outperformed Gordon in the minors, Gordon has had a successful MLB season, and it doesn't make sense to expect Martin to be an opening day guy if you think Gordon is useless.

    Gordon was brutal in AAA at 22. Then OPS'd .801 there as a 23 year old. OPS'd .774 there as a 25 year old (2020 was his age 24 year) while making his MLB debut. As a 26 year old he OPS'd .743 in the majors. Austin Martin was in AA as a 22 year old. OPS'd .685 in repeating AA as a 23 year old. OPS'd .791 as a 24 year old in AAA. Why would we look at this and think Martin may be the answer on opening day? That's my point. Martin hasn't lit the minors on fire by any means. He's going to debut at the same age after putting up pretty darn similar AAA numbers in his age 24 season as Gordon did in his age 23 season.

    I don't want to "ride this dog" in the sense that Gordon should be the opening day CFer. I just don't know why you want to cut him and hand Martin a job when Martin hasn't been better than Gordon to this point of their careers. Neither of them should be the answer to opening day CF. But Gordon is just fine as the 13th guy on the bench who plays sparingly while Martin gets a little more work in AAA before he gets the call for an everyday job as an injury replacement in the majors. That's my point.




    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...