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    Moving Louie Varland to the Bullpen would be Malpractice


    Greggory Masterson

    We all saw what he could do in the pen. It’s tempting, but it’s not the time.

    Image courtesy of Jeffrey Becker-USA TODAY Sports

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    It’s frankly a compliment to the Twins’ front office, amateur scouts, and player development that we’re even having this discussion. As a 15th-round pick in 2019, the bar was pretty low, but he’s vaulted over it, and now coaches and executives have a tricky question: let him continue to develop as a starter or turn him loose in the bullpen.

    Although Louie Varland was a relative unknown coming out of the draft, he has worked hard behind the scenes to add velocity to his fastball—which sat in the low 90s on draft day but now averages 95—and develop usable breaking pitches to add to his excellent control and extension.

    He’s already had some success as both a starter and a reliever. Through his first 12 career starts between 2022 and 2023, he had a sub-4.00 ERA, though his FIP was about a run higher than that due to a homerun per nine innings rate of nearly 2.00. The wheels came off in his final three starts, giving up 17 runs and five home runs in 15 innings with an opposing OPS of 1.101.

    Varland returned to St. Paul and stayed at the Twins’ Triple-A affiliate from June 18th until September 6th. Upon his return, a new Louie Varland was at manager Rocco Baldelli’s disposal, slinging his fastball up to the high 90s and touching 100. Over 12 relief innings, struck 17 batters out, holding them to a .471 OPS and allowing just two runs (1.50 ERA).

    In addition to pumping his fastball velocity, working out of the bullpen has also allowed him to rely more heavily on his fastball. Since leaving Division II Concordia-St. Paul with only a fastball, he’s experimented with several off-speed pitches to mixed results. If he’s a reliever, there will be less emphasis on developing those secondary pitches, which is another tick in favor of leaving him in the pen.

    However, there are two reasons that Varland should not be moved to the bullpen—just yet.

    First, he deserves one more shot at being a starter—something he’s openly opined for himself—and the Twins need to ensure they don’t start the permanent transition too early. Does Varland project as a frontline starter? No. At present, he seems like a competent backend option. Depending on his ceiling in the bullpen, there’s absolutely a case to be made that he would be more valuable in the eighth inning.

    However, the starting option should be exhausted before that move is made. With few exceptions, pitchers do not return from the bullpen to the rotation. If Varland can get his changeup or slider up to an above-league-average pitch, or if he further develops his cutter, he could have a role as a mid-rotation starter, and those do not grow on trees.

    There are often two reasons a career starter is permanently moved to the bullpen—ineffectiveness and injury. Current Twins examples include Griffin Jax and Jhoan Duran, respectively. Jax was cartoonishly ineffective as a 26-year-old rookie starter in 2022 (after the first time through the order), but his fastball and slider played enough to warrant work in the pen. Duran endured several injuries as a starter, and his raw stuff was begging for an MLB job anyway.

    Varland fits neither of those camps. Again, if he is revealed to be no more than a backend option, it’s probably time to let him cook as a reliever. However, given the time and effort he’s expended to get to the spot he’s in, few would be surprised if he took one more step and could be a mid-rotation arm. But to figure that out, the team must keep the toothpaste in the tube.

    The second reason is more practical and logistical. The Twins don’t have the depth right now to remove him from the mix. All indications suggest that the team will acquire another starter this offseason, bumping Varland out of the rotation, but as recent history indicates, teams need more than five MLB starters.

    Varland can slide into the next-man-up position occupied by Bailey Ober in 2023, on call in St. Paul until a rotation spot opens up—which is inevitable in modern MLB. He would be moved up from the seventh option that he occupied in 2023, a position that gave him 10 starts—and probably would have given him more opportunities were it not for Dallas Keuchel’s emergence as A Man Who Throws Innings midseason.

    Currently behind Varland on that depth chart are arms like Simeon Woods Richardson, David Festa, Brent Headrick, and Randy Dobnak. You might have your favorite of that lot, but if forced up to the sixth option—which meant 26 starts for Bailey Ober last year—there’s reason to be worried about the rotation. Keeping Varland there and giving the other options more time to separate themselves in St. Paul, or simply continue to develop, is the safest course of action.

    Another option is bringing in a veteran to occupy that sixth spot, which would make keeping Varland on standby less of a necessity, but that, too, is a logistic hard bargain. In order to bring a veteran in to sit in Triple-A, the organization probably needs to find a player with no offers to join a big-league team out of camp. That caliber of player is someone like late-career-Keuchel, Chi Chi Gonzalez, Aaron Sanchez, or Jose De Leon.

    None of those names inspire the same amount of confidence that Varland does. Bringing in someone with an opt-out for that position may raise the ceiling a bit on the type of veteran who can be stashed in St. Paul, but that’s still someone like 2020’s Jhoulys Chacín (who did, in fact, opt out before the Twins had reason to call him up.

    If starting pitching doesn’t work out for Varland in 2024, there’s plenty of room for him to transition. Shoot, even if he is an effective starter, he can still be bumped down to the pen in September for the playoff run, similar to how Kenta Maeda was handled in Los Angeles. It’s just not time to force it today.

     

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    Not bringing in a better starter and needing Varland in the rotation is malpractice.

    Choosing to slash  payroll with a group of up and coming  young players developing a taste for winning is malpractice.

    This FO and ownership group employ malpractice as their MO.  They seemingly do what they can to make sure this team is incapable of winning a World Series.  Using a home run plagued back of the rotation starter in the bullpen, where he is clearly most effective, is the least of the issues.  It is non-issue that has almost zero impact on whether this is a good baseball team.

    14 minutes ago, Beast said:

    Not bringing in a better starter and needing Varland in the rotation is malpractice.

    Choosing to slash  payroll with a group of up and coming  young players developing a taste for winning is malpractice.

    This FO and ownership group employ malpractice as their MO.  They seemingly do what they can to make sure this team is incapable of winning a World Series.  Using a home run plagued back of the rotation starter in the bullpen, where he is clearly most effective, is the least of the issues.  It is non-issue that has almost zero impact on whether this is a good baseball team.

    So Louie is a finished product? He has no chance of improving? 

    This is why, even though the Twins haven't shown a willingness to do this, I think having Paddack start the game and Varland piggyback with him is the best way forward.  Both Paddack and Varland fill innings for the Twins, hopefully effectively, and putting less stress on the bullpen when they get the Twins through the 7th or 8th inning. 

    They both stay "stretched out" and depending on pitches thrown, either could fill up to 5 innings in an appearance.  This also leaves the "Wild Card" of Matt Canterino available to fill the 8th inning role eventually.  Canterino would have to prove his health and effectiveness FIRST.  But let's say he does BOTH.  After the All Star break or by August 1st, Canterino could be filling that 8th inning set up role. 

    Guys who were VERY effective last year--Funderburk, Stewart, can continue to grow into a bigger role if performance dictates they should.  Jax, not being overused, would see his effectiveness improve.  Theilbar is effective when healthy, he's just on the I.L. more and more frequently as he's aging.  

    But none of this makes sense or is possible if the Twins fail to add someone who truly should slot in the #2 SP spot.  If that guy is not BETTER than Ryan or Ober, there is an acute need for Paddack and Varland to be used separately as "stand alone" SP's and that presents a domino effect stress on the bullpen if one of both aren't pitches well, or reasonably deep into games.   

    2 hours ago, Cory Engelhardt said:

    I would imagine they will treat a major league signing, with Paddack, as working together for make sure the 5th spot is covered. It's always good to have depth. But maybe that is too much? 

    1. Lopez
    2. Playoff level starter via trade
    3. Ryan
    4. Ober
    5. Paddack
    6. MLB free agent signing
    7. Duran
    8. Jax
    9. Varland
    10. Stewart
    11. Thielbar
    12. Funderburk
    13. Rotating arm from St. Paul

    Well, I think Alcala is going to get a shot this year if he's healthy: the team likes his stuff and he's shown flashes of real ability in the bullpen before his injury, and one of Balazovic, Winder, or Sands is likely to make the roster as well. Which means there's really only room for Varland in the bullpen if they don't sign anyone, and in the rotation if they're unable to sign/trade for anyone. I strongly suspect they will acquire a starter with some kind of pedigree before the season starts, most likely via trade. (I also expect a great deal of disagreement over how good that starter actually is, with people staking out positions that range between quality #2 and "that bum shouldn't even be on a playoff team!" almost regardless of who it is....)

    I think there's a real possibility that Varland may land in the bullpen eventually, but I tend to believe that the franchise would be better off, both this season and for the future, in giving him another opportunity to stick as a starter. If he can add that 3rd pitch and keep the ball in the park, then he's a great add to the rotation for 2025...and likely will end up starting 10-20 games this season anyways, with room for him to go to the bullpen for the playoff run this year anyways. And if he can get either the slider or the changeup working consistently...he'll be even more dangerous in any role. But he won't really get enough reps to know with any real confidence in the pitch if he's not throwing it a lot more.

    Do we really need Varland in the bullpen right now, when the biggest need there is not a high leverage late-inning guy, but someone to throw 1-2 innings in the 5th-7th on a semi-regular basis?

    I think Varland can be that multi-inning bullpen option, that's why I like him there. IF that means he is going in the 5th or the 8th, I don't care much about that. Whatever the high leverage situation is, I like him as a "fireman" of sorts.

    Posters on Twins Daily have speculated about various trades and comments regarding starting pitching nearly always reference an expected trade for a guy to slot in behind Pablo Lopez as a playoff type starter. A few of the names thrown out include: Mitch Keller, Corbin Burnes, Jesus Luzardo, Logan Gilbert, and George Kirby. Guys like Lucas Giolito would not only be very expensive but slot in as #4 starting pitchers.

    While it would be wonderful to acquire one of Seattle's main guys, it is unlikely. If the Twins were to trade, the cost will be some combination of Lewis, Lee, Ryan, or players among that group. Polanco, Kepler, Farmer, Vazquez, and minor leaguers are not going to return the kind of pitcher the Twins need. I have no idea what other teams want from the Twins. A Lewis for Kirby or Gilbert deal might work. A Ryan plus Lee for Burnes and Quero might work. These trades may be too costly for some people, including Falvey. 

    Louie Varland is (as a previous comment pointed out) the type of starting pitcher the Twins are looking for, one who can pitch a full slate of innings over a full season. Ryan, Ober, Varland, and Paddack are as good as Bryce Miller or Bryan Woo or at least they are all in the same proximity. While I'm still hoping for someone like Kirby, etc. to fit into the Twins rotation, a look around the league and the dollars for free agents leaves me feeling plenty confident in Louie Varland as the #4 guy in front of Chris Paddack. We already know that Paddack is a stretch beyond 120 innings. Perhaps a surprise happens which will be welcomed if it makes the team stronger, but I'm fine with the current team.

    On 12/27/2023 at 12:06 PM, Beast said:

    Not bringing in a better starter and needing Varland in the rotation is malpractice.

    Choosing to slash  payroll with a group of up and coming  young players developing a taste for winning is malpractice.

    This FO and ownership group employ malpractice as their MO.  They seemingly do what they can to make sure this team is incapable of winning a World Series.  Using a home run plagued back of the rotation starter in the bullpen, where he is clearly most effective, is the least of the issues.  It is non-issue that has almost zero impact on whether this is a good baseball team.

    Beautiful!  Couldn't have said it any better. 




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