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    Prospects Parked


    Nick Nelson

    Byron Buxton goes by the nickname "Buck." I'm told it's a shortening of his last name, but at this point I'm wondering if it isn't more appropriately a shortening of the words "bad luck."

    The tweet from William Boor, a reporter on scene at the Arizona Fall League on Monday, felt like some sort of cruel cosmic joke:

    #Twins prospect Byron Buxton, MLB.coms top prospect, just left today's #AFL14 game with an injury. Looked like he hurt wrist diving for ball

    It evoked a nauseating feeling that was all too familiar.

    Image courtesy of Mark Rebilas, USA Today

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    Buxton's season in the minors was obliterated by injuries, each one somewhat freakish in nature. He sprained a wrist in spring training, then reinjured the same wrist, then took a painful fastball to the other wrist, and ended his campaign with a knockout concussion in the outfield.

    When I pondered this summer whether the Twins are the unluckiest team in baseball, that sentiment stemmed largely from the plight of their star prospect. Buxton is the top asset in the organization, and the centerpiece of their rebuilding effort.

    This time Buxton has a fractured finger, which is at least preferable to a wrist aggravation, but his AFL season is done. He'll once again be shut down before he really gets a chance to get going. It has truly been a lost season for the premier young talent in the game.

    So if Terry Ryan seems cautious about raising expectations for next year's team, I guess it's not hard to see why. Much speculation is surrounding the manager search right now, and that will soon give way to hot stove buzz as free agency heats up, but neither a new skipper nor an expensive veteran addition is going to fuel a turnaround for this club.

    That responsibility rests upon the young internally developed core led by Buxton. And he's not the only one who's been struck by setbacks. Miguel Sano lost his whole season to Tommy John surgery, and is sitting out winter ball. Eddie Rosario, who ranked as the organization's third-best positional prospect, lost nearly half his season to a drug suspension and scuffled after returning, though he's currently raking in the AFL.

    Had things gone to plan, all three would have started the 2014 season in Double-A and would likely be angling for big-league jobs next spring. Instead, all three will likely start at Double-A next year, with much to prove.

    That's why I cut Ryan quite a bit of slack for the franchise's stalling rebuild. While bad decisions have been made, these prospect developments have been far more impactful and have been entirely out of his control.

    But here's some food for thought: If you believe in Doug Mientkiewicz's managerial muster, you might actually be pleased by the rumblings that he could end up managing at Chattanooga next season.

    Overseeing and assisting the returns of Buxton, Sano and Rosario -- not to mention the rise of top pitching prospect J.O. Berrios, who is likely to start there -- could be the most important job in the organization in 2015.

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    Isn't that the natural cycle you always post about? How could the Tigers have a good farm system if they are drafting late all the time lately? And, isn't your argument that is only sustainable for about 10 years or so doing it the Twins way? How many years will the Tigers be good/great, then bad, then good/great again? Isn't the cycle about the same?

    Good set of questions. Let's take your favorite organization, the Cards, to exemplify how an organization can, with luck and skill and mistake avoidance, keep themselves from the deepest depths. It starts with having a mentality of constant rebuilding. A team can "rebuild" from mid-cycle better than with a completely depleted farm system. Some semblance of excellence can be sustained for longer than ten years IF the organization EXECUTES with an acceptable volume of those inevitable mistakes and the very occasional but inevitable bad draft. And yes, it's tenfold easier to have a good draft if you have a top ten pick. SO, in my view of the Card's world, they always have talent rising at a decent clip, they avoid becoming financially encumbered for years beyond the useful life of a player contract, they avoid the Garza-Ramos-Hardy stuff that sets a franchise back two years, and they avoid FA moves almost at all "costs", because they can, frankly, having avoided scraping bottom like our Twins have done.

     

    To emulate the Card's model effectively, you have to first get back to roughly mid-cycle in terms of prospect depth, and you have to begin to accumulate a bit of surplus talent that can be traded to fill the remaining holes.

     

    Entering their fourth (not third, my bad earlier) off-season of the rebuild, I'd say the Twins are in a position to begin a sustainable run of success. In contrast, even spending $170M or more, Detroit's run of success, if you call a wild card one-and-done a success, is past its apex.

    I just wish people weren't so unrealistically positive when "throwing out these five and six year numbers" when it comes to the Twins.

     

    Your math is off.  We are now in the midst of the fourth off-season of the rebuild, not the third, 2011-2015, and the Twins have already sent signals about off-season moves and 2015 payroll projections that Year Five of non-competitiveness is all but assured.  And sadly, that is highly reflective of the Twins history since the 70s of the typical rebuild being of at least five bad years, followed by a number of bad/mediocre  years as they finally accept the need for more comprehensive roster turnover.

     

    Here are the positive+++ and negative--- cycles for the Twins since '62.

     

     

     

     

    +++ 1962-1970 Mostly strong years, two mediocre.  9 years.

    ---    1971-1986 Mediocre to bad  SIXTEEN YEARS

    +++ 1987-1992 Mostly good years with one bad.  6 years

    ---    1993-2000  Bad, bad, bad  EIGHT YEARS

    +++  2001-2010 Very competitive, one season under .500. 10 years

    ---    2011-2014 Thank God for the Stros.  FOUR YEARS & ???

     

     The Twins have a few rookies dipping their toes in the major league water, but the projected impact prospects still have quite a ways to go before this team will be worthy of regaining the title "perennial legit contender."  Hopefully, it can be before 2019.

    You're right, my bad. We've only had three off-seasons of rebuilding so far, and the main visible benefits of those three years is a top 3 farm system and additions like Hughes, Vargas, Nolasco, Santana, Arcia, May, Pinto... 

     

    I don't hear anyone calling us a "perennial legit contender", do you? You're absolutely right, though, that none of the five prospects we have ranked among the forty best in all of baseball have made an impact yet. I think even the most optimistic of us would be happy with a record of around .500 in 2015.

    Good set of questions. Let's take your favorite organization, the Cards, to exemplify how an organization can, with luck and skill and mistake avoidance, keep themselves from the deepest depths. It starts with having a mentality of constant rebuilding. A team can "rebuild" from mid-cycle better than with a completely depleted farm system. Some semblance of excellence can be sustained for longer than ten years IF the organization EXECUTES with an acceptable volume of those inevitable mistakes and the very occasional but inevitable bad draft. And yes, it's tenfold easier to have a good draft if you have a top ten pick. SO, in my view of the Card's world, they always have talent rising at a decent clip, they avoid becoming financially encumbered for years beyond the useful life of a player contract, they avoid the Garza-Ramos-Hardy stuff that sets a franchise back two years, and they avoid FA moves almost at all "costs", because they can, frankly, having avoided scraping bottom like our Twins have done.

     

    To emulate the Card's model effectively, you have to first get back to roughly mid-cycle in terms of prospect depth, and you have to begin to accumulate a bit of surplus talent that can be traded to fill the remaining holes.

     

    Entering their fourth (not third, my bad earlier) off-season of the rebuild, I'd say the Twins are in a position to begin a sustainable run of success. In contrast, even spending $170M or more, Detroit's run of success, if you call a wild card one-and-done a success, is past its apex.

     

    The Cards have done a really good job building from within, drafting and developing.  That is without question.  I don't know if they have avoided free agency "at all costs" though.  They certainly have been willing to dole out the types of contracts that are doled out in free agency.  The types of contracts that get teams in trouble.  Whether that be in free agency or extending their own players is really not a big difference.

     

    For example:

     

    They had 10 years and $210M on the table for a 31 year old Albert Pujols.

     

    They then turned around and give a 30 year old Holiday 7 years and $120M.

     

    They extended Wainwright fives years for 97M, ages 32-37

     

    They signed Peralta on the FA market at age 31, 4 years and $53M after he was tied to PED's

     

    They certainly were lucky someone outbid them for Pujols.  They still owe Wainwright $80M over the next four years and he is 33.  This is a guy that had TJ in 2011 and then has pitched 666 innings in the following three years.

     

     

    Edited by tobi0040

    You're right, my bad. We've only had three off-seasons of rebuilding so far, and the main visible benefits of those three years is a top 3 farm system and additions like Hughes, Vargas, Nolasco, Santana, Arcia, May, Pinto... 

     

    I don't hear anyone calling us a "perennial legit contender", do you? You're absolutely right, though, that none of the five prospects we have ranked among the forty best in all of baseball have made an impact yet. I think even the most optimistic of us would be happy with a record of around .500 in 2015.

     

    As things stand now, and the seeming unlikelihood that any major additions will be coming in from outside the organization,  I am one that would be absolutely thrilled if the Twins hit around the .500 mark in 2015.  It would mean that there would have had to be some combination of events:

     

    more of the rookies were called up and had immediate impact,

    sophs didn't regress,

    the OF situation miraculously stabilized,

    Mauer returned to career average,

    Plouffe and Escobar prove that 2014 wasn't a fluke, 

    Hughes stopped his pattern of even-year-on/odd-year-off,

    Nolasco returned to career average. 

     

    I'm not holding my breath that the majority of these items will have come about.  Assuming they basically stand pat on the extended roster, the most optimistic take would be that the earliest they could hope to be tabbed as fringe, not perennial, contenders would be 2016.  And then, going into 2017, either Hughes would have to be re-signed or another potential ace acquired, or the Twins have to draw to a perfect inside straight with May, Meyer and Berrios.  Still seems like at least SEVEN years in the dark forest.

    Edited by jokin



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