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    The 5 Worst Things To Happen To The Twins In 2015


    Nick Nelson

    The 2015 season was largely a positive one for the Twins, and on Monday we touched on five of the most encouraging developments that took place.

    It wasn't all sunshine and roses, though. So today we'll look at the five most unfortunate things that transpired this year, from a big-picture perspective.

    Image courtesy of Bruce Kluckhohn, USA Today

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    1. Joe Mauer's decline continued

    We hoped that he would regain some of his diminished sharpness and plate discipline as he moved away from his concussion issues. We hoped the transition to first base would result in improved power numbers driven by stronger legs. We hoped that Mauer could return to being a star-caliber player whose veteran bat would be the centerpiece in an athletic young lineup.

    It hasn't happened. It's getting harder to believe it's going to happen.

    The 2015 season marked the first time that Mauer has ever posted an OPS+ below 100, ending a string of 11 consecutive above-average offensive performances dating back to 2004. He batted .265. He slugged .380 with 10 home runs from a power position. He struck out almost twice as often as he walked.

    His outstanding numbers with runners in scoring position prevented him from being a total liability, but with the bases empty (59 percent of his plate appearances) Mauer hit .232/.284/.349, while always batting at the top of the order. Throughout his career, he has made up for his lack of home run pop by being an on-base machine who consistently set up the hitters behind him for success. He didn't do that this year, and with a lack of injuries or limiting circumstances to point at, this is beginning to look like what Mauer truly is at age 32: a mediocre hitter who belongs closer to the bottom of the lineup than the top.

    For better or for worse, Mauer – still owed $23 million annually through 2018 – is going to be around for a while yet. We can only hope for better.

    2. Josmil Pinto basically dropped out of the catcher conversation

    Pinto's receiving skills have long been considered marginal at best, but he nonetheless entered this season as the Twins' best hope for an eventual Kurt Suzuki replacement at catcher who could actually deliver some offensive punch. The hitting ability was there, so it was just a matter of making enough improvements defensively behind the plate in order for the Twins to entrust him with handling the pitching staff.

    Unfortunately, Pinto endured a very rough season that likely ends any real possibility of him becoming a regular backstop for the Twins. He battled ongoing concussion issues throughout the summer that cost him two months and limited him to 72 total games (in which he posted an ugly .669 OPS). After returning to Rochester in August, he played DH exclusively the rest of the way.

    When you combine the brain injury concerns with the iffy defensive abilities, it's increasingly difficult to imagine the Twins giving Pinto any kind of real shot to become their starting catcher, and that's a shame because no one else in the organization offers his kind of offensive upside at the position. That remains true even after the acquisition of John Ryan Murphy.

    3. Glen Perkins fell apart in the second half

    Perkins' tailspin at the end of the 2014 season was a little worrisome, but he seemingly erased any doubts with a first half in 2015 that saw him convert every save chance while earning on All-Star nod.

    However, his quick and shocking drop-off after the break, and especially his costly poor outings late in the year, created some major question marks about his outlook going forward.

    Two springs ago, the Twins handed Perkins an extension through the 2017 season with hopes that he'd be their closer for the duration of that term. Now, Terry Ryan is reluctant to commit to Perk as the ninth-inning man for 2016, and no one can blame him. The lefty was consistently ineffective for the final two months this year. After the All-Star Game, he never put together three consecutive appearances without allowing a run. Opponents batted .360 against him with seven home runs.

    Given that Perkins has now tailed off in the late stages of back-to-back seasons, could this be an issue of preparation and conditioning? Ryan seemingly intimated such with this answer in his Offseason Handbook interview:

    http://s16.postimg.org/6ow3j6o2t/TRperk.png

    If that's the case, the problem at least seems correctable. Perkins doesn't strike me as the type of guy who's going to sit back and tolerate this kind of performance from himself, so perhaps his heartbreaking finish in 2015 will serve as a wake-up call.

    4. Alex Meyer unraveled

    When the Twins traded Denard Span to the Nationals back in 2012, they acquired a player that they viewed as a potential front-end starting pitcher. Meyer cultivated his ace-in-waiting status during his first couple years in Minnesota's system, putting up huge strikeout numbers while shutting down minor league hitters at Double-A and Triple-A.

    This year, however, everything came undone. Meyer floundered in the International League, which he had dominated in 2014. From spring training through September, the big right-hander constantly struggled to find the strike zone... and his confidence.

    It's far too soon to give up on the 25-year-old Meyer. But it might be time to give up on the idea of him as a starter.

    With his command issues and resulting huge pitch counts, he had an uphill climb in order to break into the rotation for a Twins team that values efficiency and deep outings from starters. He spent most of this season in the bullpen and it's looking like that is where his future lies.

    The good news is that he can be a major asset there, with triple-digit heat and a wipe-out breaking ball. The bad news is that removing him from the rotation equation leaves the Twins system very thin on high-ceiling starters that miss bats.

    5. Oswaldo Arcia stopped hitting

    Over the years, Arcia has exhibited some notable downsides – namely, a dreadful lack of range in the outfield and some boisterous mannerisms on the field that tend to rub some people the wrong way. He has made up for these things, however, by consistently hitting the crap out of the ball.

    Arcia rose fast through the minors, clobbering the competition at each stop, and reached the big leagues at age 21. He has accumulated a .741 OPS with 36 home runs in 853 MLB plate appearances, all before turning 25, becoming one of the most accomplished hitters in the game for his age. He looked like a long-term fixture in the middle of the lineup.

    Arcia was beginning to heat up after a slow start this year before landing on the disabled list in May. He headed to Triple-A after being reinstated, seemingly for a temporary rehab stint, but never returned to the Twins.

    At Rochester, Arcia's bat went amiss for the first time in his career. Outside of a brief home run flurry in July, he was inexplicably flat-out awful against Triple-A pitching for a full three months, batting just .199 with a .630 OPS while showing almost no plate discipline.

    His lost year puts the Twins in a tough position, because Arcia will be out of options next spring, meaning he'll either need to be rostered or exposed to waivers. It's tough to count on him after his brutal showing in 2015, but it'd be even tougher to simply let his potent lefty power bat slip away.

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    Good list.  One of my top concerns, maybe my top concern was the step back, or at least lack of development from all the hard throwing relief pitchers who were previously thought to be on the fast track to the majors.  It couldn't get more disappointing for the 2014 draft class with Burdi, Reed and Curtis all disappointing after strong 2014 seasons.  Add Zach Jones to the mix and it's easy to see why many people thought the MLB bullpen should have easily been able to be fixed internally last year.

     

    Despite all the attention paid to relief arms in the draft lately, only two guys (out of 18!) pitched in relief in 2015 and were drafted by the team this decade. They were Ryan O'rourke picked in round 10 and AJ Achter in round 46 in 2010.  Oof.

     

    Good one. I was going to mention this also. Burdi, Reed, Meyer should have been expected to contribute - at least by the latter point of 2015.

     

    Hopefully the solid AFL campaigns by Burdi and Reed portends good things in 2016.

     

    Morneau somehow slashed his K% to a career low at age 33. For all the talk about needing to hit for power, I'd love to see what Mauer could do by reducing his K% back to his early career levels.

     

    Yeah, given the BABIP and ISO he put up last season, turning 1/3 of his Ks into balls in play would have improved his 2015 slash to something like .284/.355/.400. Still way below Mauer's career standards, but a lot easier to swallow (all MLB 1B hit .259/.336/.444 last year).

     

    The latter did bring us Sano, in a sense...but I can't disagree with this statement.

    And the former brought us Escobar at SS. When you think about it, D-San's complete ineptitude may end up being a good thing. Had he hit semi-decently (650ish OPS), you wonder how long Molitor would have stuck with him and we'd have to deal with his lacking production and mistake-prone defense while Escobar continued to linger in a weird utility role.

     

    So yeah, while it's unfortunate that Santana and Vargas collapsed, it paved the way for #1 and #2 on this list

    There are too many specific names on the list.  Example:  Josmil Pinto.  It wasn't the "loss" of Pinto (the handwriting of that was on the wall in before this year), it's the complete lack of immediate, viable replacements for Suzuki.

     

    Suzuki has been a 0.0 WAR player over the last four seasons. Except for the first half of 2014. Which still leaves seven other half seasons over the last four seasons. :)

     

    A zero WAR player is easily replaceable by just about anyone, almost by definition. I would include Pinto, should the Twins have somehow played him regularly last year. I would include Murphy as a good replacement for next year too, should the Twins play him regularly.

    His second half was rough, no doubt, to say that Dozier's overall season was less than satisfactory seems awfully harsh. He put up a 750 OPS with 28 HR, 39 doubles and 101 runs scored as a good defensive second baseman. That's pretty good.

    Dozier was elite at the break despite a BA in the .250s, but by season's end his OPS+ was 101, barely above average, with the OBP falling from .345 to .307, less than his OBP in either '13 or '14. He had an overall better year in 2014, so to me that is less than satisfactory.

    Are the Twins actually trying to DO something about the Mauer problem? Have they suggested that maybe he should change his approach? Stop taking that first pitch down the middle? Pull the ball into the huge right-center gap they're giving him? Have they mentioned to him that his production is simply not good enough for a #3 hitter?

     

    Maybe this is being done behind the scenes but they really seem to be afraid of addressing the problem. And it IS a problem.

    #1 Ryan and Co did not follow Gardenhire out the door...

    #2 Inability by the aforementioned to make trades and give new life to a competing (but failing quickly) team, unlike their competitors.

     

    FWIW: 

     

    Arcia had a higher overall OPS and OPS+ than Hunter (.706/96 vs .702/89)in the majors.  The aforementioned decided to get him to the minors for a lesser player who hit from the wrong side of the plate (check the Twins' numbers against RHPs again; Arcia had a .780 OPS against them... A platoon with Hunter should had been in order but the aforementioned did not think so).  Arcia's minors' numbers are irrelevant at this point because he a. was likely frustrated and did not care and b. had nothing to prove at the level. 

     

    As far as Meyer goes he had a .378 BABIP His 3.28 FIP < 3.66 FIP of 2014.  K% dropped a tick (27% to 24%) but BB% was the same (13.1% vs 13.5%).  So not that much "unraveling".  Other than the fact that the aforementioned thought that the sky was falling.   He does have mechanics issues that need to be solved, but the sky is still up and he pitched like he usually pitches other than the BABIP situation.

     

    The Pinto situation is a combination of accidents and opinions about his defense (by the aforementioned) that may or may not be true, esp. compared to the guy they trotted out all season.  He still might play, if healthy.

     

    So other than the Mauer situation (which I might or might not buy,) and Perkins being unprepared and decided to play hurt, the #1 in this post is the root cause of the issues (and if they did something when Perkins was unraveling, see #2 in this post), the Twins could had make the post-season.  But they didn't.

     

    Good point.  Even with our college reliever draft strategy not starting in earnest until 2012, that's not a good record.  (And not many of them look like they will start 2016 relieving in AAA either.)

     

    For sure, the results have been a mixed bag. I'm still unwilling to concede that  the "strategy" is flawed. I base that on the overall history of failure of all picks for all teams past the top half of the first round. The injury history for these high-velo pitchers is almost shocking. But the Twin's track record is definitely spotty going back to Shooter Hunt, Carlos Guttierrez, and Billy Bullock.

     

    Since then, injury, and not faulty selection, is to blame for much of the subdued optimism: Bard, Chargois, Melotakis, Jones, Romero, Landa, Curtiss, Cedaroth, and a few others. Expectations maybe got a little out of control (pun intended) regarding Burdi and Reed. But those two have issued zero walks in about 20+ innings so far in Arizona, so things are looking up for them. And we have others in the pipeline too: Peterson, Booser, Rosario, Jorge, etc., let alone guys who may still emerge like Pressly, Tonkin, Graham, and Meyer. It's important to note that every one of the pitchers named here possess good velocity, and that I'm not talking about guys like Hildenberger, Baxendale, Darnell, Rogers, etc.

     

    Something tells me that before the end of the 2016 season, relief pitching might be described as a real strength rather than a catastrophic weakness.

    Edited by birdwatcher

    All of the things on that list are valid, but couldn't really be controlled or changed.  There were some things, however, that could've been, and in my opinion are the top 3 with a bullet:

     

    1)  Ryan's reluctance to bring in BP help.  There isn't really an excuse for how that played out (at least, not a valid one).  He eventually did, but not soon enough. 

     

    2)  Ryan's relucatance to call up Sano sooner.  I'm not saying he should have opened the seaon with the club, but the best player on the team, and future face of the franchise, spent half the year playing for another team.  You can try to convince yourself otherwise, but it had everything to do with service time, and nothing else.  You can say hindsight is 20/20....but it doesn't take Billy Beane to see that the lineup needed Sano.

     

    3)  Perkins' collapse.  I don't know what his deal is, and I don't know everything that went on behind the scenes.  But, the facts that have been made known and observed:  He's come into camp out of shape two years in a row, and crumbled down the stretch two years in a row.  I'm not going to come and out and call him lazy.  Its entirely possible there is something else going on.  But, if it walks and quacks like a duck....there's a good chance its a duck.  Funny that his late season melt downs seem coincide with signing his $20M+ contract.   

     

    If any one of those things go the other way, and all three were controllable situations that should have, the chances of a playoff birth go up in a major way.  I can live with Mauer getting old, and certain players lacking requisite talent or getting injured.  I can't live with incompetence and/or laziness costing the team wins.  The fans who fill, and have partially financed, that state-of-the-art stadium deserve better, and people should be held accountable (not just the player with the $23M/yr contract).

    Edited by Darius

     

    Wasn't Bard hurt in college? That is my recollection of why I hated the pick.....he was already seriously injured. If not, well, I'm old, I forget things.....

    Yeah, he had a pectoral injury, IIRC.  Going into the season, he was projected as a first round pick but b/c of the injury he dropped.  It's hard to complain too much about that draft b/c it's looking like that might become of the Twins really good draft years (Buxton, Berrios, Chargois, Jones, Walker, Duffey) but I remember I was really hoping they'd take Pierce Johnson, who went one pick later.  Johnson was supposed to be a quick to the majors college arm.  

     

    Yeah, he had a pectoral injury, IIRC.  Going into the season, he was projected as a first round pick but b/c of the injury he dropped.  It's hard to complain too much about that draft b/c it's looking like that might become of the Twins really good draft years (Buxton, Berrios, Chargois, Jones, Walker, Duffey) but I remember I was really hoping they'd take Pierce Johnson, who went one pick later.  Johnson was supposed to be a quick to the majors college arm.  

     

    So they took a chance on Bard instead of going with the sure thing? Impossible.  :)

     

    #6...IMHO...May being moved to the bullpen.

    Not only should Pelfrey have been moved, (AND the Twins should have traded for a second reliever besides Jepson), but he may have actually found a real and successful niche in the bullpen. But the rotation would have been better with May in it. We might have even won a couple more games in the 2 month stretch where Pelfrey pitched just well enough to lose all of his decisions.

    And now, because of what he did in the pen last year, the Twins may be convinced they should put this talented young starter in the pen for good. I fully expect a bounce back from Hughes. Santana had a bad stretch, but otherwise pitched as well as I've ever seen him. But how awesome would it be to see Gibson, Berrios, May and Duffey all in the rotation together?

    I have gone on assuming May's return to the rotation, given the mediocrity & ineffectiveness of Mr. "Bats In The" Pelfrey. Thanks, now I've got another reason to be concerned with the braintrust's madness without any discernible, logical method as it impacts the starting rotation. As if they opined in unision: "Mmmnn, yes, let's send that perfectly good mid-rotation arm to the bullpen, we don't need him with our great wealth of starting options..."

    #1   Santana PED suspension.  Huge hit to the team.  Probably 4 or 5 win difference at least.

     

    #2   Starting rotation meltdown after the all-star break where the Twins won 5 of 21 games.  Cost us the playoffs and illustrated how weak the rotation could be especially without Santana.  Tommy Milone, Kyle Gibson and Phil Hughes all horrible in this stretch.   

     

    #3   Joe Mauer's continued implosion that began in earnest in 2014.  Having FULLY recovered from concussion symptoms for 2 + years, Joe surprisingly(or unsurprisingly to some) continued declining in almost every statistical category despite round after round of scathing rebuttals by his supporters on this forum.  Again, his lack of production was a significant reason the Twins fell short of the playoffs.   

     

    #4    Trevor May banished to the bullpen in favor of Mike Pelfrey.  Despite some shorter outings early in the season Trevor was the Twins best starter early on.  Unfortunately for him, MIke Pelfrey made a big big stink about being sent to the pen and Trevor was sent there in early July due to lack of quality relievers.  This became a much bigger factor later on in the season when Mike became ineffective as he stopped using his split finger fastball.   

     

    #5    As many here correctly predicted before the season began, the bullpen was a thorn in our side.  When it became apparent that they were in full meltdown mode after the break Ryan failed to take corrective measures in time which cost the team on the order of 8-10 wins.  Moving Trevor May to the bullpen was a desperation move and the Jepsen trade was too little too late.  Huge fail on Terry Ryan's part. 

     

    Are the Twins actually trying to DO something about the Mauer problem? Have they suggested that maybe he should change his approach? Stop taking that first pitch down the middle? Pull the ball into the huge right-center gap they're giving him? Have they mentioned to him that his production is simply not good enough for a #3 hitter?

     

    Maybe this is being done behind the scenes but they really seem to be afraid of addressing the problem. And it IS a problem.

    They have tried various combinations of the above, and there were several noticeable changes in approach last year.  The attempt to "pull the ball into the huge right-center gap they're giving him" resulted in a ton of K's and pop-ups. The return to doing what he does best resulted in a bit of a hot streak, but didn't last.  The only one I haven't notices is the last one on your list, but it can't be too long in coming.

     

    Throughout his career, he has made up for his lack of home run pop by being an on-base machine who consistently set up the hitters behind him for success. He didn't do that this year, and with a lack of injuries or limiting circumstances to point at, this is beginning to look like what Mauer truly is at age 32: a mediocre hitter who belongs closer to the bottom of the lineup than the top.

     

    I was doing some digging and here is a statistic I came up with on how out of place Mauer is in the 3rd spot in the lineup.  I went to Fangraphs and found the player for each team that had the most plate appearances in the 3rd spot of the lineup and found their OPS while in that spot for their team.

     

    ex:  http://www.fangraphs.com/statsplits.aspx?playerid=1857&position=C&season=0&split=11.3

     

     I then ranked all of them by OPS descending and this is what I found:

     

    3BattersRanked

     
    Mauer is by far the worst falling a full 42 points below the 29th ranked guy.  My biggest disappointment is that Paul Molitor let the 3 hole in the lineup be filled with such low production.

     

    Edited by jharaldson

    Mauer is by far the worst falling a full 42 points below the 29th ranked guy.  My biggest disappointment is that Paul Molitor let the 3 hole in the lineup be filled with such low production.

     

    Molitor did try Sano in the 3rd spot, and was rewarded with a .587 OPS. :)

     

    Anybody else he might have tried, taking their full season stats at face value, among those with enough PA to qualify, would have raised our ranking in the above list to... next to last. Escobar at .754.

     

    There just weren't enough good options to cause Molitor's hand to be forced. One can argue that Sano should have been moved up from 4th to 3rd more often. Not a game changer.

     

    The problem was the roster itself. This is not yet a good hitting team.

    I was doing some digging and here is a statistic I came up with on how out of place Mauer is in the 3rd spot in the lineup.  I went to Fangraphs and found the player for each team that had the most plate appearances in the 3rd spot of the lineup and found their OPS while in that spot for their team.

     

    ex:  http://www.fangraphs.com/statsplits.aspx?playerid=1857&position=C&season=0&split=11.3

     

     I then ranked all of them by OPS descending and this is what I found:

     

     

     

    Mauer is by far the worst falling a full 42 points below the 29th ranked guy.  My biggest disappointment is that Paul Molitor let the 3 hole in the lineup be filled with such low production.

    Dislike, but good research.

    #1   Santana PED suspension.  Huge hit to the team.  Probably 4 or 5 win difference at least.

     

    Lots of people have said this, but I don't buy it. I don't think Santana deserves the blame (I know this isn't a blaming thread, sorry) for what happened with the other deficiencies in the lineup.

     

    Also, the Twins were 49-40 going into the All Star break. Hard to see how Santana would have made them 53-36 or better!

     

    Otherwise I can't disagree with the rest of your list too much.

     

     

    I was doing some digging and here is a statistic I came up with on how out of place Mauer is in the 3rd spot in the lineup.  I went to Fangraphs and found the player for each team that had the most plate appearances in the 3rd spot of the lineup and found their OPS while in that spot for their team.

     

    ex:  http://www.fangraphs.com/statsplits.aspx?playerid=1857&position=C&season=0&split=11.3

     

     I then ranked all of them by OPS descending and this is what I found:

     

     
     
    Mauer is by far the worst falling a full 42 points below the 29th ranked guy.  My biggest disappointment is that Paul Molitor let the 3 hole in the lineup be filled with such low production.

     

    Couple points. 

     

    1) Batting order really doesn't matter and is way overstated by fans. 

    2) The few studies of batting order that I am aware of suggest the #3 hitter is the most overrated spot -  The most important spots in a batting order are the 1, 2 and 4 spots. 

    3) OPS isn't the best stat and OBP is probably a better guide.

     

    That said, I'm honestly not trying to defend Mauer.  He was horrible last year and is a real problem going forward.  But batting order doesn't really matter much.

     




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