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It took some time for the Twins to allow Matt Wallner an actual leash at the highest level. Trevor Larnach started in left field on Opening Day, But Wallner continued to produce with a 927 OPS in 67 Triple-A games and forced his way into the starting lineup, where he posted a 139 OPS+ across 76 games. Now, he will be tasked with substantiating that production.
Wallner got his feet wet with an 18-game sample back in 2022. The immense power was impressive, and overall he was above league average in that span. As with many power hitters, the strikeouts are prevalent with Wallner, but he also does a good job at drawing walks. A book has been put together on him, though, and pitchers will have had an offseason to prepare against him.
Last year, Wallner owned a 31.5% strikeout rate, which, had he qualified, would have ranked fifth in the majors. Only Brent Rooker, Jack Suwinski, James Outman, and Ryan McMahon ended more at-bats in strikeouts. Each produced positive fWAR totals, so it is a path that can work, but Wallner must continue to draw walks and dictate at-bats. His 11% walk rate was above Rooker and McMahon of that group, but there is room to get better.
At the dish, Wallner chased just over 28% of the time, which is respectable. He also whiffed just over 15% of the time, below the 16.7% mark he put up during the 2022 cameo. Unlike Larnach before him, Wallner will see a heavy diet of heat. Whereas the Oregon State product feasted on fastballs and struggled with offspeed, Wallner’s diet has been fastballs up and away. With a nearly 50% pull rate last season, pitchers don’t want to give the slugger a chance to deposit a ball into the overhang at Target Field.
Exit velocity and hard hit rate are the name of the game for Minnesota’s left fielder, and he loses some of that prowess when flipping the ball to the opposite field. Of his 14 home runs last season, only three went left of center, and only one was truly to left field. His 18.8% barrel rate and nearly 50% hard-hit rate play best when he can drive the ball on the right side. As pitchers force him to be patient and go the other way or jam him in, it will take adjustments to survive.
Defensively, Wallner will also need to work on keeping himself in the lineup. He has a huge arm, but most teams ceased testing it after the Southern Miss product recorded a few early outfield assists. He was worth -2 DRS and -2 OAA in just over 300 innings in left field last season, and while that’s not a significant sample at all, he can’t succumb to needing daily defensive replacements.
What Baldelli does for contingency plans remains to be seen. Emmanuel Rodriguez isn’t going to be a consideration early on this year, and Austin Martin is a better fit in center field. Manuel Margot could definitely get run behind Wallner, and he may even be an ideal platoon partner there. Then there’s Larnach, who will likely be ticketed for Triple-A St. Paul to begin the year. He has been given sporadic chances but has never done enough to stay healthy and stick. A strong start at Triple-A could bring the former first-round pick back to the big leagues, but Minnesota likely will give Larnach and Wallner time to settle in at their respective destinations.
Wallner's success in his sophomore campaign could propel the Twins to new heights. He went through periods of being a lineup leader last season and then experienced a hitless streak where everything seemed to go wrong. If he can remain somewhere in the middle all year long, everyone involved can benefit from a corner fielder who can man the position for a few years.
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