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

    Why the Minnesota Twins Will Overtake the Cleveland Guardians in the Second Half


    Nick Nelson

    The Minnesota Twins trail the Cleveland Guardians by 4 ½ games at the All-Star break. Overcoming the formidable division leaders in the second half will be no easy task, but here's why the Twins are capable of making it happen--and will.

    Image courtesy of Matt Marton, David Richard-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    The 2024 AL Central race is giving vibes of the 2006 season. That year, the Twins went on a blistering run to reach 96 wins after a slow start, but all summer long, they struggled to gain ground on the division-leading Tigers, who were playing at a nearly 100-win pace themselves.

    One of the most unforgettable, microcosmic stretches came from Jun. 8 through Jun. 30 that year, during which the Twins won 18 of 20... and picked up exactly half of a game in the standings. Throughout July and into August, Minnesota kept rattling off wins and taking series, but they just couldn't put much of a dent in their division deficit, which fluctuated between nine and 12 games for most of the season.

    That held true, anyway, until the middle of August, when the Tigers finally started to relent. Detroit got as high as 40 games above .500 at the peak of their prowess -- for a good while, they were on pace for 110 wins, three years after losing 119 games -- but they began hurtling back to Earth during the stretch run. Minnesota capitalized. 

    In their final 50 games, Detroit went 19-31, while the Twins went 30-20 to overcome a double-digit deficit and win the division on the final day. For the younger crowd that wasn't around to witness it, let me tell you: it was wild

    This year, I believe history will repeat itself in the Central. It might not play out in such dramatic fashion, although that is no given. The bottom line is that Minnesota is the better team, and over the course of a long MLB season, the best team tends to come out on top.

    Let's break down three reasons I feel confident in this proclamation.

    Cleveland is good. They're not THAT good.
    I'm definitely not saying the Guardians aren't a good team. They have the best record in the American League; that's obviously nothing to scoff at. But when you investigate their success through any kind of deeper statistical lens, it becomes clear that fortune has strongly bent in their favor. A project called the MLB Deserve-to-Win-O-Meter, which attempts "to determine a team's 'luck' factor by how their hits were dispersed in a game vs many simulations," while also accounting for launch angle, exit velocity, and ballpark, recently pegged Cleveland as the luckiest team in baseball, by a pretty vast margin.

     

    The Guardians rank 10th in the majors in scoring, but are 23rd in xwOBA. Their hitters rank 10th in the majors in home runs, but rank 30th out of 30 teams in average home run distance. Their pitchers are eighth in ERA, but 15th in FIP. Their staff has the eighth-lowest BABIP in the majors and the second-highest strand rate.

    I'm not saying any of these numbers change what has happened. The wins are baked in, and the Guardians deserve credit for timely hitting and clutch pitching. But the underlying metrics do paint a different picture than the surface-level representations of Cleveland's true quality and expectations going forward. The Twins, conversely, have been luck-neutral at best according to almost any metric, and probably more on the unlucky side.

    I don't necessarily expect the Guardians to slump as badly as the 2006 Tigers did down the stretch, but then, the Twins don't need them to, since the division lead is not nearly as large. They simply need Cleveland to get into a prolonged stretch of playing .500 ball, and maybe that has already begun; the Guards are 6-7 here in July.

    So long as Cleveland keeps coming down from their 100+ win pace, the Twins will catch them. Here's why.

    Minnesota has the league's deepest and most unrelenting lineup.
    Over the course of this season, Minnesota's offense has evolved into the league's best. They've removed underperformers (Alex Kirilloff, Edouard Julien), added difference-makers (José Miranda, Brooks Lee), and seen players throughout the lineup perform brilliantly. The players you could've once pointed toward as laggards – Carlos Santana, Byron Buxton, Manuel Margot, even Christian Vázquez – have rounded into improved form, while Trevor Larnach and Willi Castro have reached new levels. At some point (hopefully soon), Royce Lewis will be back. 

    And then at the heart of it all, you've got Carlos Correa, the team MVP and its driving force. He's an All-Star and he's been one of the most impactful players in the American League, offering leadership that goes beyond the field. Although the past weekend's plantar fasciitis diagnosis is alarming, word is that it's less serious than a year ago.

    In contrast to Cleveland, the underpinning of Minnesota's offensive success is quite sustainable: they consistently make contact and hit the ball hard. The Twins rank eighth among MLB teams in xwOBA for the season, and have been considerably better since their lineup reached its current state. They rank first in the American League in wOBA, wRC+ and position player fWAR over the past two months.

    Twins pitching will be good enough to get it done.
    Both the Guardians and Twins have dealt with a void atop their rotation this year. Cleveland ace Shane Bieber is out for the season following elbow surgery, while Pablo López has not pitched in a manner befitting a No. 1 starter. One of those things is correctable in the second half, and one isn't.

    Turning back to the lens of underlying metrics and expected numbers, everything about López screams "positive regression." His 5.11 ERA is vastly higher than his xERA (3.43) or his xFIP (3.22). He has the lowest strand rate of his career, the highest home-run rate on fly balls, and the second-highest BABIP.

    None of this guarantees anything, but they are indicators that López isn't pitching as badly as the numbers suggest. Visually, his stuff looks fine for the most part. We saw last year – especially in the playoffs – what López can be, and at times, he seems very close to unlocking it again. Cleveland, with no Bieber and Triston McKenzie in shambles, just doesn't have a starter with that kind of upside.

    That's not to say the Guardians have a bad pitching staff. It will continue to be a strength for them, undoubtedly. It's just a strength I think that the Twins can realistically match or even outshine the rest of the way. They've got the frontline depth with Joe Ryan, who was a borderline All-Star in the first half, and Bailey Ober, who's been their best starter for quite a while now.

    In terms of bullpens, these are two of the best in the game. I'm not sure I'd put Minnesota quite at Cleveland's level, but it's close, especially if the Twins get Brock Stewart back after the break and the front office pulls a few strings in August or September. (Late-season relief roles for Louie Varland, David Festa or Zebby Matthews?)

    How much does winning the division matter?
    To be clear, I expect both of these teams to make the playoffs. It would likely take a mammoth collapse for Cleveland to miss out even on a Wild Card berth. But the difference between a division title and a Wild Card can be the difference between playing at home or on the road--or even the difference between a first-round bye or a precarious best-of-three matchup to reach the ALDS.

    Granted, these circumstances don't dictate anything, as 2006 illustrated: Minnesota got swept in the first round by Oakland as division winners, while Detroit reached the World Series. But the playoff setup is much different from back then, with far more incentive to take the division title. 

    For the Twins, the key goal over these final 66 games – aside from making sure they hang onto their playoff spot – is to overtake Cleveland and win the Central for a fourth time in six years. This time around, they're really going to have to earn it. I believe they're more than capable.

    This is what it's all about folks. It's gonna be a very fun and exciting second half. Strap in.

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Riley Quick

    Fort Myers Mighty Mussels - A, RHP
    Start #3 for the 21-year-old went well again. He tossed three scoreless innings with no walks. He gave up one hit and had three strikeouts. In 8 IP through 3 starts, he's given up 0 runs, 1 hit, 3 walks, and 13 strikeouts.

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    Cleveland offense is spearheaded by three key. Players.  on base machine Kwan and RBI guys Naylor and Ramirez.  If any of these three goes into a prolonged slump their offense is going to struggle.  Someone already pointed out the key to their success is their bullpen.  Not saying Cleveland can’t pull it off but it is more of an uphill battle for them to keep their offense going.  I suspect they can find help for their pen if needed.  
    The Twins however have the deepest lineup and deepest bench.  They are designed to score runs.  I’m surprised they are not hitting more home runs as a team.  But their offense doesn’t center around a few players the same way as Cleveland so anyone can step up at anytime and lead the offense for a while.  

    I’m not so sure.  There’s plenty of regression to be had on the Twins roster.

    In my opinion, numerous hitters performed at an unsustainable level in the first half.  Larnach, Castro, and Jeffers have already come back to earth.  We saw Lewis slump, and he certainly won’t continue to slug .700.  Lee has shown some holes with a .313 OBP and .744 OPS now after his torrid start.  History says Buxton will hit and injury or extended slump at some point.  Correa developing plantar fasciitis might derail him, but his production may be unsustainable even if healthy.  Miranda had a nice run, but he’s due for a slump as well.  Things could turn back to anemic offense we saw early in the season in a hurry if it happens all at once.  I could see Kepler start hitting for some power and Wallner continue to hit some home runs, but who knows.

    Lopez could turn things around, but Ryan has shown us second half meltdowns and has given up 13 runs in his last 4 starts with less than 6 IP in each.  Ober is has been good, but his last 6 starts have been against the White Sox, Tigers, Mariners, Oakland (twice), and the Pirates.  The four starts prior to that, he gave up 16 runs over 4 starts against the Yankees, Royals, Tangers, and Cleveland, while not making it beyond 5 innings in any of those.  He’s also got quite the history of durability issues, and is already at 100 innings.  SWR is a clear regression candidate and Paddack isn’t any good.  There’s also some bullpen guys pitching above their head, historically, that could be regression candidates.

    Looking at the Guardians roster, not sure I see any strong regression candidates other than Kwan.

    Houston and Boston are both playing very good baseball and are closer to us than we are to the Guardians.  I think it’s more likely that we get chased down by them and miss the playoffs all together than win the division.  I still expect them to make the playoffs, but it is still way more up in the air than most seem to think.  Too many people are already looking forward to the playoffs.

    22 minutes ago, Beast said:

    I’m not so sure.  There’s plenty of regression to be had on the Twins roster.

    In my opinion, numerous hitters performed at an unsustainable level in the first half.  Larnach, Castro, and Jeffers have already come back to earth.  We saw Lewis slump, and he certainly won’t continue to slug .700.  Lee has shown some holes with a .313 OBP and .744 OPS now after his torrid start.  History says Buxton will hit and injury or extended slump at some point.  Correa developing plantar fasciitis might derail him, but his production may be unsustainable even if healthy.  Miranda had a nice run, but he’s due for a slump as well.  Things could turn back to anemic offense we saw early in the season in a hurry if it happens all at once.  I could see Kepler start hitting for some power and Wallner continue to hit some home runs, but who knows.

    Lopez could turn things around, but Ryan has shown us second half meltdowns and has given up 13 runs in his last 4 starts with less than 6 IP in each.  Ober is has been good, but his last 6 starts have been against the White Sox, Tigers, Mariners, Oakland (twice), and the Pirates.  The four starts prior to that, he gave up 16 runs over 4 starts against the Yankees, Royals, Tangers, and Cleveland, while not making it beyond 5 innings in any of those.  He’s also got quite the history of durability issues, and is already at 100 innings.  SWR is a clear regression candidate and Paddack isn’t any good.  There’s also some bullpen guys pitching above their head, historically, that could be regression candidates.

    Looking at the Guardians roster, not sure I see any strong regression candidates other than Kwan.

    Houston and Boston are both playing very good baseball and are closer to us than we are to the Guardians.  I think it’s more likely that we get chased down by them and miss the playoffs all together than win the division.  I still expect them to make the playoffs, but it is still way more up in the air than most seem to think.  Too many people are already looking forward to the playoffs.

    I think this is a pretty reasoned counterpoint to the article. That is why they play the games and we watch.

    5 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    I don't put much stock in launch angle & exit velo as any indication of luck. What they attribute as luck is the ability to spray the ball around the field & one who hit the ball hard & the inability to do so is unlucky. Many also attribute luck with winning one-run games. Winning one-run games is due to having hitters who can hit in the clutch (which is an ability) & not strike out.  

     

    Luck is more than just hard hit and launch angle to outcomes.  I agree that if that is all you look at it is poor way to evaluate if someone is getting lucky more than not.  However, having a large number of your HR be just over the wall plays into that.  If you hit a ball that would be a fly out in 29 stadiums but the one you are in and it is a HR there, that is some luck involved. If you your starting pitchers are always getting out of jams, eventually that will even out some most likely. 

    I have not seen many Cleveland games, only those against the Twins, and I cannot say they got by with a lot of luck, but if you are hitting balls that have low expected hit percentage, unless that was planned to hit where they did, that is luck.  Now, it is true you cannot get lucky if you do not make contact so just having the ability to make contact can help you out some. In part, once the Twins lowered their K rate in late April, they started putting up a ton more runs too. 

    50 minutes ago, Beast said:

    I’m not so sure.  There’s plenty of regression to be had on the Twins roster.

    In my opinion, numerous hitters performed at an unsustainable level in the first half.  Larnach, Castro, and Jeffers have already come back to earth.  We saw Lewis slump, and he certainly won’t continue to slug .700.  Lee has shown some holes with a .313 OBP and .744 OPS now after his torrid start.  History says Buxton will hit and injury or extended slump at some point.  Correa developing plantar fasciitis might derail him, but his production may be unsustainable even if healthy.  Miranda had a nice run, but he’s due for a slump as well.  Things could turn back to anemic offense we saw early in the season in a hurry if it happens all at once.  I could see Kepler start hitting for some power and Wallner continue to hit some home runs, but who knows.

    Lopez could turn things around, but Ryan has shown us second half meltdowns and has given up 13 runs in his last 4 starts with less than 6 IP in each.  Ober is has been good, but his last 6 starts have been against the White Sox, Tigers, Mariners, Oakland (twice), and the Pirates.  The four starts prior to that, he gave up 16 runs over 4 starts against the Yankees, Royals, Tangers, and Cleveland, while not making it beyond 5 innings in any of those.  He’s also got quite the history of durability issues, and is already at 100 innings.  SWR is a clear regression candidate and Paddack isn’t any good.  There’s also some bullpen guys pitching above their head, historically, that could be regression candidates.

    Looking at the Guardians roster, not sure I see any strong regression candidates other than Kwan.

    Houston and Boston are both playing very good baseball and are closer to us than we are to the Guardians.  I think it’s more likely that we get chased down by them and miss the playoffs all together than win the division.  I still expect them to make the playoffs, but it is still way more up in the air than most seem to think.  Too many people are already looking forward to the playoffs.

    What your missing is the Twins have so many hitters who can go on hit streaks more so then Cleveland who has basically 3 really good hitters.  If any of this three slump Cleveland is in trouble.  If Correa slumps Buxton or Jeffers or Santana or Kepler or Miranda or ….. could get hot.  

    38 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    Health, health, health. With health, I think MN catches CLE. If CC or Buxton is hurt/hurt, good luck to MN. If one of the top 3 starters gets hurt, yikesmcyikeyson. 

    This will likely end up being the key factor. We can speculate on stats etc but if key guys go down on one club it would likely be the decider. 

    5 hours ago, LA VIkes Fan said:

    Thanks for the analysis, Nick. I think you're pretty spot on. That raises two questions, (1) what do we need to do to catch Cleveland and (2) how much of an advantage is it to being a division winner. Look, health is the factor we can't evaluate because significant injuries to either team would make a big difference. That also applies to Kansas City.

    But assuming equal health luck, the answer to first question is easy. The Starting rotation is good but not great and we have very little depth behind the current starting five. We have now seen Varland and Festa start. Neither is ready to make a significant contribution this year. First, we need another starting pitcher and there are a couple out there who should be in our price range from both the salary and prospect perspective that would help – Tyler Anderson of the Angels, Erick Fedde of the White Sox, and Cal Quantrill of the Rockies. I would love to get someone like Evaldi, Flaherty, or even Kikuchi, but I just think the cost will be too high. Second, we need one more late inning reliever from the left side. If we can even even get either one of Stewrt or Topa back we have the right side covered. We could really use a guy like Tanner Scott, Jake Deikman, or Aroldis Chapman, but I've even take a guy like Andrew Chafin or Matt Moore. Alternatively, we could get a high-end gas guy from the right side and just drop a lefty and Carlos Estevez is available. We don't need a hitter badly enough to trade prospects of any value. The Lineup is relatively deep and can even survive some injuries.

    I really hope we are talking to the Angels every day about trying to get Tyler Anderson and/or Carlos Estevez. They need young players in the worst way and we can probably get one or both of those guys without giving up any of our top 10 prospects, maybe even not anyone in the top 15.

    How much of an advantage would be to win the division? It could be HUGE. I think it's a fair assumption that the winner of the AL Central will be the number two seed in the AL and get a bye in the first round. The number two seed is likely to get the winner of the AL West in the second round if that team can take out the number six seed, probably Boston or Kansas City. That means the an ALDS matchup with either Houston or Seattle, most likely Houston. That's a team we can beat. We then only have to play the surviving team from Baltimore, Cleveland, or the Yankees in the ALCS. In other words, we can avoid two of the three teams that are toughest to beat, and only have to play one of Baltimore, New York, and Cleveland to make the WS rather than two of them in two consecutive separate series. Winning the division is HUGE this year for our chances of actually having all deep playoff run.

    I don't think Cleveland wins 100 or 101 games which is their current pace. I think it went much closer to 93 to 95 games, which means they go something like 37 – 30 or 35 – 32 the rest of the way. The Twins need to go 41-25 to win 95, 39-27 to win 93. I think they can do that with the team they have, I think the chances are actually pretty good if they add another quality starting pitcher and a quality reliever, and have relatively good health.

    Very well stated.  I think the best thing that can happen for the Twins is for Lopez to return to form.  He has pitched well in (I believe) 3 of has last 4 starts.  That gives the Twins 3 very solid starters and backed by two decent starters.  Another starter to improve our depth is something the front office ought to pursue.

    My basic heuristic for Cleveland playing at their true talent level is that I'll believe it once Jose Ramirez is statistically their best hitter.

    Getting closer now with Fry very close to slipping below Ramirez in OPS.  Still a couple of rookies with small samples and Steven Kwan.  I might accept Kwan OPSing higher than Ramirez, though ultimately I don't see anything to suggest that his bat is really much that much different than Luis Arraez's. Basically he had the first half this year that Arraez did last year and ultimately he will be around an .800 OPS guy (though with a lot better defense than Arraez).

    They're a good team though and still have a 5 game lead so I don't if the Twins will catch them.  It should be a good race though.

    6 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    I just had plantar fasciitis. I think in most cases it's improper footwear (proper depends on the person). I love to walk & resisted giving it up but when I decided to give it a rest for a couple of days & added the proper footwear it cleared up. I'm not an expert & IDK what is proper footwear for Correa is & I'm sure what Correa's heels go through is much more intense beating than what I've experienced but I'm of the opinion that it's very treatable especially caught early.

    I wish I could give this an upvote, but that was certainly not my experience with plantar, nor that of many other sufferers I have known.  Obviously Correa suffered from it all of last year on the other foot, so I doubt his problem this year is "bad footwear"...surely he has been broken of that habit.   I absolutely hope you are correct but for many this is a life-long condition, even with the best doctors and treatments.  Any flare up is frankly very bad news for Correa and the Twins.

    5 hours ago, Schmoeman5 said:

    Yeah, right. Your regression narrative doesn't take into consideration that all the metrics are wrong. Take Kwan for example.  The metrics say he shouldn't be doing what he's doing based on past seasons. What they don't take into consideration is that he's a different player. He's worked on adding more pop to his bat. He's no longer a Luiz Arreaz type hitter stroking line drives to left. He's pulling the ball when pitched in. And he's doing it with some thump. Guess who's capitalizing on Kwans success. Ramirez. And this article comes out when Lewis, Correa, Buxton, Miranda, are out or slowed. Are their replacements going to exceed the performance of those guys? And what about regression for Twins players? Oh that's right. That doesn't happen for the home 9. See you next month for the same type article.

    The metrics say that based on his batted balls from this season Kwan has the 11th largest difference in BA-xBA and the 3rd largest difference in SLG-xSLG (nearly 100 points) of any qualified batter in the league.

    To give him his due, he is hitting the ball harder and has improved in those expected metrics. However, he's still very far from being a power hitter deserving of a .500 slugging. 

    Even accounting for his improvement, he's still massively overperforming his metrics.

    Cleveland, as a team, has the worst batted ball characteristics in the league. Can they keep outperforming their metrics for 70 more games? Maybe, but if it were the Twins I wouldn't bet on it. 

    I think the head-to-head games between the Twins and Guardians will determine the Central champ. The Twins would have to win seven of eight against Cleveland to get the tiebreaker, but six of eight would make up almost all the ground between the two clubs.

    Health and pitching will determine if they can overtake Cleveland. 

    I believe that the Twins can catch Cleveland if they have relatively good health.  To me this year reminds me more of 2003 when KC was playing over their heads and the Twins were 7.5 games back at the all-star break.  The Twins added Shannon Stewart and won the division.   I think Brooks Lee can be this years Shannon Stewart with his on base abilities and the Twins will have the equivalent of an August trade when Lewis comes back.  JMHO

     

    5 hours ago, RpR said:

    I used to think shoes were shoes; I would try on a pair and know instantly if there was a major problem.

    I found out in the past ten years, that shoe nasties can show up a goodly deal of time after purchase, and makes life miserable.

    Been wearing dad shoes for about 10 years here too. Feels so much better.

    7 minutes ago, IaBeanCounter said:

     I think Brooks Lee can be this years Shannon Stewart with his on base abilities and the Twins will have the equivalent of an August trade when Lewis comes back.  JMHO

     

    🤩

    You mean if he quits immitating Louis Arraez by literally throwing a game away.😂

    5 hours ago, RpR said:

    I used to think shoes were shoes; I would try on a pair and know instantly if there was a major problem.

    I found out in the past ten years, that shoe nasties can show up a goodly deal of time after purchase, and makes life miserable.

    Shoes are most definitely not just shoes. They make a difference. Ask Cliff.

     

    15 minutes ago, IaBeanCounter said:

    Shannon Stewart

    "After his stellar 2003 season, Stewart suffered from plantar fasciitis problems in both feet, limiting him to 92 games in 2004 and only 44 in 2006."

    I remember that quite well.

    May history not repeat itself.

    3 hours ago, Beast said:

    ... [Ober's] also got quite the history of durability issues, and is already at 100 innings.  

    Ober did have 167 innings pitched last year, including the minors. He's on pace for 169. 

    Another thing to think about is 2 years ago the roles were reversed and the guardians over took so it's probable we could return the favor this year and Clevelands lineup is solid but alot of their hitters have been playing well above their previous numbers and likely can't maintain that.

    I don't really care if the Twins overtake Cleveland or not. I only want 3 things:

    1. Twins make the playoffs (wildcard is fine by me)

    2. Twins get blistering hot in the playoffs

    3. Twins win the World Series

    It seems to me over the last 10-15 years the best teams in MLB rarely win the World Series anymore. Just the teams that get hot during the playoffs...

    How many years have we (basically all non-Cleveland fans) said Cleveland "ain't as good as their record"?

    The time has long passed to give up this trope and accept that Cleveland puts a very good team on the field, and if you are waiting for them to come back to earth, you are likely to be disappointed. 

    Either that Fracona magic is so strong he need not even be around, or maybe the Spiders have a pretty good model for putting team on the field year after year. 

    You need to beat them, they won't do it for you!

    I remember 06 like yesterday and those guys would have made noise if not for the injuries to Radke, and Liriano. (Not to mention the error Hunter made that had a .000001% chance of happening)

    I don't think this team has ever been in a hole that deep. This four games is nothing. Cleveland can't sustain this lead. Again, if we can somehow stay healthy..we are top 3 in the AL.

    if I'm Falvey..and obviously I'm not...I'm shopping for Scherzer, Eovaldi, or maybe Quantrill, or t.Anderson. that 4-5 rotation spot isn't going to matter in October but it matters if you want to be playing then.

    At this point, money should not be the object. The players are here. Let's go Win!

    No more negativity/badmouthing!!! We got the team to win it all!!! Once everyone is back at full health no stopping the twins!!! They are must see/watch/listen to!!! I’m planning everything around twins. Forget about going out with friends/working and missing games!!! No way!!! Twins are must watch and another World Series championship will happen!!! Go twins!!!!




    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...