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    Twins Outfield Of The Future Begins


    Ted Schwerzler

    Last night former first-round draft pick Aaron Hicks got the call from the Minnesota Twins. While it isn't his first rodeo in the big leagues, there's no doubt this time is what might be the most important.

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    After playing 27 games at the Triple-A level and batting .336/.415/.561, Minnesota saw fit to improve their outfield by bringing Hicks back into the fold. With more weighing on Hicks this time around, there's also plenty of reason to believe that this time things will click.

    Although he was the 14th overall pick in the 2008 draft, Hicks took a more accelerated route to the big leagues than would have been expected. Despite playing five seasons in the minors, his best season at the plate saw him hit .318/.409/.491 in rookie ball immediately after being drafted. A strong 2013 spring training, combined with the Twins dealing both Denard Span and Ben Revere, had Hicks being promoted directly from Double-A. After 150 games of struggle at the big league level, it was apparent a new approach was needed with Hicks.

    Last season, the Twins demoted Hicks from the major leagues to Double-A. Playing in 43 games for Double-A New Britain in 2014, Hicks batted .297/.404/.466 and once again looked the part of an exciting prospect. Although he didn't get a September call-up in 2014, Hicks was promoted to Triple-A Rochester, and for the first time in his career, played through Double- and Triple-A in succession.

    Expected to come in to the 2015 season with the starting center field job his to lose once again, the Twins opted to go a different direction. With returns in spring training not being where the club wanted, Paul Molitor brought both Jordan Schafer and Shane Robinson north. A confusing decision at the time, there's no doubt that Hicks made the most of his time in Triple-A. Abusing opposing pitchers while being the offensive catalyst for the Red Wings in 2015, Hicks has earned his most recent promotion back to the big leagues.

    Now in line for the starting center field role for the foreseeable future, the Twins are hopeful they can begin to watch their outfield of the future unfold. Hicks will immediately bring not only an offensive boost but also defensive help to a lackluster outfield. He presents opportunity for a Twins team in a good spot to reach even new heights. The Twins hope is that Hicks will play his way into their future plans.

    There's little doubt that Byron Buxton is eventually going to take over the center field role for the Twins. He's the number one prospect in all of baseball, and he's looked the part at every level. Buxton and Hicks are mutually exclusive however, in that the success of each of them would be huge for the Twins, though that would necessitate one of them changing position. Casting aside Hicks' previous struggles (remember, he's in uncharted territory now, having excelled at each level of the farm system in order), a solid start for Hicks makes him an ideal corner fit for the Twins. Hicks has a plus arm, and could profile nicely in right field down the line.

    Minnesota is no doubt enjoying the early success that the 2015 season has brought them, but this team is being built to contend for years to come. The hope is no doubt that an outfield of Oswaldo Arcia, Byron Buxton and Aaron Hicks would be the configuration for many years to come. Adding Eddie Rosario as a fourth option would only further the talent that the Twins could employ out of the gate next season.

    The Minnesota Twins, Aaron Hicks, and most everyone else sees this as a last shot for the former first-round pick, but smart money may be on the player. Hicks has shown plenty of reason to believe in him, and for the sake of an improved outfield going forward, the hope would be that it all comes full circle.

    For more from Off the Baggy, click here. Follow @tlschwerz

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    I'm absolutely baffled by the sudden desire to dump Arcia. He's got 30 HR potential, he's young, and he's cheap. Sure, he'd bring a big haul of prospects in return but that's not what the team needs right now.

    I wouldn't dump him, but Arcia is currently on track to get a multi-million salary as soon as this offseason.  I actually doubt you could get a big haul of prospects for him right now -- his MLB performance to date looks a lot like Dayan Viciedo.  30 HR potential isn't all that desirable in that kind of a package (low AVG/OBP, bad corner defense), no matter the age/salary.

     

    He's going to have to perform to keep his job this summer.

    The one guy not mentioned here is AB Walker III. To me he looks like the LF the Twins will put out there with Buxton and Hicks, with Rosario as the fourth outfielder.

     

    Arcia may turn into a much better hitter as he matures. He's been showing signs of easing off his homer swing in order to get more RBI's. He can flip his wrists and hit a drive in the oppo gap with ease, which could raise his average and his RISP. However, Arcia in my opinion will never be an average defender. He flinches away from the wall, he takes bad lines to fly balls, lets too many balls fall in front of him, and lacks foot speed. Good arm, tho.

     

    The Twins could settle for Arcia in left, but Walker will develop into a better all around ballplayer. Walker's got just as much power as Arcia, but more athleticism, which implies that he'll become a better defender. Arcia at the moment is a better hitter, but I also expect Walker to refine his approach, at least as much as Arcia. Walker also steals bases, which Arcia will never do.

     

    I'm absolutely baffled by the sudden desire to dump Arcia. He's got 30 HR potential, he's young, and he's cheap. Sure, he'd bring a big haul of prospects in return but that's not what the team needs right now.

     

    Also, the idea that the team would choose to pay Hunter to DH over keeping Arcia would be a fireable offense. Hunter might have another year left in the tank after this one, but he's not in the long term plans of any team. Arcia certainly should be.

     

    If Hicks can show effectiveness from the LH side of the plate, he's going to stick (even if he has a few brain farts in the field or on the basepaths). Arcia just needs to calm down at the plate again and he should be an effective LF. Hunter will get us through this season in RF and Robinson makes for a reasonable 4th OF this year.

     

    But the future is an OF rotation of Buxton, Arcia, Hicks, and Rosario. That should be an exciting prospect for a lot of reasons: there should be plenty of offense, even if Arcia stays below average overall it should be a fine defensive alignment, and it's going to be cheap for some time. Rosario should be a great fit as a 4th OF.

     

    Look, Arcia isn't great in LF, but he'll be able to get by out there. There's no need to look at moving him to DH any time soon. But frankly, it's a good thing that there are guys in the minors that are putting pressure on people in the majors. That means you have depth to guard against injury. That means you're not promoting guys too early any more out of desperation (Hicks). And it means you can trade assets from a position of strength to keep the minors strong.

     

    Arcia isn't going anywhere unless he gets too expensive AND doesn't fit in the OF any longer.

    Very well put.

     

    But the future is an OF rotation of Buxton, Arcia, Hicks, and Rosario. That should be an exciting prospect for a lot of reasons: there should be plenty of offense, even if Arcia stays below average overall it should be a fine defensive alignment, and it's going to be cheap for some time. Rosario should be a great fit as a 4th OF.

     

    With the way Molitor likes to mix things around, will there truly be a 4th outfielder?

    Having either Buxton or Hicks playing anything other that CF seems like a waste of talent to me. 

     

    Hicks will probably be the key as to who stays and who goes.  #1 is keeping his head in the game.  He seems to have gotten the hitting thing down.  After his 1st 11 games at AAA he was hitting .250.  In his next 16, he went hitless only twice and raise his average by 86 points.  Looking at Buxton's game stats, it looks like he might be still working off some rust.  He'll have to crank out some Hicks April 22 - May 11 numbers to get called up this year.

    Hicks made a few bad reads and took a few bad routes on some balls. He once flipped the ball out of his glove to dozier showing that he is an careless idiot and he missed the cutoff man a few times. All around bad defender.

     

     

     

    Sarcasm. I think a handful of mistakes once again painted the entire picture of his defense in a negative shade.

    I watched most games last year and yes he made some mistakes but in my opinion not as many as people make it out to be when they say his defense sucks. He looks to have cleaned much of that up anyway




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