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    Twins Spring Battle: Zebby Matthews vs. Mick Abel

    Two young arms are fighting for the final spot in Minnesota’s Opening Day rotation.

    Cody Christie
    Image courtesy of William Parmeter

    Twins Video

    Spring training is ending, and final roster decisions loom for the Minnesota Twins. Injuries to Pablo López and David Festa have unexpectedly created an opening in the rotation.

    Now, two young pitchers compete for the last rotation spot. Zebby Matthews began spring as the favorite, but Mick Abel’s recent electric performance has made the decision tougher. Only one will break camp with the club for Opening Day in Baltimore.

    Why Matthews Should Make the Roster
    To begin with, Matthews entered spring training as the leading candidate for the final rotation spot, and his overall profile still makes him a strong option for the Opening Day staff. Matthews’ 5.92 ERA through 25 starts raises concerns at first glance. Yet a closer look reveals tools that suggest greater potential than the ERA implies.

    Matthews has the type of velocity teams crave in a modern starter. His four-seam fastball averaged 96.5 mph last season, and he pairs it with a slider that generated 50 strikeouts and a 38.5% whiff rate. That combination alone gives him the ability to miss bats consistently. Matthews has recorded 131 strikeouts in 117 innings, showing that his stuff is capable of producing outs at the highest level.

    What makes Matthews even more intriguing is the depth of his arsenal. In addition to the fastball and slider, he mixes a cutter, changeup, curveball, and sinker. Few young pitchers possess that many options, and the variety allows him to attack hitters in multiple ways throughout a lineup.

    Control has also been one of his greatest strengths. Over the past two seasons across all professional levels, Matthews has posted a 4.8% walk rate. Among pitchers with at least 50 combined starts during that span, that mark ranks seventh best. That type of command provides a solid foundation for long-term success.

    Why Matthews Could Be Left Off the Roster
    Despite the tools and upside, Matthews has struggled to turn his raw ability into consistent results. One of the biggest concerns has been his command within the strike zone. While Matthews does an excellent job limiting walks, his pitches often drift into dangerous locations once they cross the plate. Over the past two seasons, opposing hitters have posted a .362 batting average and a .979 OPS against his strikes, the second-worst marks among pitchers with at least 25 starts.

    Left-handed hitters have been especially problematic. They have crushed Matthews’ pitches in the zone for a .406 batting average and a 9.1% home run rate. Those numbers suggest that his pitch placement needs significant improvement before he can fully harness his arsenal.

    Still, there are signs that better days could be ahead. Matthews’ career FIP sits 1.51 runs lower than his ERA, suggesting he has been somewhat unlucky. Even a modest improvement in his in-zone command could significantly raise his ceiling.

    Why Abel Should Make the Roster
    Abel has made a case this spring. In 10 innings, he struck out nearly 40 percent of batters and issued no walks, quickly garnering attention for his control. Abel’s early outings were nearly flawless. He threw his first 10 innings without a walk or run, displaying the command the Twins wanted.

    Even when tested, Abel responded well. Facing the Toronto Blue Jays, he walked George Springer on eight pitches, then left a slider that Daulton Varsho hit for a two-run homer. Abel rebounded by striking out the next three, then finished 3 1/3 innings. He gave up only three singles and erased a runner with a double play. That ability to recover could be a sign of maturation.

    Abel has always possessed excellent raw stuff and a wide pitch mix. If his improved control is real, he could quickly become one of the most dynamic arms in the Twins’ rotation. On the fringes of contention, Abel might offer the highest upside among the pitchers competing for the final spot.

    Why Abel Could Be Left Off the Roster
    Abel still faces a challenge: experience. He has the fewest major league innings in the starting group, making him the easiest to send to Triple A. Developmentally, that option could make sense. Abel has struggled with walks throughout his minor league career, and the organization may want to see a larger sample size of improved command before handing him a permanent spot in the rotation.

    Roster management also matters. Teams often keep younger pitchers in the minors early to avoid inconsistency in the big league rotation. Even with Abel showing the most electric arm this spring, the Twins may see a few more Triple-A starts as the safest path for his long-term growth.

    The final rotation decision depends on philosophy. Matthews offers more experience and stability. Abel brings more upside. The Twins must weigh early-season safety against the potential boost Abel could provide. Realistically, both pitchers will be needed for critical roles throughout the 162-game season.

    With Opening Day approaching quickly, the Twins must decide whether to trust Matthews’ experience or gamble on Abel’s potential. Either way, the outcome of this spring battle could have a significant impact on who heads north with the club.

    Who should earn the final rotation spot? Leave a comment and start the discussion.

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    Both need to get every possible opportunity to fail, and fail repeatedly, at the major league level this year. No excuse for this not to be the case in 2026. Both have the upside to warrant an early-to-immediate long look. If management is unwilling to take advantage of the 2026 situation with early promotion of valued, healthy 24/25 year-old prospects… (also Raya, Prielipp, etc….it’s not like any of these guys are even very “young” at this point)…then there’s truly no hope for this organization.

    9 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Are you intentionally working hard to take my comment out of context?

    The Twins have played the yo-yo game with a number of younger players when it comes to short leashes. Much more so on the position player side of the equation than the pitching side.

    The criteria you've set to prove validity of my position that having a short leash on players influences their methodology require the player to perform poorly with the Twins, be shuffled frequently between the minors and majors, then be given a subsequent more patient environment and to go on to be far better for another team. Pretty narrow.

    I think it's common knowledge setting an unrealistic expectation for performance, then punishing a person for not hitting that performance number is a bad environment.

    Out of context? "That kind of mentality destroys development and younger players." What context am I missing?

    So asking for examples to substantiate your massively exaggerated claim is an unfairly narrow criteria. Lol ok....

    Do I think Falvey's penchant to lean into veteran mediocrity over unproven youth hindered this team at times? Sure, but if you're going to claim the Twins were destroying young players then I'll say it again, cite your work, It shouldn't be that hard if the environment was/is as toxic as you're making it out to be. 

    7 hours ago, Western SD Fan said:

    I could make a tepid argument for Zach Littel.  While I wouldn't suggest he has flourished, he has managed to carve out a meaningful career post-Twins.  Even so much that some people wanted to bring him back in FA to round out the rotation for this year. 😬

    I know you said tepid, so I'll take it as a devil's advocate type argument, but Zach Littell is on his 6th organization since the Twins outrighted him at the end of the 2020 season. SF waived him, he didn't appear in a MLB game for Texas, and Boston waived him before he settled in with TB. Did all those teams "mess with him," too? If Zach Littell is the example of organizational malpractice you're kinda proving my point. 

    Those trades at the deadline are looking better by the day. Imagine if we did not have Bradley, Abel and even Rojas after Lopez went down and Ober continues to struggle. Starting depth and upside would be a real problem even if they may have signed a low priced vet or two. 

    14 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Are you intentionally working hard to take my comment out of context?

    The Twins have played the yo-yo game with a number of younger players when it comes to short leashes. Much more so on the position player side of the equation than the pitching side.

    The criteria you've set to prove validity of my position that having a short leash on players influences their methodology require the player to perform poorly with the Twins, be shuffled frequently between the minors and majors, then be given a subsequent more patient environment and to go on to be far better for another team. Pretty narrow.

    I think it's common knowledge setting an unrealistic expectation for performance, then punishing a person for not hitting that performance number is a bad environment.

    But it's not common knowledge that this is reality with the Twins, or at least any more true with the Twins than a typical MLB team. 

    I agree with him, this doesn't seem to be the case. Much like the fabricated Twins philosophy of "anyone can play anywhere" this just seems like something a fan says regardless of the truth. 

    This in my opinion is what is called a no brainer decision.  You gotta go with Mick Abel over Zebby Matthews to start the season.  Matthews has been erratic and not in control.

    How I think the rotation shakes out to start the year.

     

    Ryan

    SWR (who's not been very good so far in spring training, but logged the most innings just ahead of Abel and Bradley)

    Mick Abel 

    Taj Bradley

    Ober, Matthews, Festa, Morris, 

    23 hours ago, mikelink45 said:

    I would prefer a six man rotation to begin.  Let them duel against real talent in meaningful games.  Reduce the stress on Ryan's back, Ober's struggles, and SWR and Bradley's growth.  

    I agree, great point. It's not like we are going to challenge for a playoff spot anyway. Spread out the innings, save arms and see what we have. 




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