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    Week in Review: Reality Check

    Following a winning surge that brought them within a game of .500, the Twins dropped six of seven while being struck by further attrition in the pitching corps. Things are looking significantly more bleak than they did a week ago.

    Nick Nelson
    Image courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    The Weekly Nutshell:
    The past week represented an interesting opportunity for the Minnesota Twins to match up against a couple of franchises in similar positions. The White Sox and Pirates are also lower-budget teams that are focused on development and building toward the future while also trying to stay competitive in the present. During these two series, the Twins looked to be miles behind both opponents. 

    They lost six of seven games, with the only win coming in a laborious 11-inning affair on Tuesday. An increasingly injury-ravaged and filler-packed pitching staff gave up nine-plus runs on three separate occasions as the team's biggest strength from the first third of the season lapsed into a liability. Now the Twins will limp back to Target Field on a five-game losing streak, hoping to capture any kind of positive energy with the season sinking back into darkness.

    Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 5/25 through Sun, 5/31
    ***
    Record Last Week: 1-6 (Overall: 27-33)
    Run Differential Last Week: -25 (Overall: -21)
    Standing: 3rd Place in AL Central (6.5 GB) 

    Latest Game Results

    Game 54 | CWS 3, MIN 1: Twins Come Out on Losing End of Chi-Town Pitching Duel

    • Martin, Bell, Clemens: 0-12

    Game 55 | MIN 5, CWS 3 (11): Lee's Clutch Three-Run Double Secures Win in Extras

    • Ryan: 7.2 IP, 2 ER, 5 H, 0 BB, 9 K

    Game 56 | CWS 15, MIN 2: Regression Hits Like Load of Bricks in Massive Blowout 

    • Orze, Adams: 2.2 IP, 8 ER, 2 H, 2 BB, 3 K

    Game 57 | CWS 6, MIN 2: Walks, Mistakes Cost Twins Early in Disappointing Series Finale

    • Woods Richardson: 2.2 IP, 5 ER, 5 H, 3 BB, 4 K

    Game 58 | PIT 6, MIN 5: Reynolds Walks Off Rogers with Two-Run Homer in Ninth Inning

    • Larnach: 2-4, HR, 2 RBI

    Game 59 | PIT 10, MIN 9: Fierce Comeback Effort Fall Short After Ober Digs Big Early Hole

    • Ober: 4.2 IP, 8 R (7 ER), 12 H, 1 BB, 3 K

    Game 60 | PIT 9, MIN 3: Pirates Rough Up Tiwns Pitching Once Again to Seal Sweep at PNC

    • Matthews: 4.1 IP, 7 ER, 6 H, 2 BB, 7 K

    IF YOU'D RATHER LISTEN TO THE WEEK IN REVIEW THAN READ IT, YOU CAN GET IT IN AUDIO FORM! FIND THE LATEST EPISODE ON OUR PODCAST PAGE, AS WELL AS ON APPLE AND SPOTIFY. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANNELS SO YOU DON'T MISS OUT!

     

    NEWS & NOTES

    The Twins already have Mick Abel and Alan Roden — two key pieces acquired at last year's trade deadline — on the injured list indefinitely, and they've seen Taj Bradley sidelined for a spell. On Friday, another hopeful future fixture from that deadline class landed on the shelf, with Kendry Rojas placed on the 15-day IL due to elbow soreness. 

    The injury is being billed as inflammation, and Joe Ryan's recent example taught us not to overreact, but this is certainly ominous news for Rojas, whose health history was part of the reason behind Toronto's willingness to give up his promising arm in the Louis Varland trade.

    Stepping back into the rotation on short notice for Rojas was Simeon Woods Richardson. Unfortunately, he picked up right where he left off, coughing up five earned runs on five hits and three walks in 2 ⅔ innings. At that point, the Twins had seen enough: they designated Woods Richardson for assignment on Saturday, exposing the 25-year-old to waivers and potentially losing him for nothing. A major downfall from the strong finish last year, and from my view a bit of a questionable decision.

     

    One day after designating Woods Richardson for assignment, the Twins lost another former rotation anchor, with Bailey Ober also heading to the injured list due to elbow inflammation. After impressively giving up just five homers through 52 innings in his first nine starts, Ober had given up seven in his past three, and he got flat-out crushed by the Pirates on Saturday. 

    We'll see how long he's out, and we'll see if Woods Richardson is able to get through waivers and stick around, because the depth would be even handier now.

    The Twins selected the contract of right-hander Mike Paredes from St. Paul to replace Ober on the roster. Paredes is a fun story as a former 18th-round draft pick out of high school who has turned himself into, if not a prospect, at least an intriguing arm who has captured the Twins' attention. Working as a 4-5 inning starter with the Saints, the 25-year-old posted a 2.70 ERA and 25-to-5 K/BB ratio in May, and he also has plenty of experience pitching in relief. Paredes made his MLB debut on Sunday, shaking off early control issues to allow just one earned run in 3 ⅔ innings. 

    In other pitching moves, Travis Adams was sent down and called back up, while John Klein was called up and sent back down. Kody Funderburk also returned to the fold from Triple-A. The Twins, who've already used 18 pitchers in relief this year (not counting Orlando Arcia) are in a constant churn to keep fresh arms at their disposal.

    HIGHLIGHTS

    The Joe Ryan experience continues to be a very enjoyable one. He turned in a fourth consecutive excellent outing in the wake of his early-May elbow scare, holding the White Sox to two runs over 7 ⅔ innings with zero walks and nine strikeouts. 

     

    As so much goes amiss in the rotation around him, Ryan has been beyond steady, putting up quality starts in seven of his past nine turns while seemingly looking better each time out. He ranks fifth among MLB starters in fWAR and appears very much on track to make a second straight All-Star team. It's a little bittersweet that, as Ryan excels and the Twins unravel, the biggest implication of his success is what it means for his trade value rather than this team's outlook.

    It was an interesting week for Kody Clemens. On Wednesday he made his first professional start in center field, and then he was back there three times in the next four days. To his credit, Clemens mostly held his own in the surprising assignment, and he also delivered a power-packed week at the plate with two homers, two triples and a double.

     

    Finally, Brooks Lee deserves a shout out. He came through with the clutch three-run double in extras to lift the Twins in their lone victory of the week, and also homered three times, pushing his season total to eight. 

    Lee's output this season has been highly sporadic, and that was the case again last week — he was 2-for-21 with one walk outside of those four extra-base hits — but the occasional power flurry is welcome and it's nice to see him at least holding his own at the plate with an OPS that's been hovering around average. If he's going to keep batting second and playing third base, he'll need to meet a higher bar for consistency. 

    LOWLIGHTS

    Rojas is hurt. Ober is hurt. Abel remains sidelined. Bradley is still fresh off the injured list, but had his shortest start of the season on Friday (4 IP, 5 ER) after being pushed back a day. And now Woods Richardson is out the door.

    The rotation has been one of the biggest strengths and stabilizers for the Twins over the first two months, but has taken a quick and drastic turn for the worst. Even in the healthier contingent, things are not trending well aside from Ryan. 

    Zebby Matthews got knocked around by the Pirates on Sunday, coughing up seven earned runs in 4 ⅓ innings. It was his second straight start allowing multiple homers, succumbing to what has largely been his kryptonite as an MLB pitcher. He's got to keep the ball in the yard.

     

    Connor Prielipp is bogging down in his own introduction to the big leagues. After posting a shiny 2.88 ERA through his first five starts, Prielipp has turned in back-to-back rough outings, including his latest against the White Sox: 4.1 IP, 6 ER, 8 H, 3 BB, 5 K. The erratic performance included a pair of wild pitches. 

    Prielipp's ability and raw stuff have never been in doubt. The big question is how he will handle throwing 85-90 pitches every fifth day with an arm that hasn't been conditioned for such rigors. Hopefully what we're seeing now is a temporary stumble rather than a sign of Prielipp struggling to endure the taxing workload of an MLB starting pitcher.

    As the pitching staff wears down, Minnesota's offense is not proving capable of keeping pace with the opposition. In these seven games, they were outscored by 25 and out-hit by by 23. The White Sox and Pirates went 12-for-13 on stolen bases (including 5-for-5 against Victor Caratini on Saturday) while the Twins went 1-for-3. Minnesota's hitters struck out 67 times against 13 walks. 

    There are too many non-factors in the lineup on a day-to-day basis. The Twins are going out of their way to keep Austin Martin in right field even as his production falls off a cliff — he went 1-for-22 with a walk in the past week and his OPS dropped by 187 points in the month of May. Using Martin routinely in right field against right-handed pitchers, against whom he has a sub-.650 OPS, is a glaring sign of this offense's shortcomings and lack of optimization.

    So too is Josh Bell batting third, as he did on Saturday despite an OPS that had nearly dropped below .600. He did deliver three RBIs in that game but Bell has been a major liability while hitting in the middle of the order. The Twins hoped he could bring both power and discipline as a veteran presence but in May, Bell managed just two home runs with 30-to-3 K-BB ratio in 102 plate appearances. He entered play on Sunday tied with Pittsburgh's Marcell Ozuna for the worst fWAR among qualified big-leaguers at negative-0.8. 

    Trevor Larnach, another early-season success story, is slumping with a deteriorating plate approach: he went 3-for-24 with 10 strikeouts and one walk. Luke Keaschall is slugging .322. Caratini has four extra-base hits all aseason. 

    Aside from Byron Buxton, who remains clearly hobbled and limited to DH, there is just no one in this lineup who inspires much faith at all. With the attrition and struggles on the pitching staff, unless several of these languishing hitters can step up and show something, things are prone to get pretty ugly here in June.

    TRENDING STORYLINE

    Royce Lewis is campaigning for a recall at Triple-A. He's been on a tear ever since his demotion, batting .324 with five homers and three doubles in nine games. It bears noting that he's still striking out a fair amount (eight times in 21 plate appearances over the past week) but the production is there and he's swinging with a visibly renewed confidence. 

     

    I'm not under the illusion that Royce has suddenly been "fixed" by a couple good weeks against minor-league pitching, but at some point the Twins will need to bring him back and see if he can channel that against the real deal. Might they feel an extra sense of urgency to seek a spark as their offense spins its wheels a with lineup full of punchless bats.

    The big question, of course, is where he will fit in, whenever the Twins deem him ready to return. Brooks Lee appears to be digging himself in at third base, which is where Lewis has played exclusively since being optioned. It seems notable that Arcia was the starter at first base on Sunday, which at least sets up the stylistic precedent for Lewis to play there.

    Will he start getting some reps there with the Saints? Or maybe at second base, or even the outfield? Presumably the Twins will want to at least work him in at a few positions to establish some flexibility before bringing him back. I'm more interested to see how many positions he plays in the coming week than how many more homers he pops against Triple-A pitchers.

    LOOKING AHEAD

    The Twins return home to wrap up their longest stretch of the season without an off day. They've played 10 straight and they'll play seven more at Target Field, with the White Sox arriving for a quick-turnaround rematch followed by a matchup against the struggling Royals. The Twins would love to bounce back against the Sox and may find the going a little easier with Munetaka Murakami now on the injured list. It remains to be seen how Ober's spot in the rotation will be filled.

    MONDAY, JUNE 1: WHITE SOX @ TWINS —RHP David Sandlin v. RHP Joe Ryan
    TUESDAY, JUNE 2:  WHITE SOX @ TWINS — RHP Davis Martin v. LHP Connor Prielipp
    WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3: WHITE SOX @ TWINS — RHP Erick Fedde v. RHP Taj Bradley
    THURSDAY, JUNE 4: ROYALS @ TWINS — RHP Seth Lugo v. TBD
    FRIDAY, JUNE 5: ROYALS @ TWINS — RHP Michael Wacha v. RHP Zebby Matthews
    SATURDAY, JUNE 6: ROYALS @ TWINS — TBD v. RHP Joe Ryan
    SUNDAY, JUNE 7: ROYALS @ TWINS — LHP Noah Cameron v. LHP Connor Prielipp

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    Featured Comments

    2 hours ago, TheLeviathan said:

    It's almost like a small sample size of one week is a bad one to use to judge a bad team as a contender.

    Jim Mora should've been used during that slate of ridiculous articles:

    Jim Mora Playoffs GIF

    I believe the panel would also have accepted a Dennis Green gif.

    Nothing to add to what has been voiced here. Injuries definitely hurt and I can be on board with that excuse for the SP's to a degree, otherwise injuries are part of the game and aren't exclusive to this team. We are going nowhere fast, looking at the 40 man roster I have to believe it is one of the worst in baseball.... when we are using the Alan Roden as a big injury blow you know we are screwed... a career .191 hitter with 2 hrs and 9 rbi's. I also thought Carantini's speciality was his defense.... he has no ability to throw anyone out, the Sox and Pirates ran at will. Big week coming up....7 game homestand, need to go 5-2, which isn't happening unless something changes....no idea what that might be.

    I believe we are seeing the results (in part) of two of Falveys I’m the Smartest Guy in the Room theories. First, that slow, bad defenders that could hit was a market inefficiency. Turns out having good athletes that can run and field as well as hit are desirable. Second, that they skimp on starting pitching draft capital by drafting a bunch of late round college guys and use their magic powers to make them good big leaguers. Turns out that pitchers taken in the early rounds are usually better. Who knew?  To be fair, Falvey did eventually go away from these two strategies but it took five or so years. We are living with that 5 year period where we didn’t really add talent to the organization. One reason I believe we have to trade Ryan and Jeffers is because this org needs a talent infusion. I know we have some good prospects but if you consider a reasonable attrition rate we don’t have enough. We literally need to upgrade every position except CF. Pitching wise our rotation is in decent shape if they stay healthy but the bullpen is in need of an overhaul and there is no pitching left in the upper minors - none. And if EmRod / Culpepper/ Jenkins fail, we will be in for a grim period of time. 

    27 minutes ago, Linus said:

    I believe we are seeing the results (in part) of two of Falveys I’m the Smartest Guy in the Room theories. First, that slow, bad defenders that could hit was a market inefficiency. Turns out having good athletes that can run and field as well as hit are desirable. Second, that they skimp on starting pitching draft capital by drafting a bunch of late round college guys and use their magic powers to make them good big leaguers. Turns out that pitchers taken in the early rounds are usually better. Who knew?  To be fair, Falvey did eventually go away from these two strategies but it took five or so years. We are living with that 5 year period where we didn’t really add talent to the organization. One reason I believe we have to trade Ryan and Jeffers is because this org needs a talent infusion. I know we have some good prospects but if you consider a reasonable attrition rate we don’t have enough. We literally need to upgrade every position except CF. Pitching wise our rotation is in decent shape if they stay healthy but the bullpen is in need of an overhaul and there is no pitching left in the upper minors - none. And if EmRod / Culpepper/ Jenkins fail, we will be in for a grim period of time. 

    They have plenty of SP depth compared to every team in baseball. They are just having awful luck that they are all hurt at once and SWR forgot how to pitch after being fine for two years. I'm not sure what people expect. 

    We can't complain that he didn't draft pitchers high, and that he didn't get enough hitters high.... But we can question the picks and types of hitters, agreed. 

    People also forget that the previous regime left them with one good young player. One. It's hard to fix that when your owner decides to drop into bottom of the barrel payroll. 

    11 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    SWR has been utterly awful. He was not wanted or needed, period. Nobody should be saying they actually wanted to see Sim on the mound in the big show. 

    What can be argued is maybe there's something in the tank from the bullpen the Twins could have tapped into. Sim is not and never has been an MLB caliber rotation arm in my opinion. He's gotten results, but it's taken a fair bit of luck and a whole lot of kid gloves yanking him after short inning starts which tax the bullpen. It's also worth noting the Twins optioned him last year after his poor performance forced him off the roster.

    He simply does not have the stuff. He has never had the stuff. Sim has always had to rely upon pinpoint locations at the very edges and corners of the zone. This is exactly what I expected out of SWR which is why I've felt he belongs in the 'pen if he's going to make it.

    We'll see if he gets claimed. I think he will, but I've been wrong about that in the past where I'm a Twins fan so I see potential in Twins players who are fringy. If Sim goes unclaimed, well, that is virtually irrefutable proof Sim isn't viewed as an MLB level talent.

    You’re thinking about SWR for this year only. He’s making MLB minimum until the end of 2027. You’re making a bet at this time that SWR won’t be worth exploring the next 3-4 years of control. I find that wild since he’s been a 2 WAR pitcher the previous 2 seasons. 

    12 hours ago, Vanimal46 said:

    You’re thinking about SWR for this year only. He’s making MLB minimum until the end of 2027. You’re making a bet at this time that SWR won’t be worth exploring the next 3-4 years of control. I find that wild since he’s been a 2 WAR pitcher the previous 2 seasons. 

    While it's great Sim was able to get balls to inexplicably find gloves instead of seats, his metrics have always suggested he was living on the edge and he was overdue for this kind of regression.

    His fans tend to point to what I consider a completely broken metric (bWAR/rWAR). My opinion is based on 2024 Nola vs. Berrios who had largely identical ERA, ERA+, RA9, yet had massive differences in WAR. I've discovered nonsensical WAR values in Baseball Reference previously only to see him adjusted in subsequent years due to positional value duplication, etc. Buxton's 2017 is a good example where I believe his WAR value has been adjusted/reduced 2x over the years due to calculation errors and adjustments. Baseball Reference made a change to pitcher WAR value in recent years, and I really don't care for it.

    In any case, Sim doesn't have any good pitches and he can't throw strikes or they'll get destroyed. That's not a recipe for a pitcher with sustainable success built into his profile, and that has ALWAYS been SWR's profile.

    Aside from that, last time I checked, you can't substitute his lucky performances from previous years into current games, and the current games are the ones the Twins are playing. If you want to trot an 8 ERA guy out there, I think you'll be amongst the "nobody wants to see that" group. Perhaps there are a cluster of 0.001% die hard Sim fans who believe he's going to suddenly start getting results again.

    18 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    People also forget that the previous regime left them with one good young player. One. It's hard to fix that when your owner decides to drop into bottom of the barrel payroll. 

    2 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    Ryan. 

    I liked Ryan and yet I also felt it was time for him to go as a GM.  Total System Failure was a harsh self-assessment, and at the time it sounded right.

    But "good" and "young" are fuzzy terms in the first place, and I'm not sure perfect 20/20 hindsight is the only way to judge a front office.  At the time, Nick Gordon, Stephen Gonsalves, and Alex Kirilloff were all listed in MLB's top 100 prospect list.  They all fizzled for various reasons, but that snapshot in time was cheerier than things turned out.  Prospects fail all the time, but that top-100 list wasn't constructed with soothing Terry Ryan's feelings in mind.

    And it bears remembering that the Twins posted a winning season and made the playoffs the very first season of the Falvey regime.  Falvey made many moves that season, but unless you're playing OOTP in easy mode, it's very hard to turn a franchise around like that in one off-season with all-new talent.  A lot of young players were already contributing.  Buxton, Sano, Berrios, Polanco, Kepler, and Rosario all were 25 and under, and all made positive contributions.

    A common refrain is that the Twins are perpetually slow in promoting players.  Ryan brought up this core while still young, and it shouldn't be held against him.

    1 hour ago, ashbury said:

    I liked Ryan and yet I also felt it was time for him to go as a GM.  Total System Failure was a harsh self-assessment, and at the time it sounded right.

    But "good" and "young" are fuzzy terms in the first place, and I'm not sure perfect 20/20 hindsight is the only way to judge a front office.  At the time, Nick Gordon, Stephen Gonsalves, and Alex Kirilloff were all listed in MLB's top 100 prospect list.  They all fizzled for various reasons, but that snapshot in time was cheerier than things turned out.  Prospects fail all the time, but that top-100 list wasn't constructed with soothing Terry Ryan's feelings in mind.

    And it bears remembering that the Twins posted a winning season and made the playoffs the very first season of the Falvey regime.  Falvey made many moves that season, but unless you're playing OOTP in easy mode, it's very hard to turn a franchise around like that in one off-season with all-new talent.  A lot of young players were already contributing.  Buxton, Sano, Berrios, Polanco, Kepler, and Rosario all were 25 and under, and all made positive contributions.

    A common refrain is that the Twins are perpetually slow in promoting players.  Ryan brought up this core while still young, and it shouldn't be held against him.

    Plus Pressly, May and Gibson. There is a narrative that Falvey inherited this huge mess. The farm was depleted but the mlb lineup was largely in place. 

    24 minutes ago, Linus said:

    Plus Pressly, May and Gibson. There is a narrative that Falvey inherited this huge mess. The farm was depleted but the mlb lineup was largely in place. 

    I was listing players 25 and under in response to a post using the word "young".  A complete analysis of the franchise Falvey inherited would be much lengthier, I agree.  While I mentioned a few prospects, a balanced view would indeed use words like "depleted" to describe the farm, because (in part) of very strange draft choices like Tyler Jay.  Ironically, the final draft under Ryan was a pretty good one - Kirilloff, Rortvedt, Baddoo, Miranda, Jax all saw major league time and held potential, with Jax the only one who panned out.  But now I'm descending a rabbit hole and I'm climbing out this very minute.   😁

    7 minutes ago, ashbury said:

    I was listing players 25 and under in response to a post using the word "young".  A complete analysis of the franchise Falvey inherited would be much lengthier, I agree.  While I mentioned a few prospects, a balanced view would indeed use words like "depleted" to describe the farm, because (in part) of very strange draft choices like Tyler Jay.  Ironically, the final draft under Ryan was a pretty good one - Kirilloff, Rortvedt, Baddoo, Miranda, Jax all saw major league time and held potential, with Jax the only one who panned out.  But now I'm descending a rabbit hole and I'm climbing out this very minute.   😁

    Agreed and when a farm system graduates a bunch of guys to the bigs in a short time frame it’s always going to be depleted for a while. Same thing will happen again when / if Culpepper/ Jenkins / Em Rod graduate. 

    1 hour ago, Linus said:

    Plus Pressly, May and Gibson. There is a narrative that Falvey inherited this huge mess. The farm was depleted but the mlb lineup was largely in place. 

    I was talking about the farm, I should have been more clear. He missed on three straight top five picks.... And his last draft was great. In any event, way off topic.




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