Twins Video
On Tuesday night, amidst the chaotic election frenzy, the Twins announced that they would be parting with hitting coach Tom Brunansky and first base coach Butch Davis, while the rest of Paul Molitor's instructive unit would remain intact.
That means that Neil Allen will return as pitching coach. This is rather surprising for a couple of different reasons.
Firstly, because Allen oversaw a staff this year that ranked as the worst in baseball and one of the worst in franchise history. Almost without exception every Twins pitcher underperformed.
And secondly, because Falvey carries a reputation as a pitching guru with his own distinct philosophies on teaching and development. If he was going to come aboard with any particular directive in mind as far as the coaching group is concerned, one would think it would be a change at this position.
However, the new Chief Baseball Officer is evidently impressed enough with Allen. And although the results from Twins pitchers hardly could have been worse this year, there is some evidence that Allen may have been handcuffed to some degree in implementing his ideologies.
Last month, Mike Berardino of the Pioneer Press wrote an article on the team's widespread issues with fastball command. Within the piece, Allen had a rather interesting quote. Speaking about the way the sinking two-seam fastball, specifically, is handled with pitching prospects, the pitching coach said, "That's something that throughout the whole system needs to be addressed ... Big time."
Berardino adds:
Toward that end, Allen spent extra time in late September crafting a systemwide pitching plan that would govern the way young Twins arms are brought along. Allen, whose status for next season remains unclear along with the rest of the big-league coaching staff, presented his detailed program to Molitor before heading home after the season.
So it sounds like, even with his job in limbo, Allen was still proactively working to address the organization's deep-running issues with pitcher development. And Falvey is on board.
In a Q&A piece from David Laurilia published on FanGraphs this week, Allen goes into great depth regarding several elements of pitching instruction. In his answers, the former Rays minor-league coach speaks almost nostalgically about his time in the Tampa system. But, as he points out, the core directives "come from the higher-ups. The general manager, the manager, and the pitching coordinator would get together and start the program."
Now, with new higher-ups in place, perhaps Allen can better recreate the outstanding results that the Rays were able to produce with young arms during his time there.







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