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    Five Prospects The Twins Should Promote


    Jonathon Zenk

    We are a month and a half into the baseball season and the Minnesota Twins are a woeful 10-31, tied with the Atlanta Braves for the worst record in the league. Right now, most Twins fans should turn their attention to minor league baseball. There are a handful of minor leaguers in the Twins system who deserve a promotion. I tried to avoid players, especially younger ones, who have been at their respective level for only this season. Here are my top five:

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    5. LaMonte Wade, OF, Cedar Rapids

    Wade has been tearing it up in Cedar Rapids so far this year. After having just a .143 batting average in Cedar Rapids last season (granted, it was just a four game sample size), he is is hitting at a .325/.421/.472 clip this season. He has shown to have a very good eye at the plate, striking out 18 times in 123 official at-bats and has more walks (22) than he does strikeouts. The 2015 ninth=round draft pick is also 22, so if the Maryland product keeps this up through the month of June, he is worthy of a promotion. His .893 OPS is also leading all of the Twins minor leaguers and his slugging percentage is third, behind only teammate A.J. Murray and top prospect Byron Buxton.

    4. Randy LeBlanc, RHP, Cedar Rapids

    LeBlanc has been nothing short of incredible for the Kernels this year. He has allowed four earned runs in 46 innings. Yes, four! That is good enough for a microscopic 0.78 ERA. He had a solid season for Cedar Rapids last year, going 9-5 with an ERA just north of 3.00, but he has been even better this season. Now, I would not call him a great prospect, considering he is already 24 and still in Low-A ball, but he absolutely deserves a promotion, especially when one of the Fort Myers pitchers is promoted within the next few months. His WHIP of 0.87 is second in all of the Twins system and he has an opponents batting average of just .196. If he ever wants to sniff a chance at the majors, he needs to improve his strikeout total, as he just has 28 in his 46 innings. But with an ERA of less than 1, he needs a new challenge and will soon get it.

    3. Stephen Gonsalves, LHP, Fort Myers

    If anyone has been more impressive than LeBlanc this season, it has been Gonsalves. After dominating in Cedar Rapids early last season, Gonsalves was promoted to Fort Myers and pitched well, registering a 7-2 record with a 2.61 ERA. He has been nothing short of incredible this season, going 5-1 and having an ERA of 1.27 in seven starts. If you dig into his stats a little more, it makes his season that much more impressive. He has a WHIP of 0.84, which is tops in all of the Twins system and an opposing batting average of .152. After a season-opening start in which he gave up three runs in six innings in a loss to Bradenton, the southpaw has given up only three runs total in his last six starts (36.2 innings). His K/9 from Cedar Rapids was unattainable in Fort Myers as he struck out 77 batters in just 55 innings, but this season's 8.02 K/9 in still very solid. If there is room in Chattanooga, Gonsalves will be promoted shortly.

    2. Kohl Stewart, RHP, Fort Myers

    Last year in his first season at High-A, Stewart pitched decently for Fort Myers, but still had a high opponents batting average and was still not striking out very many. A year ago, the 2013 first-round pick struck out just 71 batters in 129.1 innings for just 4.94 strikeouts per nine innings. This year has been a complete turnaround. Not only has he had his way with opposing hitters, his strikeouts per nine innings rate is miles better than 2015. He has struck out 37 in 40.2 innings so far for an 8.19 K/9 to go along with his 3-1 record with a sparkling 1.77 ERA. His opponents batting average also stands out at .185 with a WHIP of 0.98. His major improvement from 2015 has earned him a promotion that will likely come this summer.

    1. J.T. Chargois, RHP, Rochester

    It is unfortunate that he has to settle for being on this list, considering he has done more than enough to be a part of the big league club. Chargois has been lights out for Chattanooga and Rochester this season. So far on the year, Chargois has pitched 17.1 innings split between the two teams and has allowed a total of two earned runs. In Rochester, he has pitched 5.2 scoreless innings and has allowed just two hits, while striking out an incredible 13. Obviously that won't hold up, but that is an eye-popping 20.65 strikeouts per nine innings. Even if you include his stint in Chattanooga this year, his K/9 is still 14.02. For a team that has a bullpen as bad as the Twins, there is no reason that Chargois should not be on the big league club and I have a feeling if he keeps it up, he will be up sooner rather than later.

    What do you think of this group of five, and are there other minor leaguers you feel are ready or in need of a promotion?


    Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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    Marek Houston

    Cedar Rapids Kernels - A+, SS
    The 22-year-old went 2-for-5 on Friday night, his fourth straight multi-hit game. Heading into the week, he was hitting .246/.328/.404 (.732). Four games later, he is hitting .303/.361/.447 (.808).

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    Here is a list of people saying he's the savior:

     

     

    Now that that straw man is dead........the Twins are terrible. They seem to have issues with young players not being ready when they come up. They could start pulling guys up, and see if they are ready or not (those that are close) and also to get them a taste of the majors.......or they can just keep being awful, not gather information on their minor league players this year, and go into next year w/o an idea of which guys are ready.........

    Chargois has only pitched 17.2 innings between AA & AAA this season. It seems a bit premature to be anointing him as the savior for the Twins bullpen with so few innings at those levels. He only has 5.2 innings pitched at AAA. If he reaches 20 innings at AAA and still has such great numbers and a K/9 > 9 then he should be called up and given a serious look at replacing Jepsen in the highest leverage situations. But, 17.2 innings isn't enough to say he's MLB ready...

    Wait , did you just say that he's not mlb ready, but if he pitches 14.1 more innings he should be closing mlb games?

    I think you overestimate how much more he can learn in 14 innings.

    If he's ready then he's ready now.

    If he's not ready now he's not going to be ready in 14 more innings.

     

    Wait , did you just say that he's not mlb ready, but if he pitches 14.1 more innings he should be closing mlb games?
    I think you overestimate how much more he can learn in 14 innings.
    If he's ready then he's ready now.
    If he's not ready now he's not going to be ready in 14 more innings.

     

    Using that logic, a guy is either always ready or never ready.

     

    I think 14 more innings might be a nice litmus test of showing whether or not the guy is ready.  SSS is a real thing.  I don't think there's anything wrong letting Chargois spend a bit more time in AAA to make sure this simply isn't a nice couple of weeks.  He will probably get the call at some point this year and there should be data points on him next year come ST.  That's what we want, right?

    Using that logic, a guy is either always ready or never ready.

     

    I think 14 more innings might be a nice litmus test of showing whether or not the guy is ready. SSS is a real thing. I don't think there's anything wrong letting Chargois spend a bit more time in AAA to make sure this simply isn't a nice couple of weeks. He will probably get the call at some point this year and there should be data points on him next year come ST. That's what we want, right?

    Of course SSS is a real thing. That is kind of my point. 14 more innings is still going to be a tiny sample size. That is the life of a reliever. It's going to take an entire career to go beyond SSS as a reliever.

    He has mlb stuff. Arms only have so many bullets in them. Frankly, in a lost season, it's laughable that he's not up right now.

    There is no downside. He has options, he can be sent back down if he is overwhelmed.




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