Twins Video
Game Results:
Tuesday, 10/15 | Salt River 4, Surprise 6
Wednesday, 10/16 | Salt River 1, Scottsdale 3
Thursday, 10/17 | Mesa 5, Salt River 9
Friday, 10/18 | Peoria 4, Salt River 14
Saturday, 10/19 | Salt River 0, Glendale 1 (7 innings)
Sundary, 10/20 | Salt River 4, Scottsdale 2
The Salt River Rafters finished the week 3-3, and are now 6-5 overall, one game behind the leader in the Arizona Fall League standings. While there wasn’t as much offense this week for Salt River, there still were some big outputs on the scoreboards. When it comes to Twins prospects, a slugger kept a bit of a hot hand, but there were also solid pitching results. In Minnesota farmhands' 13 innings pitched on the week, they allowed just three earned runs; teams on the circuit are averaging six and a half runs per game.
OF Kala’i Rosario
Week: 6-for-19, 3 R, 3B, 3 RBI, BB, 8 K (5 games)
Overall: .290/.333/.548
Rosario didn’t launch any more home runs in week 2, but he stayed hot to start the week, racking up six hits in his first three games. He was again plugged into the heart of the Salt River lineup, and played right field in three games, while DH-ing in the other two.
His first game of the week came on Wednesday, and with his team down 3-0 in the eighth, Rosario delivered a two-out RBI triple to score their lone run of the game.
In Thursday’s win over Mesa, Rosario’s sacrifice fly in the bottom of the first put the Rafters in front 2-1. He added a single in the third inning and drew a walk in the fifth, coming around to score a run later that made it 5-4 Salt River.
In the blowout of Peoria on Friday, Rosario finished 3-for-5 with a pair of runs scored. His single in the bottom of the sixth drove in a run to make it 9-4 Salt River. He did cool off in his final two games, going 0-for-7 with 3 K’s and putting an end to his modest four-game hitting streak, but still batted a solid .316 in his 20 plate appearances on the week.
IF Ben Ross
Week: 2-for-15, 2 R, 2 RBI, 4 BB, 4 K (5 games)
Overall: .200/.366/.367
Ross wasn’t able to match his output from Week 1, but still got on base at a decent clip in his five games. He played shortstop in four of those and third base in the other, batting primarily in the middle of the Rafters lineup.
He was 0-for-7 in his first two games of the week, drawing one walk while striking out twice. He picked up his first hit in Thursday’s win over Mesa, driving in Rosario with the go-ahead run on a single in the fifth inning. On Friday, he finished 0-for-2, but drew a pair of walks and came around to score both times.
In Saturday’s 1-0 loss against Glendale (in which both teams had just four hits), Ross was responsible for one of those from the Rafters. His single in the fourth inning moved a runner into scoring position, but they weren’t able to put one on the scoreboard.
IF Danny De Andrade
Week: Did not play.
De Andrade has yet to get on the field for the Salt River Rafters. The infielder hit .243/.333/.359 in 29 games with the Cedar Rapids Kernels before injuring his ankle and spending the rest of the season on the injured list.
RHP Devin Kirby
Week: 3 IP, 1 H, 2 BB (1 appearance)
Overall: 0-0, 0.00 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, .071 BAA, 4 BB, 2 K (5 IP)
The knuckleballer ate three innings in Friday's domination of the Peoria Javelinas. He came out of the bullpen to start the sixth with the score 8-4 Rafters and froze Peoria there. He walked the first batter he faced, as he couldn’t get a knuckler to land in the zone, but induced a double-play ball to erase them. He also gave up his first hit in AFL play, but retired six in a row before his second walk of the outing in the eighth. He faced 11 hitters, and all 38 of his pitches were tracked as knucklers, with 20 of them going for strikes (53%). In reality, once again, there were seven pitches that clearly were either a fastball or a traditional breaking ball from him, but he's stumping Statcast.
RHP Jack Noble
Week: 3 IP, 2 H, 0 R, BB, 4 K (2 appearances)
Overall: 1-0, 1.80 ERA, 1.20 WHIP, .267 BAA, 2 BB, 6 K (5 IP)
Noble made appearances in Wednesday’s loss to Scottsdale and Saturday’s loss to Glendale, coming in as the first reliever of the game for the Rafters in both contests.
Against the Scorpions, this was in the fourth inning, with the game still scoreless. He gave up a leadoff single, but coaxed a double-play ball and struck out the last one to face the minimum.
On Saturday, he went multiple innings versus the Desert Dogs, pitching the third and fourth frames. In the third, he gave up a single, but bookended it with strikeouts and they caught the runner stealing so he again faced just three hitters. In the fourth, a two-out walk was all Glendale would get, and he ended this appearance with his third strikeout.
LHP Kade Bragg
Week: 3 IP, 2 H, 3 R (2 ER), 3 BB, 2 K (2 appearances, with 1 start)
Overall: 0-1, 4.50 ERA, 1.50 WHIP, .133 BAA, 4 BB, 3 K (4 IP)
The left-hander pitched out of the bullpen in the Rafters first game of the week on Tuesday, then made the start in their last one on Sunday evening.
In the game against the Surprise Saguaros early in the week, Bragg was charged with the loss. He allowed a pair of doubles, and his defense committed two errors leading to his three runs allowed. His fastball did touch 94.4 miles per hour, so there's something there with him, but he needs to be around the zone with quality strikes more consistently.
In his start against the Scottsdale Scorpions, Bragg delivered a clean first inning, including a pair of strikeouts. Back out for the second after his team had taken a 1-0 lead, he had a bit of trouble finding the strike zone and ended up walking the bases loaded. Fortunately, he got a lineout to keep the Scorpions off the scoreboard. Because of those free passes, Bragg ran up his pitch count to 42 in the outing, with just 20 of them going for strikes (48%).
RHP Jacob King
Week: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, K (1 appearance)
Overall: 0-0, 0.00 ERA, 0.00 WHIP, .000 BAA, 0 BB, 1 K (1 2/3 IP)
Like in week 1, King was only called upon to make one appearance in the Rafters six games, and it came in their first one on Tuesday.
He followed Bragg after Salt River had fallen behind 5-2, pitching a one-two-three sixth inning. He needed just 10 pitches and struck out one against the fifth, sixth, and seventh hitters in the Saguaros lineup. His fastball sat in the low 90s, but it did have decent carry, and his slider has real depth relative to it. A bit too old and too filled-out to project to add velocity, King needs to defy the odds to mature into a big-league arm, but his pitch shapes are intriguing.
RHP Liam Rocha
Week: 3 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, BB, 2 K (2 appearances)
Overall: 1-0, 3.60 ERA, 1.80 WHIP, .318 BAA, 2 BB, 5 K (5 IP)
Rocha took the mound in Thursday’s win over the Solar Sox, and in Sunday’s win over the Scorpions.
Against Mesa, he came on to begin the sixth inning with the Rafters up 5-4, after Ross had driven in Rosario in the bottom of the fifth. A leadoff walk and a single put the tying run in scoring position before he was able to get a double-play ball that stunted some of the threat, but still left a runner on third base. He gave up an RBI single to the next hitter and was charged with a blown save before getting out of the inning with a strikeout. Rocha has a very vertical four-pitch mix, with an interesting ability to tunnel those offerings off one another from his three-quarter slot. Once again, the question is whether he can find another few ticks of velocity on a fastball that currently sits just north of 90 miles per hour.
On Sunday night, the righty was brought into the game to start the sixth again, this time with his team down by one. He gave up a leadoff single but retired the next three Scorpions, including one strikeout, to keep the Rafters in striking distance. Back out for the seventh, an error forced him to face a few more hitters than he would have liked, but kept Scottsdale off the scoreboard. In the top of the eighth the Rafters went up 4-2, and gave Rocha the win in his ledger.
Please feel free to ask questions and discuss the prospects playing in the AFL this week!
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!
View Twins Top Prospects






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