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    Tipping Point: Twins Release 2024 Draft Pick for Pitch Tipping


    Seth Stohs

    According to ESPNs Jeff Passan and Kiley McDaniel, the Minnesota Twins have released 2024 sixth-round draft pick Derek Bender on Thursday. It might be one of the most wild stories you’ll hear. 

    Image courtesy of William Parmeter

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    Pitch Tipping has always been a thing in baseball. Teams and players, trying to gain an advantage, watch everything a pitcher does on the mound. Maybe a pitcher holds his glove slightly higher when he’s going to throw a curveball. Maybe he slightly slows his delivery on a changeup. You would be surprised at how minute a detail can give a team an advantage. 

    Going back to 2015, the year Torii Hunter returned to the organization for one more season. Paul Molitor was the manager and the two were both seen as among the best in picking up tells from the pitchers. Often, Twins pitchers would go to Hunter or Molitor and have them watch some pitches to see if they might see something that the opponents could pick up on. 

    For decades, it was a source of pride if a team could find a tell by a pitcher and share it with his teammates. Other times, the team will be able to figure out a catcher’s sign pattern and give tiny hints to the hitter from second base about what pitch is coming. Sometimes the first base coach can see it. 

    There were always rumors inside the game that in the late 70s and early 80s, the White Sox used to use a center field camera and the scoreboard features (lights) to pass information from video watcher to batter. Of course, players from those teams, and their manager Tony LaRussa deny such claims. LaRussa went on to manage in Oakland with players who rarely found controversy. 

    It became a controversial topic when the Astros won the World Series with the help of technology and garbage cans. What was different? The use of technology to obtain the information. That is what MLB has tried to crack down on. 


    According to ESPNs Jeff Passan and Kiley McDaniel, the Twins cracked down on pitch tipping in the organization. They released 2024 draft pick Derek Bender about two months after selecting him for tipping pitches. 

    If you aren’t aware, Bender is not a pitcher. He is a catcher, and according to the reports, he was flat-out telling opposing hitters what pitches were coming. 

    If you recall, the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels were playing in Lakeland last week against the Tigers Low-A affiliate. After games were rained out on Wednesday and Thursday, the Mussels needed to win three of the final four games to claim the second-half division title from Lakeland. They played a double-header last Friday. They lost a suspended game.  

    In the second game, Bender was set to bat ninth and catcher Mussels starter, lefty Ross Dunn. Dunn, a 2023 draft pick, went just 1 2/3 innings in that game but the damage had been done. He gave up four runs in the second inning. He gave up five hits and walked a batter. In the first inning, he got a ground out, gave up a double in between two strikeouts. 

    The second inning began with a long home run by Archer Brookman. Jackson Strong singled. After a force out, there was a walk. And then a hard-hit, line-drive double by David Smith drove in two runs. After a ground out, Jack Penney drove in the fourth run with another double. At that point, Dunn was removed from the game. 

    Lakeland scored just two more runs over the course of the game. The Mussels managed just two hits in the entire game, so ultimately it didn’t really affect the outcome. 

    But that alone isn’t proof of anything. Dunn ended his first pro season with an ERA of 6.46. He often gave up big innings. 

    However, it was the Lakeland coaches who approached the Mussels coaching staff after the game and after their players were reporting that the Mussels catcher was flat-out telling them what pitches were coming. 

    From ESPN: “Fort Myers coaches were notified by Lakeland coaches about Bender's pitch tipping after the game, sources said. Bender's willingness to tip pitches surprised Lakeland players, and there were no indications of wrongdoing from the Flying Tigers, sources said. Bender had told teammates he wanted the season to be over, according to sources.”

    Mussels manager Brian Meyer did not play Bender in the final two games. Instead, he was out in the bullpen. The Mussels won their final two games to go out on a good note, but this has to leave a sour taste in the mouths of a lot of teammates, coaches, and probably players around the game. 


    The Twins drafted Bender in the sixth round of the 2024 draft out of Coastal Carolina. He became an everyday player there as a sophomore in 2023. In 62 games, he hit .341/.399/.635 (1.034) with 13 doubles, 19 homers and 83 RBI.

    That summer, he played for Bourne in the Cape Cod League.  You may remember seeing this video. 

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    In 60 games this spring, Bender hit .320/.422/.520 (.942) with nine doubles, two triples, and 11 home runs. The Twins drafted him and quickly signed him with a $297,500 bonus (right at slot). He went to Fort Myers to begin his pro career.   

    On August 7th, he made his pro debut and went 2-for-4 with a walk in Jupiter. Six days later, against Lakeland, he went 2-for-3 with his first professional home run, a three-run shot.   

    A week later, in Tampa, he went 2-for-3 with a walk. He had two doubles and three RBI. 

    Through his first 11 games, he hit .306/.405/.528 (.933) with two doubles and two home runs. However, over his final eight games, he was 1-for-24 (.042). Last week in Lakeland, he played in three games and went 0-for-7.  

    There’s a reason that teams don’t worry too much about the small sample size of games that current year draft picks put up. Consider that the college kids have  been going hard every day since mid-January, played a full 60 game college season, went through the draft combine and other ways to be ready, and then come in and play another series of games. And then many of them stick around for the Bridge League or Instructs. Add in the grueling heat in both Florida and Arizona, and the southwest Florida humidity, and frequent tropical storms and hurricanes. There is just a lot. 


    Part of me wants to give Derek Bender the benefit of the doubt. I would love to hear his side of this story, whatever that may be. I did reach out to Bender and offered a place for him to tell his side, but as of publishing this article, there was no response. From the ESPN article, they reached out to him through his agency and got no comment, and obviously the Twins are going to try to keep it internal… as they should. 

    Part of me wants to say that I understand burnout after a long season. It can be grueling, and frankly, players need their rest. That year is a lot. But others do it. Did Bender have a momentary lapse? Has he been wanting his season to end for a while? Maybe he doesn’t even like playing baseball all that much. Maybe he’s just always been so good at it that he felt obligated to keep going, and it gave him an opportunity in college, but now he’s ready to do something else. That’s OK. We don’t know. 

    What isn’t OK, and obviously what he was released for is quitting on his team. Not only that, but actively helping them lose games. As a teammate, as much as I would want to understand, I would find it hard to have a guy around that you know has actively tried to make your team lose games. 

    Could Bender play again? Probably. I know I tend to believe in second chances. He’s still a very young 21 year old. But if you were one of his teammates, could you ever trust him fully? Would that trust ever come back? Baseball is hard enough that you don’t want every error or every 0-for-4 game to come with additional questions about your effort. 

    So, no, I don’t expect Derek Bender to ever return to the Twins organization. And with the coverage that this story has received, and that it will receive in coming days, I can’t imagine any other MLB team to give him an opportunity either. 


    If he ever does want to get into baseball, it may have to be by going through the independent leagues (if they are even interested). That’s the route that two of his Coastal Carolina teammates had to go. Fellow 2023 Chanticleers, Payton Eeles and Nick Lucky, were signed by the Twins earlier this season. Lucky spent five years in Conway (SC). Since signing with the Twins, he has played in Fort Myers, Cedar Rapids and even a game in St. Paul. Eeles? Well, since signing with the Twins very early this year, he has hit .307 with a .919 OPS between Fort Myers (34 games), Cedar Rapids (13), and St. Paul (54). 

    The Twins did the right thing in releasing Bender. Hopefully Bender won’t find himself regretting this and asking himself What If for the next couple of decades?


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    If you don't want to play, take yourself out of the game. Don't sabotage Ross Dunn, a young pitcher struggling to make it in baseball. What Derek Bender did was pretty close to unforgivable. Time for him to consider doing something else for a living. I don't even care if he's got talent. Good riddance. 

    6 hours ago, Doctor Wu said:

    A sudden sad ending to a potentially promising career. But I have no sympathy for scumbag cheaters --- and doing it to your own team of all crazy things --- so good riddance! I hope he never gets a job in professional baseball again. 

    I agree, but not wholeheartedly.  How many of us (definitely myself) did STUPID things when we were 21?  I do agree the Twins had to release him; and the first video that was part of this article demonstrated the guy appears to be a butthead.  I would like to believe that he can grow up and be a decent individual.  

    2 hours ago, IndianaTwin said:

    As a person who deals with depression, there have been times in my life when I have wanted to make (and have made) decisions that seem(ed) quite desperate (even dangerous) at the time. My later self sometimes looks back at them as irrational.

    I have no reason to know the dynamics in this young man's life. I hesitate in even typing this, because messages like this lead to speculation. I'm saying it only to recognize that there is almost always more to a story than is seen on the surface.

    I will refrain from making judgments on the young man, and I wish him well in the next steps of his life. 

    That is really the gist of my meaning when I said I'd like to know his side of the story.  Not his rationalization, per se, since there can be no excuse, but what in the world motivated him to go in that direction?

    Your own self-portrayal resonated.  I've never been diagnosed, but a couple of times in my life I've "shot a torpedo through my own hull" to get out of something with an air of finality that didn't make logical sense but seemed necessary at the time.  I didn't do it in a way that took anyone else's ship down, of course; that is what makes Bender's action beyond the pale.  Young people can make foolish decisions that will haunt them forever.

    Several have wondered why Bender didn't take his concerns to his coaches or manager and ask for some time off.  While I believe the Twins to be reasonably forward-thinking in their approaches, it still wouldn't surprise me if Bender did actually try to ask for some kind of respite, and got told that it wouldn't be a good look to end his first pro season with that kind of mark on his record.  It's a fine line for any supervisor to toe in any line of work, and I would not expect the Twins to go public with that kind of detail of what did or didn't get discussed behind closed doors.

    It's a sad situation and outcome, and I advocate compassion even if the crime itself is unforgivable in baseball terms.  If Bender wants a baseball career it will probably have to be as a first-baseman, and then the bat has to be like a first-baseman's.  Whatever odds he had when he got drafted (already low, as with anyone who's not a first-rounder) just got worse.

    This may be the act of an emotionally and/or mentally ill person in danger…someone who desperately needs help.

    It may be the act of a psychopathic, selfish, —-hole.

    Time will tell. But, we’ll probably never know. And you release him either way.

     

    Unfortunately, this stuff does happen from time to time...and it is gross.

    My first year of coaching varsity HS in SoCal, we had 4-5 D-1 prospects on our team. We ended up 4th in the nation in homeruns. But the coach before us was terrible and let all of the players have "me-first" mentalities.

     Our catcher, who was a sophomore, was jealous of the attention other players were getting, and his dad was an idiot. I was the pitching coach and called every pitch. In the middle of the season, we went through a 2-week stretch where everything I called was getting hit hard. I told my HC I have no idea what I am doing...tried everything, and for him to call pitches instead. A few days later, he showed up at my house telling me he had received multiple phone calls from players/parents saying our catcher was telling all batters what pitches were coming. 

    He was kicked off the team, but the district allowed him to play for another team. A year later, he pitched against us and a full-on brawl ensued. People need to take this stuff more seriously-it can alter the college/career paths of many individuals. 

    I actually couldn't care less about his side of the story. If you didn't want to play anymore, let someone else who does and don't screw over the rest of your teammates. He's lucky there's not a story about the team having an internal brawl over this, at least not yet...

    If the Astros' players were relaying their own signs to their opponents so they could hurry with their off-season vacations, I suspect most of that roster would be unemployed right now - regardless of how good they are - Correa included. This is apples and oranges.

    Man, this is a rough situation.   

    I wholeheartedly believe in 2nd chances, and recognize areas in my life where I have been given 3rd, 4th, and 5th chances.  That said, the thing I really struggle with in this situation is the thousands of talented young men who never even get first chances to play pro baseball. 

     

    Obviously we will never know the whole story.  If Bender was in the midst of a mental health crisis, hopefully he will get the help he needs and can work his way back.  But if it is more a matter of him lacking the emotional intelligence to handle adversity better than this - and this is an incredibly low bar I am talking about - then his roster spot should being given to someone else.

     

    6 hours ago, Aggies7 said:

    Oh sure it’s fine when Crash Davis does it, but now it’s a problem 

    That was coaching, sir.  Coaching matters!!!!

    Just as a thought exercise, say Vazquez went to hi-A for a longer rehab.  Charlee Soto thinks he's a hot shot (making this up, mind you) as the first round flamethrower.  Thinks he knows better than Vazquez about everything and will not listen.  How does Vazquez grab his attention in an era where shoving folks in lockers is frowned upon?  You need me as much as I need you, kid.

    I would be willing to bet something like this has happened has happened before, but with a vet/prospect dynamic.  It that instance, the Vazquez would certainly tell the manager what happened and why he did it, maybe before he did it.  The manager might even ask him to do it. 

    This ain't that, though.  It's why he got ratted out by the other team.  Someone asked about the umpires and while we haven't heard yet I'll bet they were involved.  In pro ball they probably wouldn't do anything during the game but the plate ump probably signed the final nail in the coffin when he talked to Falvey. I've had countless non-baseball behavior events I've corrected on the field and then explain what happened to a confused coach.  Many kids benched after the explanations.

    One of the more bizarre stories I can remember ever hearing about a baseball player's on field conduct.

    Wanted to end his team's season because he was worn out physically or mentally? Had a personal problem with that specific pitcher so wanted to tank their performance? Had money on the game and wanted to help his odds?

    If he wants to continue his career we'll likely get some sort of comment from him, but it'll be hard to know how much of it is believable. Just a wild story. If he's a person in crisis I very much hope he gets the help he needs and looks to find a path back to the life he was attempting build. If he was just a jerk who hurt his teammates out of his own selfishness I hope he has some good people in his life to help him improve as a person and he has a good backup plan for his life from here on out cuz baseball likely is not the answer anymore.

    2 hours ago, Steve Lein said:

    I actually couldn't care less about his side of the story. If you didn't want to play anymore, let someone else who does and don't screw over the rest of your teammates. He's lucky there's not a story about the team having an internal brawl over this, at least not yet...

    Yeah that’s where I stand too. There’s nothing he can say that will make this situation better. If worst case he had a mental breakdown, there are a dozen other choices he could have made without screwing over his teammates. He made an unforgivable selfish decision that goes against everything teamwork and competition stands for. 

    I keep seeing folks here calling him a kid. He is 21. He is an adult. What were you all doing at 21? I was doing a lot and most guys that I know were also. To quote a great movie line; "It's a terrible thing to have to grow all the way up at 21". He deserves no pity nor any respect. Yes, he will have to live with this the rest of his life. Tough s__t! You get what you earn. I hope his Dad took him out to the woodshed when he got home, but then his Dad may have taught him to be this way in the first place.

    1 hour ago, Vanimal46 said:

    Yeah that’s where I stand too. There’s nothing he can say that will make this situation better. If worst case he had a mental breakdown, there are a dozen other choices he could have made without screwing over his teammates. He made an unforgivable selfish decision that goes against everything teamwork and competition stands for. 

    The swift and final decision kinda tells me it's not a woe is my mental health thing.  I'd like to believe if there was a drug/alcohol/mental health thing he would be quietly in rehab.  I think we can all agree that the Twins organization has shown they are going to lean to the side of extra chances and support.

    I've fired quite a lot of people over the years. I can count on one hand how many were cut and dried one week done. Every chance we have, we try to get someone to straighten up.  Frankly, it's cheaper to fix employees that find new ones.

    He'd have a very small chance get a job with me. I do believe in second chances and I know I don't have all the details, but I think I have the most important detail.

    The Minnesota Twins do not make these decisions lightly.

    13 hours ago, FlyingFinn said:

    If your that worn out that you want the season to end, tell the team. With 4 games left, another catcher can probably be found from the FCL club that is done playing. I think there are even some catchers in Fort Myers who are just working on things in camp (could be wrong on that). Kudos to the opposing manager.

    And to the oppo players who brought it to their attention.

    Crash Davis re-run he is not.  Man, if I were that starter who got raked... 

    On 9/13/2024 at 5:34 AM, Doctor Wu said:

    A sudden sad ending to a potentially promising career. But I have no sympathy for scumbag cheaters --- and doing it to your own team of all crazy things --- so good riddance! I hope he never gets a job in professional baseball again. 

    But it's ok for Correa. Because he's a Twin now. No penalties for any of the players. The good old double standard. 




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