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    Tyler Jay Shifting To The Bullpen (Minor League Notebook)


    Seth Stohs

    Twins Daily has learned and confirmed that Tyler Jay has been moved to the bullpen going forward. A couple of sources have verified the change.

    We will have much more on that, and several other minor league notes today.

    Image courtesy of Seth Stohs, Twins Daily (photo of Tyler Jay)

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    When the Twins drafted Jay with the sixth overall pick in 2015 out of the University of Illinois where he was used almost exclusively out of the bullpen. At the time, the Twins and many other teams felt that the left-hander's pure stuff and four-pitch mix was reason to give him an opportunity to start.

    After signing, he jumped straight to Ft. Myers where he pitched out of the bullpen the rest of the season. Last year, he began the season in the starting rotation of the Ft. Myers Miracle. He had his ups and downs but he had some very good moments too. In one game, he threw eight shutout innings, allowing just two hits and a walk to go with 11 strikeouts. Overall, he was 5-5 with a 3.10 ERA in 13 starts for the Miracle. In 69.2 innings, he walked 21 and struck out 68.

    He moved up to Chattanooga to end the season. He made two starts and a couple of relief appearances before being shut down due to an injury in his neck.

    He missed the final month of the season rehabbing. Had the season lasted a couple more weeks, he likely would have returned.

    He came to camp with the idea he would be starting. It was a mutual decision to move Jay to the bullpen exclusively, and it’s something he enjoys and thrives in. It’s likely we’ll see his fastball readings back into the mid-to-upper 90s, and his slider can be a weapon. It is very possible that the Jay could be as good as Glen Perkins was during his three All-Star seasons. As a reliever, he is likely to move much more quickly.

    Earlier in the week, the Twins announced that Randy Rosario would be moving to the bullpen as well. In both cases, the pitchers were happy with the decision.

    WBC RETURNS

    The three Twins minor leaguers from Australia who participated in the WBC for their country have returned. Lachlan Wells has thrown a couple of bullpens and worked in the AA game on Friday afternoon on the back fields. In the game, he took a line drive off of his biceps. He stayed in the game and this morning told me that it’s fine. In fact, he threw another short bullpen this morning.

    Todd Van Steensel, full beard and all, has also returned.

    Aaron Whitefield has had a busy year. He reported to Ft. Myers for extended spring training last April. Following his terrific showing in the GCL, he participated in the World Cup for Australia. Then he returned to Australia where he again played for the Brisbane Bandits. He said the plan was just to play half of the season, but the team was competing for a playoff spot and wanted to defend its Claxton Shield title. Whitefield kept playing and Brisbane topped Melbourne for the repeat. Right after that, he joined the Australian WBC team and they played in several games in Korea and then in Seoul, South Korea. Within a day of of the end of their run, he returned to Ft. Myers. He got one day to try to move past jet lag, and now he’s going full go.

    Reynaldo Rodriguez and Yohan Pino also returned and are working with the Rochester work group. Pino started on the mound for the team on Thursday.

    WBC ENTHUSIASM

    I have thoroughly enjoyed chatting with the players from Puerto Rico during the team’s WBC run. I chatted for a good half-hour with Dereck Rodriguez, who I’d mentioned is an alternate for Team Puerto Rico. He has been joined for each Puerto Rico game by about a dozen other Twins minor leaguers from the island.

    Nelson Molina told me that it’s very exciting to watch his friends and countrymen. Brian Navarreto started mentioning the players on the roster that he played with going back to Little League and it was quite a few. Edgar Corcino is from Bayamon and is friends with Jose Berrios, Francisco Lindor and Javier Baez.

    Of course, they all know the Twins contingent of Berrios, Hector Santiago, Eddie Rosario and Kennys Vargas.

    SIGHT IS GOOD

    Brian Navarreto also told me that he had LASIK eye surgery in the offseason and is still working back. He hasn’t been catching every single day. However, he also noted that he can see the ball so much better at the plate and even behind the plate. It’s also fun talking to pitchers who have been caught by Navarreto. They say that he calls a good game, works very hard, controls the running game and is just very good to work with.

    SIGHT IS GOOD, PART 2

    On Friday, Travis Harrison went 3-4 with a couple of very loud hits. I noted that he is now wearing glasses on the field and at bat. Following the game, I asked him about it and he said that doctors said he needed a small prescription, and it was his first day with the glasses. It was a good first day.

    BULLPEN IMPRESSIONS

    I’ve watched quite a few bullpens, and they’re always fun. It’s fun to see what people throw, how hard they throw, break on pitches, what they’re working on and more. Two guys have thrown bullpens that really stuck out to me.

    Huascar Ynoa is very young. He was our Twins Daily short season minor league pitcher of the year. The youngster, whose brother Michael pitches for the White Sox, throws really hard. He also showed a very good, sharp breaking ball and a solid changeup. Again, it was one bullpen, but it was very good.

    The other one that was terrific in the bullpen was Kohl Stewart. I don’t know why he doesn’t strike out more, but he throws really hard, and I’m told that the ball is very heavy, which explains the lack of hard contact. His breaking pitches looked very sharp, and I saw an at least average changeup. While I did drop him in my Twins prospect rankings this year, he clearly has the ability to be an above average big league starter.

    One bonus pitcher of note is Tyler Wells. The tall (6-8) right-hander throws pretty hard, maybe hitting 93-95. However, he also showed a very good breaking ball mix in his outing on Saturday afternoon on the back fields. He showed a slower, 12-6 curveball, and a sharper slider that darts in on a left-hander. Definitely one to watch this spring in Cedar Rapids.

    EMPTYING THE NOTEBOOK

    Here are just a couple more notes:

    • Has anyone ever seen Twins 3B prospect Chris Paul and Eagles Quarterback Carson Wentz in the same place? They look identical, at least facially.
    • Mitchell Kranson was the Twins ninth-round pick last year out of Cal-Berkeley. He did very little catching his last couple of years in college, but the Twins saw that it was a good place for him. He played all over the diamond, third base, outfield, first base, anywhere. His bat played anywhere. Since the end of last season, he has dropped 25 pounds without losing any muscle. He worked with a trainer twice a day and ate a strict diet.
    • Alex Kirilloff was watching the Twins minor league games this afternoon.

    That’s it for today. Please feel free to ask questions as you like. I’ll try to answer as I have time.


    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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    This is it for me. Our starters had an ERA over 5 last year. And Ervin was in the mid 3's and likely isn't apart of the next good rotation. So Romero is a piece. We can throw out other names and hope pick 1-1 is a stud. But we lost some of the lottery tickets this week. The rotation is still a long ways off.

    Santiago regresses to his career average for ERA. Hughes is no longer injured, Dufrey reverts  closer to his  2015 form, That takes care of most of your issues as you ignore the simple fact and the lion's share of IP that contributed to the problem,  Nolasco, Albers, Millone, Dean, and Meyer,  are no longer with the team.

     

    I think a Santiago vs. Nolasco comparison would be a more accurate indicator of who won that trade. So far it looks like LA. I was thrilled to see that Nolasco was traded last summer until I read the details of the trade. With the arbitration contract they gave Santiago and the 4 million they're paying LA this season the two are basically the same price (12 - 12.5 million). The Twins literally just swapped starting pitchers and the price to do it was giving up a former top prospect who even if he flames out as a starter (and so far he has) could still be a valuable bullpen piece. I have a hard time looking at this trade and saying the Twins got the better end of it. 

    If he can't make it as a starter the same issue would follow him to the bullpen and hence the same results

     

     

    You might have to trade some of that young positional depth for an ace starting pitcher, because outside of Romero that talent doesn't currently exist in Twins camp either MLB or MiLB.  Gonsalves is a #3/4 type same goes for Berrios, Meijia is a #4/5, Jorge is a #4/5, Stewart is an enigma.  Don't be shocked if the Twins concentrate heavily on pitching in the 2017 draft.

     

    Outside of Dozier/Polanco, they are unlikely to have meaningful depth at any mlb position over the next couple of years, and they still need a SS and C long term (though I have some hopes for Gordon). Just going to need to restock talent everywhere.

     

    At the very least, looking like a pitcher 1.1, so that's a start.

     

    I don't disagree, but that's just one guy.   We need more than that.

    We don't have anyone - today - that has #1/2 potential but that's somewhat rare. Berrios was our last guy with that kind of ceiling and a lot of people had him pegged as more a #3 type. But Gonsalves, Romero, Stewart and Jay were all on somebody's top 100 list just this offseason. And even with Jay moving to the pen, they still have some upside there (plus Thorpe and some pretty young arms in the low minors that are too far away today). I'm bummed that Jay is being moved but at the same time I think the angst is a bit overblown. We know that not every draft pick will reach it's ceiling although we don't know which ones won't.

    Santiago regresses to his career average for ERA. Hughes is no longer injured, Dufrey reverts closer to his 2015 form, That takes care of most of your issues as you ignore the simple fact and the lion's share of IP that contributed to the problem, Nolasco, Albers, Millone, Dean, and Meyer, are no longer with the team.

    This is beyond incredibly optimistic. For one, Duffey likely is done starting. Santiago's peripherals have always been worse than his ERA. And Hughes may never be fully healthy. We should revisit this in a year. also we should note Ervin reverting would be a negative vs last year.

    Edited by tobi0040

     

    This is beyond incredibly optimistic. For one, Duffey likely is done starting. Santiago's peripherals have always been worse than his ERA. And Hughes may never be fully healthy. We should revisit this in a year. also we should note Ervin reverting would be a negative vs last year.

    Sure but he's right that the positive regression of guys like Gibson and Santiago should outweigh the negative regression Santana will have.

     

    Nolasco, Meyer, Dean, Milone and Albers combined for 45 starts last year. Duffey had another 26.  That's a lot of new starts to be made by new pitchers this year. 

     

    Weren't were just told that the system was fine, and we shouldn't worry about the prospects? So confused....

    Depth wise the system is "fine" but if you're wanting that "ace" pitcher you're going to have to go outside the organization.  Because as it currently stands that's something the club is lacking but then again so are many (not everyone is either the Mets or Braves system).  The Twins' system is full of #3/4 SP and that's not a bad thing, if two (Berrios, Gonsalves, Romero, May, Jorge, Mejia) turn out that saves the club money to spend elsewhere.  I'm sure once the fire sale begins, young cost controlled SP will be Falvey/Levine's concentration when shopping Dozier and Santana so all the hem hawing over not having impact SP should be moot.

     

    I mean are we having this conversation and angst still if DeLeon was in the Twins organization and Jay was shipped to the pen?  

    Edited by Bob Sacamento

     

    Depth wise the system is "fine" but if you're wanting that "ace" pitcher you're going to have to go outside the organization.  Because as it currently stands that's something the club is lacking but then again so are many (not everyone is either the Mets or Braves system).  The Twins' system is full of #3/4 SP and that's not a bad thing, if two (Berrios, Gonsalves, Romero, May, Jorge, Mejia) turn out that saves the club money to spend elsewhere.  I'm sure once the fire sale begins, young cost controlled SP will be Falvey/Levine's concentration when shopping Dozier and Santana so all the hem hawing over not having impact SP should be moot.

     

    I mean are we having this conversation and angst still if DeLeon was in the Twins organization and Jay was shipped to the pen?  

     

    I would still be disappointed that jay was being moved off of starting already, but I can't speak for others. A decision can be both correct, and disappointing...

     

    Sure but he's right that the positive regression of guys like Gibson and Santiago should outweigh the negative regression Santana will have.

     

    Nolasco, Meyer, Dean, Milone and Albers combined for 45 starts last year. Duffey had another 26.  That's a lot of new starts to be made by new pitchers this year. 

    Santiago will have positive regression if he is allowed pitch in Anaheim's ballpark and in front of their defense. I mean, he had home run issues in Anaheim. I think a sub-5.00 ERA from him is unlikely.

     

    Santiago will have positive regression if he is allowed pitch in Anaheim's ballpark and in front of their defense. I mean, he had home run issues in Anaheim. I think a sub-5.00 ERA from him is unlikely.

    Well, we'll see.  I do think that if he's running out a 5.00 ERA after ten starts (at the most), we'd see him moved/cut for Mejia.  But I don't think we'd see another 20 starts like that like we had with Nolasco last year.

     

    Santiago will have positive regression if he is allowed pitch in Anaheim's ballpark and in front of their defense. I mean, he had home run issues in Anaheim. I think a sub-5.00 ERA from him is unlikely.

     

    He's only had one season with an ERA above 4. I understand your point, but unlikely to have a sub-5.00 seems like a stretch, and is selling Santiago a little short.

     

    I would still be disappointed that jay was being moved off of starting already, but I can't speak for others. A decision can be both correct, and disappointing...

    Hey I'm in the same boat with you, I'd prefer to see him fail first as a starter before sending him to the pen but I'm that way with most prospect SP.  But I do see what the FO is trying to do, as Jay could be pitching in the big leagues now in a relief capacity.

     

     

    BA 2017 Scouting Report on Jay

     

     

    With his mid-90s fastball and hard, late-breaking 88-92 mph slider, Jay has two big league quality pitches that give him a high floor as a potential closer. As a starter, he features a four-pitch mix, flashing an above-average curveball and mixing in a changeup that has proven effective against righthanded hitters. Evaluators question whether the modest-framed Jay has the physicality to sustain his stuff in extended work. Though electric in short stints, he wasn’t as sharp the second and third time through lineups in 2016. Whether Jay will ever build that durability is a divisive topic among scouts. The Twins remain committed to developing Jay as a starter, and he should return to Chattanooga in 2017. However, with the major league club in need of arms, he could at least begin his major league career out of the bullpen

     

     

     

    We don't have anyone - today - that has #1/2 potential but that's somewhat rare. Berrios was our last guy with that kind of ceiling and a lot of people had him pegged as more a #3 type. But Gonsalves, Romero, Stewart and Jay were all on somebody's top 100 list just this offseason. And even with Jay moving to the pen, they still have some upside there (plus Thorpe and some pretty young arms in the low minors that are too far away today). I'm bummed that Jay is being moved but at the same time I think the angst is a bit overblown. We know that not every draft pick will reach it's ceiling although we don't know which ones won't.

     

    I'm not hung up on whether they are a 1/2, I'm hung up on how many guys are anywhere near being viable contributors to the big league rotation in the next 2 years.  

     

    Prior to this move it was Gonsalves, Romero, and Jay.  (Stewart is a ways off, if even worth talking about)  We're down 1/3 of that already.  And another 1/3 of that is having a shoulder flare up.

     

    We are burning service time on some of our best young players and that is our situation for young pitching.  I'd say the angst is appropriate.

     

    So failed starter = failed reliever? 

     

    Couldn't disagree more with that take.

    That's not at all what he said.

    Alex Meyer has issues on the mound. His WHIP in MLB has not yet ever been acceptable.

    Moving him to the pen is not going to keep him from giving up hit and walks.

     

    That's not at all what he said.

    Alex Meyer has issues on the mound. His WHIP in MLB has not yet ever been acceptable.

    Moving him to the pen is not going to keep him from giving up hit and walks.

    "Moving him to the pen is not going to keep him from giving up hit and walks"

     

    So then its exactly what was said? Coming in from the bullpen for one inning, throwing your 2 plus pitches, and hopefully facing 3 batters is different than trying to work through a lineup 3-4 times as a starter. Very different. I would urge you to take a look at a list of successful relievers who struggled as starting pitchers or if you don't want to do any digging just call to mind the last few dominant relievers the Twins had. 

     

    So failed starter = failed reliever? 

     

    Couldn't disagree more with that take.

    What would make him a failed starter would make him fail as a reliever.   If he can't locate his pitches as a starter, he won't  locate any better as a reliever. If the 100 mph fastball is hittable because he throws it over the plate, 102 mph will suffer the same fate.  Meyer is a case where a failed starter would equal a failed reliever. 

     

    "Moving him to the pen is not going to keep him from giving up hit and walks"

     

    So then its exactly what was said? Coming in from the bullpen for one inning, throwing your 2 plus pitches, and hopefully facing 3 batters is different than trying to work through a lineup 3-4 times as a starter. Very different. I would urge you to take a look at a list of successful relievers who struggled as starting pitchers or if you don't want to do any digging just call to mind the last few dominant relievers the Twins had. 

    You would have a valid point except the MLB hitters were getting to him first time through the rotation, not the 2/3 time through. 

    Perkins improved his fb velocity being a reliever . I can't recall any  starter who had a plus plus fastball and slider but had control problems really succeeding as a reliever. The struggling starter becomes a better pitcher as a reliever because they end up with an above average fb rather than a below average one.

     

    What would make him a failed starter would make him fail as a reliever.   If he can't locate his pitches as a starter, he won't  locate any better as a reliever. If the 100 mph fastball is hittable because he throws it over the plate, 102 mph will suffer the same fate.  Meyer is a case where a failed starter would equal a failed reliever. 

    Meh, there is a big difference between trying to paint corners with a 4 pitch mix and throwing your two plus pitches out of the pen. 

     

    You would have a valid point except the MLB hitters were getting to him first time through the rotation, not the 2/3 time through. 

    Perkins improved his fb velocity being a reliever . I can't recall any  starter who had a plus plus fastball and slider but had control problems really succeeding as a reliever. The struggling starter becomes a better pitcher as a reliever because they end up with an above average fb rather than a below average one.

    Like I said, check some former Twins relievers, namely Joe Nathan's K/BB during his minor league career. He isn't throwing max velocity as a starter. No pitcher has the stamina to pitch that way over the course of a game. Moving to the pen would add mph to his fastball. 

     

    BA 2017 Scouting Report on Jay
    Quote
    With his mid-90s fastball and hard, late-breaking 88-92 mph slider, Jay has two big league quality pitches that give him a high floor as a potential closer. As a starter, he features a four-pitch mix, flashing an above-average curveball and mixing in a changeup that has proven effective against righthanded hitters. Evaluators question whether the modest-framed Jay has the physicality to sustain his stuff in extended work. Though electric in short stints, he wasn’t as sharp the second and third time through lineups in 2016. Whether Jay will ever build that durability is a divisive topic among scouts. The Twins remain committed to developing Jay as a starter, and he should return to Chattanooga in 2017. However, with the major league club in need of arms, he could at least begin his major league career out of the bullpen

     

    I like how I got ridiculed for saying similar things as the scouting report here does. I was told my "bullpen stalwart" floor was a ridiculous by several! ;)




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