Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

bean5302

Verified Member
  • Posts

    6,511
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    35

 Content Type 

Profiles

News

Minnesota Twins Videos

2026 Minnesota Twins Top Prospects Ranking

2022 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

Minnesota Twins Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

Guides & Resources

2023 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

The Minnesota Twins Players Project

2024 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

2025 Minnesota Twins Draft Pick Tracker

Forums

Blogs

Events

Store

Downloads

Gallery

Everything posted by bean5302

  1. As I was reading that I was like woooooooooowwww. All aboard the ultra hype train.
  2. Starts with 5.0 innings pitched and an ERA under 4.00 10/20 (50%) Starts with 5.0 innings pitched an an FIP under 4.00 10/20 (50%) Last 3 starts 4.2 IP, 6.91 ERA, 5.06 FIP, 4.03 xFIP Last 5 starts 5.0 IP, 4.74 ERA, 3.54 FIP, 3.43 xFIP Woods Richardson definitely isn't looking dominant, but he is certainly doing his part, and last night's start looked really great in person using the eye test as well as the actual runs on the board. Giving up 2HRs wasn't so good, but since they were solo shots, they didn't really hurt.
  3. I was encouraged seeing the velocity for Winder on the scoreboards. Winder's chronic shoulder had robbed him of a fair amount of velocity. He was sitting 96ish in the high minors as a starter and touching 97-98 when he was absolutely dominant as I recall. I felt like Winder's ceiling could have been as high as a #2ish guy back then. If Winder is able to keep his average velo in that 95-96 range, he could be very good out of the bullpen, but he's never going to return to the rotation without some time being injury free.
  4. It's not going to happen. SWR is a fly ball pitcher and he's been lucky with HR's so far. It's at 0.97 right now, which is already good. xFIP says 4.24 vs. FIP at 3.79. There's more HR regression to come, but if they're all solo shots, it'll be lucky and great for him.
  5. Rich Hill is 44 years old, hasn't pitched in nearly a year and was ineffective last year putting up the worst ERA he's had since 2013 and the worst FIP he's had since 2009. I guess Hill was serviceable early, but his xFIP sat in that 4.50-5.00 range the entire season. I'm not sure why there's interest since we have Dobnak, Boushley and Plutko on the roster already. I don't believe Rich Hill is likely better than any of them, let alone all of them. If the Twins sign Hill, I think the likelihood of Boushley or Plutko getting DFA'd and released is very high. A Matthews promotion likely results in Morris getting promoted as well.
  6. You're right. Sorry I brought stats into the equation. Your personal opinion of players you like or dislike is a far more acceptable basis of evaluating player value.
  7. Thanks! Only the highly dedicated professionals are good enough to be paid employees of MLB and keep their positions despite their calls being reviewed and open to official complaints. Official scorers are required to have in depth knowledge of MLB rules, and every city has to have at least 1 official scorer attend meetings to review controversial calls and discuss plays. It seems like an underpaid and under appreciated profession. I don't think I'm up to that level of commitment, though.
  8. The Twins can expect a 5.00ish ERA, lots of hard contact, hits and home runs. Varland's stuff plays up out of the bullpen, but it's unlikely to get the job done in the rotation. He struggled in AAA for a reason this year. In 7 starts at the MLB level this year, zero are considered "quality starts" by the traditional definition. By mine, 5.0+ innings, ERA under 4.00, he's got 1. In 15 starts in the MiLB system with the Saints, Varland owns a 1.43 WHIP (identical to Randy Dobnak). Simply put, way too many people put on base. A 1.43 WHIP would probably put Varland at the edge of serviceable at the MLB level. Projecting it up from MiLB to MLB isn't promising. Varland could potentially be a strong asset to the Twins out of the bullpen. The likely loss of Joe Ryan for the rest of the year and the definitive loss of Brock Stewart puts the Twins in a bind since they didn't do much at the deadline, but Varland is likely only a solution out of the pen. Hopefully, David Festa can continue to prove me wrong and Zebby Matthews looks good. It's a bad spot to be in for the Twins.
  9. Sure. Of the 376 hitters in MLB with 350+ PA in the past 2 years, Matt Wallner ranks 8th (top 2%). 350 PA, all connected together, including hot streaks and slumps, is not a small sample size. It's not ideally large, but it's getting pretty significant. Where was Wallner in his 33 plate appearances out of the gate this year? He was getting called 3rd strikes on pitches 3" out of the strike zone. He was slumping. Where was Aaron Judge in his 35 plate appearances between 7/3-711? .129/.229/.129 OPS .358 wRC+ 12. Slumps happen. Wallner is 26. Where was Wallner in Sept/Oct last year? Just hitting .284/.411/.514 OPS .925 wRC+ 157. Just 1 position player qualified last year. Carlos Correa. Just 2 position players may qualify this year. Only switch hitters Castro and Santana need apply. If you're a RHB or LHB and you aren't on a contract for $15MM+ per year with the Twins, do not expect to play every day.
  10. Varland allowed 8 hits in 4.2 innings. If the plays were so egregiously bad, they would have been ruled an error. I didn't see any "plays that should have been made." Are you talking about the very difficult play where Ramirez singled off the glove of Castro, just multiplying that one play x4? Castro managed to get a glove on it with a 100% effort dive running the opposite way. He got a lot of glove on the ball, it should have been caught. That said, Ramirez is a pretty fast runner. Even if Castro manages to grab that medium speed grounder, to then get up, spin, and make a 110 foot throw and still nab Ramirez? Most players without Carlos Correa's arm have little chance at that. Castro had already made a heck of a nice play fielding a hopper that bounced over Varland's head which could have been a hit earlier in the game.
  11. Happy to see the Twins get a win against the Guardians with Varland starting. 4.2 IP with 8 hits allowed isn't going to be too successful in most cases, but Varland was able to limit the damage on the scoreboard and the 3 ER was lifted by an outstanding bullpen effort and huge bats. I really hope Matthews looks good in his start.
  12. Wallner is one of the top hitters in all of baseball over his past 2 seasons and it showed in that at bat. Cobb wasn't trying to throw a meatball to Wallner there, but Wallner jumped on the mistake by laying off 3 pitches in a row. 2 outs, runners on first and third. Cobb clearly missed his intended down and away spot. Wallner's OPS is 1.059. No idea why you think Lewis has anything to do with it? Wallner hasn't been hitting at the bottom of the lineup for a while, and the bottom of the lineup is where you more frequently see the type of "challenge" pitch you're alluding to.
  13. "With the stuff that he has and the ability to turn the ball over, sink the ball but also command his pitches very well, he's shown great feel for his offspeed stuff, his slider is ever-improving, and we consider it a weapon," Baldelli said. "And in a day where there's a lot of pitchers that pitch in a very similar fashion and the velos are through the roof and guys that have tremendous carry are all over the place everywhere you look, Randy does something different." https://www.mlb.com/news/randy-dobnak-twins-extension Aside from the direct quotes from Baldelli talking about how the Twins valued what Dobnak was already doing, arguing the Twins had the ability to force Dobnak into doing something after they signed him to a fully guaranteed contract is generally seen as the exact opposite of the balance of power. Dobnak threw fewer sliders in 2021 (33%) than he did in 2020 (35%). You seem to have a pretty strong opinion on the subject, but just doesn't seem to be backed up very well by quotes or stats.
  14. I probably like garlic ice cream better than onion ice cream. I don't want to eat either one.
  15. Should Brooks Lee remain on at the MLB level is the only question which really needs to be asked. The answer is no. Julien was demoted after 190 PA with a .205/.305/.367 .672 OPS, wRC+ 94 line. Lee currently has 110 PA with a .253/.309/.333 .642 OPS, wRC+ 81 line 1-50% vs. 51-100% of PA prior to Julien's demotion Julien = .222/.323/.531 OPS .854 wRC+ 138 vs. .193/.297/.216 OPS .513 wRC+ 56 Lee = .265/.302/.408 OPS .710 wRC+ 99 vs. .240/.316/.260 OPS .576 wRC+ 65 There are a lot of ways to analyze and compare Brooks Lee to other players, but the bottom line is he's not playing very well at all and hasn't been for a while. After his first 6 games, Lee has been .187/.262/.240 OPS .503 wRC+ 43. Exit Velo has been 84.7mph. Barrel rate 3.2%. Hard hit 19.4%. He's struggling vs almost every type of pitch with negative values against every single pitch type except splitters since then.
  16. You said utility players don't get paid. Mookie Betts is a utility player. He's getting paid. He's not a comp for Castro, and my prediction of 5-6yrs at $100MM+ make it pretty clear he's not in even remotely the same league. I expect a team will sign Castro with the plan to make him their every day SS.
  17. Arbitration generally looks at the previous 2 years from my understanding. I really have absolutely no idea how to quantify Lewis' value. Counting stats are known to be the most valuable, but traditional counting stats often reflect themselves in WAR pretty directly. Lewis doesn't play a super premium defensive position, and not a lot of his value comes from his defense so it feels like this is probably fairly good for predictions, though the data starts from almost 10 years ago, and there has been some slight (not as much as you'd think) inflation. https://blogs.fangraphs.com/a-super-two-compensation-update/ Say Lewis ends up with 3 WAR this year. I'd expect a $4MM super 2 value in Arb 1. I'm not sure how things will pan out, but the Twins are likely to take an aggressive stance with Lewis given their tight payroll and the impact a starting arbitration salary has on the future of a player. If they can drop his Arb1 salary by $1MM, it will impact his future salaries much more.
  18. Dobnak had a tendon in his finger rupture with permanent damage. That's the problem. Unless the Twins held his hand down and smashed it with a hammer like some scene out of a mafia movie, I don't see the injury as the Twins' fault. Minnesota extended Dobnak quickly and early using their leverage against his limited finances to lock him up to what looked like an incredibly team friendly deal. They clearly valued the pitcher he was.
  19. Just because you want to label him as a utility player does not mean a signing team would view him or use him as a "utility player." The same way players are signed and moved around depending on a team's need. Mookie Betts probably qualifies as a "utility player" as you describe the term. He's played a mix of CF/2B/SS over the past few years for the Dodgers. He's making pretty good money at 12 years and $365MM.
  20. Castro's on pace for about 4 WAR this year, and he's solidified himself as an above average switch hitter a team can play anywhere other than catcher. Most teams, I think, would be comfortable plugging him in as a starter at 2B/3B/SS/LF/RF. He'll be age 28 next year. Castro is looking at a 5-6 year deal at $100MM+ easy in free agency if he puts up another 4 WAR full season value in 2025. The Twins have a shrinking payroll and long term contracts for Buxton, Correa, and Lopez eating up $70MM starting next year. Plus Vazquez, Paddack who eat up $17.5MM more. Then they have Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, Royce Lewis, Griffin Jax, Jhoan Duran all hitting arb1 next year. Say $17.5MM for those guys, that puts the Twins at $105MM. Dobnak eats up $3MM, Alcala costs $1.5MM. If the Twins keep all those players, then average about $1MM for everybody else on the roster, that puts the Twins awfully close to their probable max of $125MM-ish. I'm not sure where the Twins are going to find an extra $6-7MM for Castro's arb 3 status, let alone for a long term extension for him. Some of the numbers I'm seeing being floated for him are... very wishful thinking IMHO.
  21. Royce is my favorite Twins player. Giving him a long term contract is an absolute no-go from me. He has to prove he can remain healthy. As a Super 2, Royce will get 4 years of arbitration. How his year 1 arbitration value looks is something where I have absolutely no idea what to expect. Arb values generally rely on traditional metrics. AVG/SLG/HR that kind of stuff. Lewis' numbers are great, but he barely plays. Somebody above posted $6MM. That seems excessive to me given how little playing time Lewis has. $6MM in Arb 1 is a huge number.
  22. Not really. Baltimore's area overlaps other metro areas like Washington D.C. which is only 30min away which adds the Nationals, Capitals, and Wizards. So if you wanted to do a factor analysis like that, the Twins have a lot less competition, and a larger metro area population, and larger MLB home territory from which to draw.
  23. I suppose back on topic, if Ryan misses significant time, you'd have to assume it's either Varland or Matthews who has to take his rotation spot. I'm skeptical either one of them is MLB rotation worthy right now. We're already in a dicey spot with SWR's innings and Festa in the rotation.
  24. Or maybe they traded Polanco because he was in decline and they had better players on the roster already, as a side effect they expected to save some cash. Falvey made a bad deal after picking up a team option. That's not the Pohlad's fault. Falvey had a number of options on how to spend his financial assets. There were 4 potential contracts on the books he could have chosen to delete. None of these players have added major value this year. Vazquez $10MM Kepler $10.0MM (Team Option) -Polanco $10.5MM (Team Option) Farmer $6.25MM (Arb3) Subtracted from Polanco savings, all of nearly zero value this year. +Desclafani $4.0MM +Topa $1.25MM +Okert $1.06MM Other acquisitions +Santana +$5.25MM +Margot $4.0MM Neither Santana nor Margot are better than the players they blocked (Miranda & Martin). That's nearly $50MM in expenditures which could have been spent differently if Falvey felt the Pohlad's salary limits required adjustments to the roster. I blame the Pohlads for the trade deadline, not the $130MM opening day payroll.
  25. Not aware of Hill having pitched anywhere this year. Blake Snell made it pretty apparent a pitcher needs to ramp up. I doubt hill would be ready before mid September. Zack Greinke was wishy washy on pitching, but same type of thing. Honestly, I just don't see many options to replace a starter outside of our existing roster since the deadline has passed, and it'll take weeks to ramp up anybody who hasn't already been pitching competitively. The only name(s) that come to mind have been blacklisted by MLB. The Mexican League's regular season just ended, but there are a couple guys who have pitched in MLB who had nice seasons there. Zac Grotz, Joe Wieland. I really don't see that happening, but I don't think it'd necessarily be a horrible move to grab one of those guys on a MiLB deal if they'd want it.
×
×
  • Create New...