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bean5302

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Everything posted by bean5302

  1. 4/27+ .263/.349/.368 wRC+ 111. Do you think I don't look this **** up before I post 99% of the time?
  2. Mahle had been on the IL for a shoulder strain for only 3 weeks and the Reds rushed him back into action because they wanted to move his contract. Shoulder strains generally take more than 3 weeks to heal up, but the Twins took the gamble without a thorough physical and it bit them hard. Dyson is a different story because he wasn't on the IL, but he said he was battling through pain in the weeks leading up to the trade. From my understanding, big physicals aren't common before the deadline. Probably because there isn't any time to perform them, but Mahle was clearly a scenario where the Twins were giving up a lot for a guy who was back curiously fast from what is normally a longer stint. In regard to the results of Falvey's trades, they've been fine overall. Historically, the team has not gone after huge acquisitions at the deadline. Mahle probably ranks as the biggest deadline improvement attempt in team history.
  3. Yep. They're not going to get better. Wallner and Julien are 27 and 26 next year, respectively. They're not going to become different players or a lot better. They're in their prime. Lee is entering his prime. He'll be 24 next year, which will be getting up there for a top prospect. If you don't believe those guys can produce at a 2 WAR clip already, they're not worth hanging onto while they have team control and trade value. Lee being the exception for another year. Kepler is a below average value starting position player right now. Apart from last year, he's been below average for a few years now. Serviceable. Not desireable. Farmer's been about league average at the plate since late April. While it's all fun to look at his full year stats and conclude he sucks, Farmer and Santana looked the same in April, but Santana continued to get every day at bats while Farmer was sporadically platooned and Margot got his daily play time to reverse his line. Farmer's consistently been a 1.0-2.0 WAR starter. Good enough.
  4. 2016 = 3.39 FIP 2017 = 4.19 FIP 2018 = 2.94 FIP, Cy Young 2019 = 3.32 FIP 2020 = 4.35 FIP 2021 = 3.82 FIP 2022 = 2.80 FIP 2023 = 3.44 FIP, Cy Young Better than you could expect from any Twins pitcher on the roster. Blake Snell ranks 17th in MLB for pitcher fWAR from his rookie season on (21.5) despite time missed due to pretty frequent injury woes vs. say a bottom #2 or very good #3 workhorse like Jose Berrios (19.3). Snell's biggest issue is injuries. Now, would I like Snell on a $30MM AAV contract? Nope. But if Snell is pitching well enough for a team to acquire, he's opting out of that barring serious injury anyway. Even better news, assuming the Twins ate the remainder of his contract this year, it's not $30MM, it's $10MM, but because it's $10MM, and because Snell's $30MM opt out is actually a negative, he's not going to command a huge trade deal package. Snell isn't my favorite target, but he's one I'd be interested in because if he's healthy, he becomes our #1 starter. By all means, though, skimp on the front of the rotation and do the same thing which led to the Twins not winning a single playoff game for the longest streak in pro sports history.
  5. Farmer has no trade value. If Lee is such a massive upgrade over him, he's also an upgrade over Kepler.
  6. Trade them all, then. If they can't produce at a 2.0 WAR level, they're of no future value.
  7. Another series win against another (over .500) team. Despite all the narrative being spread for a while now that the team can only beat up on bottom feeders, the Twins have won or tied like 7 series' against playoff caliber teams this year. Trevor Larnach hasn't been great for a good portion of the season at this point. He had an 11 game scorching hot streak from 4/22-5/5, but outside that, he's been solidly below average when it comes to production. The rolling xwOBA suggests he's probably been unlucky, but things like batted ball data, exit velocity and barrels say he's been league average-ish at best. He seems kinda like the same guy he was, just more aggressive at the plate trying to generate contact rather than taking walks or striking out. Don't get me wrong, I love what he did to win the game yesterday, but he's a 1.5 WAR full season guy. Good enough to start on a team who really needs a corner outfielder, but not ideal for a playoff caliber team. Pay special note to how his OBP is extremely consistent through the same sizes. .260-.270 OBP just isn't going to play at a high level in MLB. Last 10 = 38 PA, .243/.263/.514 OPS .777 wRC+ 115 Last 20 = 68 PA, .235/.264/.397 OPS .661 wRC+ 84 11-30 = 71 PA, .203/.268/.359 OPS 627 wRC+ 78 Last 30 = 101 PA, .218/.266/.416 OPS .682 wRC+ 91 11-40 = 98 PA, .214/.271/.347 OPS .618 wRC+ 77 21-40 = 73 PA .209/.274/.388 OPS .662 wRC+ 89 Last 40 = 145 PA, .222/.269.393 OPS .662 wRC+ 87
  8. Another series He didn't boot the ball. I don't even have an idea where you're coming from on this? He slid because it was critical to stop the ball from getting to the outfield and the play was at the very edge of his range. Santana screwed that play. Just like the gold glove defensive hero didn't catch/stop a ball from Miranda that led to a loss the other day. If Santana doesn't lay there on the ground and gets up to try to cover first, that's still an out. If he doesn't distract the **** out of Martin telling him to try and make a risky throw/play at 2B, Martin may have even been able to beat the runner to 1B. Martin wisely held onto that ball rather than trying to force a play he didn't feel comfortable with.
  9. Kepler is a league average bat with pretty good defense in right field at this point. Considering the level of talent in St. Paul, there are going to be players who are likely to perform as well or better than Kepler. Is Wallner a AAA player? Is Julien a AAA player? Is Lee a AAA player? Is Keirsey a AAA player? They're on a AAA roster, but there are plenty of people who support the idea at least one of them or even all of them are better than a typical "AAA replacement player."
  10. I'm all for Snell if he's pitching like the ace he was last year. If Snell finishes the season out strong, he is not going to opt in to $30MM. He's going to take his 5yrs $100MM vs. risking another down year. The Twins have never traded for an ace mid year to the best of my memory. Snell shouldn't really be that expensive, if available, due to the rough start to the season and his current payroll. Joe Ryan's having a career year right now, and there's nothing in his advanced metrics to suggest there's huge regression coming, and Lopez has not pitched dominantly this year. The Twins really need a #1 starter to take Gray's spot for the playoffs.
  11. I was talking about his last few starts overall. Not in regard to whether he was consistently great during the game. It's expected a pitcher will run into at least a little trouble during a game no matter how good they are.
  12. I don't know about Larnach. He's pumpkin-izing back to his old self in terms of production. Pitch Type Pitch % Exp. Pitches 2021 2022 2023 2024 Fastball 28% 448 4 2 0 18 Slider 18% 288 -4 7 2 -5 Changeup 18% 288 -8 -7 -2 -10 Curveball 11% 176 1 -4 -3 -3 Sinker 9% 144 -3 4 2 -3 Cutter 6% 96 -4 -4 5 5 Splitter 5% 80 0 -6 4 -3 Other 5% 80 N/A N/A N/A N/A 1600 Haven't posted an update on his pitch weakness in a bit, but it's clear the offspeed and breaking stuff is starting to give him near universal fits again. Last 20 games 72 PA .224/.264/.388 OPS .652 wRC+ 83, 5.6% BB, 15.3% K Last 30 games 109 PA .200/.257/.370 OPS .627 wRC+ 77, 7.3% BB, 16.5% K He's not the same hitter as he was in year past. He's more aggressive at the plate and it did pay dividends during a searing 11 game hot streak 4/22-5/8, but outside that, his production has been pretty poor. It seems Larnach likely truly cannot identify non-fastballs like I had assumed for a years now. Comments about a shortened swing to help him make adjustments as the reason he was turning a corner made sense, but it just seems more likely he's at his limits. xwOBA suggests Larnach has been victimized by bad luck, but most of his Statcast data has been average to above average over the past few weeks. Statcast's rolling 100 plate appearances suggests Larnach's xwOBA is well above average, but I don't see much which would tie to that. 5/17-6/29 = 101 PA 17.3% Line Drive (poor), 48.1% Ground Ball (poor), 14.3% HR:FB rate (good), 90.9mph (avg), 9.9% barrel (above average), 37.0% hard hit (below average).
  13. Yeah, Jenkins has had a pretty awful start to the season without even considering the nasty hamstring pull. .219/.320/.313 OPS .633 wRC+ 89 with no power in 75 plate appearances. Taking more walks, and striking out a little more than last year in his repeat of Low A, but the big issue has been the evaporation of power. I don't really trust low minors batted ball data, but right now, showing Jenkins with a 40% pop up rate. Wonder if the Twins are having him work on something which just isn't working?
  14. Lopez's last games have been pretty inconsistent. He needs to be better to justify the position the Twins were expecting him to fill. 1) Great 2) Great 3) Awful 4) Acceptable 5) Awful 6) Great 7) Awful 8) Awful 9) Poor 10) Great
  15. It comes down to a few things. a) Will the Twins make a QO to Kepler? The answer to that is 90% no. He's been a 2 WAR right fielder, heavily assisted by his now declining defense with a league average bat. Even if he turns it on for the second half again and finishes up with 3 WAR again this year, he's probably taking the QO. For a guy who's made $42MM over his 10 years, a $21MM single year payday is going to be pretty amazing, and his age bracket really doesn't change going from a32 to a33 in Free Agency. b) Let's say Kepler turns down the QO (unlikely). I don't think his contract value exceeds 3-4yrs at $30-36MM. Kepler's not going to get a contract over $50MM. So the most the Twins stand to lose is a Comp B pick. c) What is Kepler's trade value at the deadline? Is it higher than Comp B, which is the absolute maximum the Twins could potentially hope to get from making the QO? I'd wager a organization 15-20 prospect or a role player on an expiring contract. d) Can the Twins replace Kepler on the roster? Yes. As of right now, Kepler is a 2 WAR type of player. Wallner, Lee, Julien, Severino, whomever you favor in the Twins prospect list as the next big thing could easily step in and fill a 2 WAR player's shoes. e) Who gets Kepler in a trade? A potential playoff team. Meaning the Twins will be making a playoff team they'll have to face later potentially better by one Mr. Maximilian Kepler, who can totally afford another ticket with his Porsche. Potential suitors? Probably the Phillies are the best bet. Maybe acquire a guy like Caleb Ricketts to add some catching depth? Should the Twins make a deal like this? My answer is... probably. Depends on the standings, injury situation, and a willing trade partner where the Twins get an actual return of something.
  16. The easiest way to get an ace is to find Johan Santana and get him to unretire. He's probably fine to pitch. Who needs a left shoulder anyway? I saw Rick Aguilera in an interview recently. Looks like he probably body shames guys at Gold's Gym. Man that guy is in great shape. Probably ready to go.
  17. The Diamondbacks directly knocked out the loaded Phillies and Dodgers teams to make it to the World Series in an era where teams have to play more series' than ever. The 2010 Giants won, the 2006 Cardinals (83-79 record) won. The 2001 Diamondbacks won. The 2003 Marlins won. The 1987 Twins won. There are plenty of good, but non-elite teams who win the World Series. The 1987 Twins wasn't even good. It was a mediocre team.
  18. His signing bonus was $6.7MM. He's at $9.1MM career earnings already. Hopefully, he's not hurting for money.
  19. In no way, shape or form was that Miranda attempt "basic." That was an infield hit Miranda was trying to rob with an extraordinary play. Santana not blocking the ball and letting it get past him is where things went really sour. Can't let that ball get past you. It shouldn't have mattered since there was runner interference when Raleigh chose to run in front of Miranda. Cal Raleigh should be been forced to return to 2B, runner out at first. It wasn't a out-of-lane issue since the base running lane is only established at the point the fielder has the ball and is attempting the tag. Raleigh did adjust his lane, but not by 3 or more feet at that point.
  20. Severino isn't eligible for the rule 5 draft right now so how he's performing now is not relevant. How he performed last year is relevant. a25, 299 PA, .302/.452/.539 OPS .990, wRC+ 153 <--- left exposed. Not selected. a23, 153 PA, .233/.320/.511 OPS .832 wRC+ 100 <--- protected 1) Would a team have selected Severino? Probably not. 2) If a team would have selected Severino, would they have kept him? No way. He opened the year at .145/.251/.303 OPS .555 wRC+ 46 in AAA in 167 plate appearances. Even at 203 plate appearances he was .181/.281/.362 OPS .642 wRC+ 64 in AAA with a long history of being mediocre at the plate. Can you imagine how his stat line would have looked in MLB with him also being considered a poor defender? .100/.200/.250? A 50% K rate to boot? Nobody is keeping that on the 26 man.
  21. If you can't tell whether or not it's an intentional HBP, there is no message sent. If Funderburk wanted to send a message, it should have been the first pitch of of his night, not literally the 25th after issuing a walk and missing the zone all over the place. But, again, I think Funderburk was just wild. It was Caleb Thielbar or Cole Sands' message to send since they pitched after the Correa HBP. Funderburk had no business making the call if it was intentional. Let the veterans decide the correct course of action and learn from them. If Thielbar and Sands were okay with it, Funderburk should to stay in his lane. If it was intentional, Funderburk can go back to AAA because it was cheap, it was dirty and it didn't send any message anyway because he was so wild on his first 24 pitches and 7 batters faced.
  22. Not sure why anybody thinks a long term extension needs to bump Lewis to $20MM next year or something? That never happens. The Twins would lock him in using a stepped scale as if arbitration was happening. 2025 a26 = $6MM arb1 replacement 2026 a27 = $10MM arb2 replacement 2027 a28 = $15MM arb3 replacement 2028 a29 = $22MM arb4 replacement 2029 a30 = $25MM 2030 a31 = $30MM 2031 a32 = $35MM 2032 a33 = $35MM 2033 a34 = $35MM 2034 a35 = $30MM --------------------------- Full NTC ends 2035 a36 = $20MM team opt 2036 a37 = $20MM team opt 10yrs $243MM. That's how it might play out. But, even then, does it make a difference vs. waiting until the end of the season to see if Lewis can at least hold up that long? Nope. I don't see how it changes anything significant at all. For that matter, I don't think it changes waiting for Lewis to play a full year next year, either.
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