bean5302
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Everything posted by bean5302
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He's no faster than Wallner was a couple years ago, and his weak arm led to teams really being aggressive on him last year where he got some opportunities to push up his defensive stats through getting some easy outs on attempted advances. Martin doesn't get a good reaction or jump, but he does have enough raw speed to make up for his poor instincts. Expecting more than average defense from him feels optimistic, but certainly more ceiling than a guy like Larnach.
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Why a Twins Rebuild Was Never the Only Answer
bean5302 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
The Twins were projected to win the division at this time last year, too. There's a big difference between projections and reality at this time of year. There are times when teams take major steps forward with a young core. We saw that between 2015-2017 where the team nearly made the playoffs, flopped and rebounded to make the playoffs for the first time since 2010. There are also a lot more times when a team is just cooked like the 2011 team where it took years and years to rebound. Tom Pohlad said he wasn't a partial commitment kind of guy, but that is exactly what fans are used to and EXACTLY what we're getting. So yeah, the owners and front office could choose to screw the fans like they are doing. It might work out or it might not. But if they're looking to get fans to invest in the team, status quo isn't the right course. They're lying to us.- 50 replies
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- bryon buxton
- pablo lopez
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I think people are getting awfully excited about Martin despite more history of being bad than being good at the MLB level. Martin was basically the exact same guy in 2025 that he was in 2024 at the plate, just with better results. 2024 vs 2025 18.6% vs 18.6% O-Swing rate 68.7% vs 58.7% Z-Swing rate (a sub-60% Z-Swing rate is terrible IMHO) 26.6% vs. 25.2% Line drive rate 42.4% vs. 50.4% Ground ball rate 31.0% vs. 24.4% Fly ball rate 87.2mph vs. 86.2mph Avg. Exit Velo (not good) 1.1% vs. 5.5% Barrel rate (still below average) 33.5% vs. 38.5% Hard hit. I just don't see it. The increased walk rate doesn't make sense given the fact Martin didn't really change his approach for swinging at pitches out of the zone or anything. His approach of waiting for mistake pitches (the very low Z-swing rate) reminds me of Eddie Julien.
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Sure. If MLB had 50 roster spots, Larnach would make sense as a part-time (mostly DH) left fielder to platoon against RHP. wRC+ 110 is honestly just a little better than average. It's not like Larnach raked at a wRC+ 150 rate or something which could offset his poor hitting against lefties. The way this roster is constructed means several players make no sense together, and Larnach is one of those. He's a high floor player, but with an extremely low ceiling.
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Arbitration is about precedent. If Skubal wins, he'll be setting a precedent that arbitration should more heavily weigh a player's free agency value (which it should). Also, I'd be utterly shocked if the next CBA didn't include more provisions to make arbitration more fair for players in the future. Right now, arbitration salary growth has been based almost solely on the initial and subsequent year arbitration values which prevents players from earning what they are worth if they start low. Skubals ruling could turn that entire concept on it's head for a lot of players who are arb-3. Not just for a back to back Cy Young winner. But only for 2026-2027 arbitration, if there's not a strike.
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Opportunity Season Isn't Over Yet for Twins
bean5302 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Why would the team be focused on raising the floor? The floor isn't the problem. Neither is the ceiling. The problem is the lack of middle ground. The meat of good teams haspPlayers the team can count on to produce that solid 2 WAR contribution as a position player. They're not flashy MVP guys, they're the bread and butter of a playoff caliber team. The floor of this team is 100 losses. The ceiling is 92-ish wins. Getting some AAAA cast offs or 1 WAR guys to get the Twins to a 95 loss team floor while simultaneously reigning in the ceiling to 87 wins isn't of any value.- 17 replies
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- derek falvey
- jeremy zoll
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How the Twins Are Building a Matchup Machine
bean5302 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Anybody on the team can switch hit (stand in the other batter's box) just as well as anybody on the team has positional flexibility (where we deploy players into positions they can't cover). I do not care if a guy hits left or right. I don't care about platoon advantages in theory. I care about production in reality.- 46 replies
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- josh bell
- victor caratini
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Inside the Twins Second Base Pipeline
bean5302 replied to Cory Moen's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
Brooks Lee was #8, and he's happy to play wherever. The target of his ire is Lewis, who played 2B when he was told he was playing 2B. I mean, I can't see why a player wouldn't be excited for the opportunity to be forced to learn a new position during a playoff chase while playing injured and in a slump, right? Also, voicing concern when asked for an opinion = outright refusal around these parts.- 19 replies
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- luke keaschall
- jake rucker
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git gud was my thought pattern. Veterans are often cited as having some sort of veteran capability to teach players how to be better, but I've rarely seen any long term evidence of that. Even truly talented guys like Cruz aren't going to be able to sprinkle magic fairy dust on players to add talent, but the very same arguments are made for any and all veteran signings. It's like the tech definition of an expert shared with me years ago. Apparently "expert" means somebody who lives more than 500 miles away.
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You suggested Rooker and Sabato were comparable because somebody else would have treated them the same. Brent Rooker has apparently become the new David Ortiz around these parts. The cautionary tale who is used by fans to justify hanging on to any MiLB roster filler well past prospect age regardless of how little similarity exists. Sabato will be considered 27 for this baseball season.
- 34 replies
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- walker jenkins
- kaelen culpepper
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Let's reward Joe Ryan with a little extension
bean5302 replied to AlLagoon's topic in Minnesota Twins Talk
He's too close to free agency to get a big bargain on him like you're suggesting. The Twins extended Pablo Lopez for 4yrs and $73.5MM in a similar situation (though Lopez had more reason to take the deal because he'd be a free agent again at 31). Your numbers would drive a rift into the relationship and be seen as an absolute insult. -
Rogers being older and experienced isn't going to make any difference in my opinion. Justin Topa's 35 this year. Sands and Funderburk have several years of MLB experience. The grizzled veteran is another one of those "intangibles" usually used to justify bad veteran players' existence on the roster. We didn't see big growth when Joey Gallow was here. Nelson Cruz wasn't able to make Miguel Sano GG. Vazquez couldn't teach Ryan Jeffers how to be a good defensive catcher. There is no value in the grizzled veteran IMHO. We have coaches. There are plenty of veteran players who've been there on the team.
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The "cheap Pohlads" used the money from not extending Santana to extend Morneau, Nathan, Cuddyer and later Mauer. Santana was clear. He wanted the biggest contract a pitcher had ever received, and he got it. Sure, he deserved it, but the Twins weren't going to match that. The Mets didn't over use Santana, either. Santana averaged similar or fewer inning per start with the Mets than he did with the Twins, and the Mets gave him similar pitch counts to Minnesota. Santana broke down, and whenever Sananta had issues, the Mets shut his season down early to get him treated. If you're talking about the one game they let Santana go 134 pitches in the FIFTH year of his contract for the Mets' first no-hitter in club history, that's really digging.
- 24 replies
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- johan santana
- bert blyleven
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Comparing a guy who is now 27 and has struggled mightily and consistently in the high minors for 4 consecutive years except for a 165 PA sample size in AA to Brent Rooker isn't reasonable. Rooker destroyed AAA. Sabato couldn't hold his own there last year. Rooker made MLB in his 4th season despite that being in 2020. He had a .931 OPS with 20 HR in 267 PA in AAA at age 26. Sabato had a .741 OPS (wRC+ 86) with 14 HR in 264 PA at age 26. Sabato is a non-prospect and it's pretty ridiculous hearing his name as a potential contributor at this point. I'm pretty surprised the Twins haven't already released him.
- 34 replies
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- walker jenkins
- kaelen culpepper
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Zoll wants Prielipp in the rotation. Falvey has wanted him in the 'pen. What I took away from the discussion is the Twins will likely make a call on his direction after watching him in Spring Training.
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Why Didn't the Twins Go Full Sell-Off?
bean5302 replied to Cody Pirkl's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
If I were to guess... it's because Falvey wants to try and salvage his job and he's convinced ownership there's talent on the roster which can carry the team back into the playoffs and new minority ownership gave the green light to keeping status quo with a year of getting familiar with and evaluating the Twins' operations. If the Twins were to have quickly sold to a new owner, I think it's extremely likely Falvey would have been fired and replaced this offseason. Since the ownership debacle dragged well into the offseason before the Twins pivoted, there may not have been enough time to dedicate to the sale plus a new GM/President search especially given the fake termination of St. Peter. Personally, I think the Twins should have fired Falvey after the trade deadline last year. No reason left to keep him at that point.- 82 replies
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- eric orze
- ryan jeffers
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Culpepper is #2 right now for me, but a distant #2. For me, grading prospects is about ceiling, floor and projectability. It's very difficult to project low minors players who are not absolutely dominant because there are so many single flaws which can be exposed. I'm not a pro scout so I have to lean heavily on scouting reports which are fraught with personal biases on how a player looks or what big time MLB player a prospect resembles in the mind of the scout. Lots of excitment around Gonzalez. Gabriel Gonzalez has a low ceiling in my opinion. He's not going to be a plus defender in the corners, he doesn't take walks so his OBP is capped, and he isn't going to be a plus power hitter. I love what he did last year to re-establish his status as a prospect worth note after a poor end to 2023 and an unimpressive 2024 season, but wRC+ 120 at AAA is league average at the MLB level (which is right where projection models place him wRC+ 89 to 100). I kind of view Gonzalez as mid-career Eddie Rosario right now. Gonzalez needs to improve his plate discipline dramatically or his speed/defense to raise his ceiling to be considered a top prospect IMHO.
- 36 replies
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- eduardo tait
- kalen culpepper
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Dick Bremer Elected to Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame
bean5302 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Dick Bremer will remain the voice of the Twins as far as I'm concerned. It's a shame the Twins didn't have more big games and national playoff attention where Bremer could have gotten more recognition. -
Dick Bremer Elected to Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame
bean5302 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I mean, that was my conclusion when he was unceremoniously dumped by the Twins out of the blue as a sacrifice to the altar of saving St. Peter's job for another season. -
I feel like I remember Pressly implying or literally stating Wallner was an easy out during the 2023 playoff series. Honestly, I feel like Pressly might be able to help the Twins hitters more than the pitchers.
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So there are 7 every day lineup players of 9, right there. Stanton could be forecasted as AAAA due to recent performances and injury history. Nobody else, IMHO. So that's 17 non Quad-A players, and I didn't even review their bench guys. The projection of all the Twins players/prospects reaching their potential is unreasonable to most people from what I've seen.
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Kaat pitched a very long time, but I think he was only the best pitcher in the rotation for one year with the Twins, in 1966. He was usually well behind 1 or 2 other pitchers in terms of bWAR, ERA, etc. I don't mind Kaat being in the Twins HoF, but Radke (45.6) pitching only until age 33 still has more career bWAR than Kaat's (45.2) 25yrs to age 44 in the league. Blyleven is on another level. Best pitcher in Twins history, hands down.
- 24 replies
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- johan santana
- bert blyleven
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