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bean5302

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Everything posted by bean5302

  1. As far as moving Lewis around the field now that he's looking adequate defensively? Sure. That makes sense (lots of sarcasm). This article is more like an angry writer seeking revenge for having been wronged by Lewis not being a superstar. Lets haze him!!!! Garbage writing.
  2. Where does the need to create and propagate this utterly false narrative come from? Lewis came up as a SS. He was told he was going to play multiple positions when the Twins signed Correa in 2022. Lewis went out and played CF as requested. In 2023, Lewis was told he was going to be the Twins starting SS. Correa got re-signed and Lewis was told he was going to move to 3B. No tantrums. No complaints. He played 3B. In 2024, Lewis was asked about 2B and he said learning the position on the fly while injured, in a slump, in a playoff chase scared him a little. He didn't refuse to play 2B. In fact, he did play 2B. For whatever reason, a substantial contingent of fans on this site just have to create false context around any trepidation a player has about any change. It honestly disgusts me. Same BS that Max Kepler refused to play CF. Never in his career did Kepler say he wouldn't play CF. He preferred right field. That's not "I refuse to play CF." But not to fans here. Amazing the fans didn't lose their mind when Griffin Jax wanted to try starting again. OMG, he refuses to pitch out the bullpen!!!!!!!!!!!!! It's just such BS. Rafael Devers refused to play 1B for the Red Sox. That's what a refusal looks like.
  3. It's the opposite of "missing 90 days." To count for a full season, they just have to be on an active roster for 90+ days. Basically, if the player is active 90 days in a season, they get a full season. I think the 7 day IL still counts against the "active roster" Emma was added to the 60 day IL on 7/23. If that was retroactive to 6/9, the Twins probably get a 4th option year. If the move wasn't retroactive, I don't think they do. I couldn't find any notes about the IL trip being retroactive.
  4. Judge has 3 right field home runs this year, 6 if you count the center field homers which are to the right field side of dead center. He has 17 on the season. @jkcarew please provide me with the source for easy lookup. In the top 30 HR hitters, Woods looks to be the only guy with more opposite field home runs than pulled home runs. Of course, I didn't get out the protractor for Bryce Haper and Sal Stewart who are spray hitters/center field homer guys. Look at the hits spray charts. Don't even look at the name or the bats R/L. 90% of the time, you can tell whether a hitter bats right or left just by the heat map. 5% of the time, they're a switch hitter. If it makes you feel better to argue semantics, I suppose?
  5. Lewis needs to do more than punish AAA pitchers. He needs to punish them in a way which demonstrates he can do more than hit mistakes. His approach needs to be better, and he needs to stabilize that approach. I wouldn't call him back up until mid June. He needs to form the habit of making better decisions at the plate, and he needs to better understand the gravity of making bad decisions (not playing in the big show.) Lewis is my favorite player. I want him to get his swagger back, his confidence, and to stop being so panicked at the plate. If that happens, I think he'll be at least All Star worthy, and could be a big face of the franchise. The guy has crazy charisma, and this team desperately, desperately needs a fan favorite like him.
  6. I looked at that last year, and it seems like he's been active enough. I think this is his last option year.
  7. Nobody hits oppo tacos at the MLB level anymore, dude. Nobody. It virtually never happens because of pitch velocity and swing design needed to counteract the increased velocity. In any case, I agree with you that Lewis' plate approach is the key. Stop swinging at junk is his #1 directive. Show he can catch up to mid 90s fastballs on the outside edges of the plate is #2. Make contact on stuff outside the zone is #3.
  8. Seems like Brian Dozier hit about 100 career home runs at 350 feet. Target Field left-corner is 339, left-center is 377.
  9. This is his final option year and the Twins haven't believed in him enough to give him a single plate appearance at the MLB level. That speaks volumes. Like an entire old school set of Encyclopedia Britannica worth of volumes. The walk rate is great, but I haven't noticed him having some exceptional eye at the plate as he swing at a lot of stuff out of the zone. It seems the MiLB scouting report is throw him junk and you'll probably get him out, but if you mess up and throw him a meatball, he'll hurt you. Emma has absolutely lousy contact rates which is another thing. If he's so great at pitch identification, he shouldn't be a windmill out there. O-Contact is an abysmal 33% this year in AAA. Z-Contact isn't good at 77%. Eddie Julien looks like Tony Gwynn compared to Emma. I think Rodriguez has done everything he could to get himself a long look at the MLB level, but there are 2 problems. One, he very clearly doesn't know how to slide into a base. It's mind boggling how a guy can wreck his thumb once a month because, I guess, he must use this thumb as a braking device for his whole body. Two, the Twins' front office has so many questionable talents on the team, but are apparently trying to win the team, cannot afford to put a potential AAAA talent into the lineup every day even if struggling for a couple hundred plate appearances. In short, he's got the power, he's got the athleticism and speed to play a premium defensive position, but he's incredibly injury prone, and I don't think he'll make enough contact at the MLB level to produce.
  10. No it's not elite, even if Twins Daily writers want to declare him to be the next coming of Ozzie Smith. There's nothing I can find in Kreidlers recent history to suggest he's anything more than adequate.
  11. I think his work to change his approach this offseason has messed up his timing. He hit a couple bombs, but his approach in the first 3 plate appearances was trash. 2 of first 3 PA came against Cole Ragans who just overwhelmed Royce. Lewis has struggled to catch up to fastballs. That's not the end of the world. Buxton looked washed for the first couple months of last year against fastballs, too. It happens, but Lewis has just been desperately hacking away at everything. He's got to learn to take what he's given.
  12. I can't agree with your take at all. Skubal's ruling showed the following. 1. Player performance in Arb2 season directly correlates with Arb3 salary. 2. What the player is currently making is irrelevant. The CBA had the provision that free agency value is supposed to be considered in the final year of arbitration. Arbiters proved they cared about free agency value, and not the salary the player was earning. The Tigers submitted a $19MM figure for Skubal, which was a $9MM jump and nearly double what he was previously making. Huge increases already. It's about the precedent in the contract negotiation. There's no way arbiters can make a ruling like they did with Skubal and say it only applies to the best pitcher in the game. Only 1 player in the game gets to follow this new precedent. This precedent will even be used for Trevor Larnach. It changes everything.
  13. First, Culpepper taking Cole Ragans deep on a "good" first pitch is way more impressive than Royce sending two bombs against a MiLB roster filler type guy. Second, Royce's results were impressive, but the approach shows the problem he's been having. He's missing on fastballs. PA1 - three straight fastballs 1. Okay to take. 2. Missed on a meatball. 3. Popped up a pretty hittable pitch. PA2 - Bad bad. Swinging at everything. 7 pitches, only 1 was a strike, swing at 5 of them. Struck out on a slider in the dirt. PA3 - Home run, but behind on fastballs again, which is a big problem he's had this year. PA4 - Okay! Here's what he needs to do. Not swinging at trash, punishing a hanging curve. PA5 - YES. Please more of this. Not swinging at trash, take what pitchers give you. So honestly, only the last 2 PA for Lewis were good, and Williams is MiLB roster filler while Cerantola is a cut above that, probably has the ability to be a plus reliever in the big show.
  14. Way too much emphasis being placed on Buxton's remaining 2 months of full no trade clause. I believe he will 100% waive it to go to a team he likes if he thinks the Twins are going to rebuild. Starting 11/1/2026, Buxton no longer has a full NTC. He has to submit a list of 5 teams to which he could be traded with no approval necessary. Also, while fans on this site love Buxton, he's a very polarizing players across the whole of Twins territory. His long injury history combined with the big contract mean he's also disliked by a lot of people. It's worth noting history suggests fans will just find a new favorite player after their favorite guy is traded, retires or leaves for free agency. While it's not the popular opinion, it's one supported by attendance over and over again. Fans attend games and spend money for the team and the overall opinion of the franchise direction, not the name on the jersey. Attendance went UP after Kirby Puckett retired. Attendance went UP after Joe Mauer retired. Attendance went UP after BOTH Torii Hunter left and Johan Santana was traded. The Twins' problems aren't impacted by moving Buxton or Ryan or anybody else they could move on this team. It's a bottom of the barrel fan experience right now. The Pohlads have misread the situation. Fans hate them and aren't even willing to give them a chance at this point, and I don't think even if they boosted spending to $150MM+ that fans would buy in for them. I don't see how the Pohlads can win fans back. A new owner instantly changes a lot, but they'll have to spend to get fans on board expecting a new experience.
  15. I'm not sure what talent people are talking about. Trade value for virtually all our guys is suspect. BBTV has paywalled their site down so hard I no longer use it at all, but I'd say Buxton is probably about a +30 value at this point. Joe Ryan's value is highly questionable at this point due to Skubal's Arb3 ruling. Ryan is probably in line for a $20MM pay day through arbitration if he remains healthy. As a 3 WAR kind of pitcher, maybe 4 WAR for a desperate partner, his surplus value would be hamstrung quite a bit. Maybe +25 at this point? Not trading him last year was the biggest mistake this front office has ever made, IMHO. Ober's tough to gauge. I don't think his results will continue as the league adjusts to his new methodology. Ryan Jeffers may be worth more because of his injury TBH. Keeping up that outstanding wRC+ 166 production line would be unbelievable given his one outlier season capped at wRC+ 136 and his career wRC+ 112. Jeffers is looking like a totally transformed hitter at this point in his age 29 season, and teams may be willing to bite on that. The hamate bone surgery has about a 100% success rate so I think teams will be all aboard. Still, he's a rental, and if traded this year, he's ineligible for a QO. His value is going to be fairly limited. Josh Bell is a DFA / release candidate. Not a trade candidate. He's at -0.4 fWAR right now.
  16. Man, I wish some of you guys could be GM for a day (not of the Twins) so I could watch you absolutely ruin a franchise in under 2 weeks, LOL
  17. Ryan no longer has organizational change value. The trade needed to happen before Skubal's arbitration result if Joe Ryan was going to bring back a load. That arbitration result probably reduced Ryan's value by about $12MM in surplus right there. On top of that, Ryan's peripherals and expected numbers are down this year and you add in an elbow injury scare? Now, should Joe Ryan be traded before the deadline? Probably not given the AL Central's weakness right now. The Twins are only 2.5 GB from the lead.
  18. Sure would send a signal to all the players with options. You'd better hit a home run every single time you come to the plate or your job will be replaced by some AAAA journeyman hitting below the Mendoza line in St. Paul. It's a great message. The team has no faith in you and is not invested in you in any way.
  19. First 12 games for Royce Lewis before IL 45PA .222/.378/.444 OPS .822 wRC+ 133 17.8% BB, 26.7% K, .273 BABIP Next 11 games after his return 44PA .122/.159/.195 OPS .354 wRC+ (7) 2.3% BB, 34.1% K, .154 BABIP Royce Lewis was hitting at an All Star level two weeks ago. Folks around here have their pitchforks flailing at everybody. Lewis is clearly hyper aggressive right now, and he has been since he came back up. He needs to settle down a bit. Also, it's hack writing to be making definitive statements about defensive prowess based on 20 games for DRS/OAA. As I pointed out on another thread yesterday, the best defensive 2B in all of baseball by a substantial margin right now is Luis Arraez.
  20. and Luis Arraez is by far the best fielding 2B in all of baseball between OAA and DRS. Maybe a bit early in the season for these defensive metrics meaning anything...
  21. I'm awfully skeptical of their assertions. It seems to me that Minnesota MiLB starting pitchers are often far behind other teams' innings. 100 innings isn't particularly noteworthy in my opinion. If the Twins are having a hard time getting their starters to 100 innings, they're not developing them right. For Tampa Bay last year, who is far and away more successful than Minnesota at developing pitchers, had 5 starters with more than 110 innings last year in AA and AAA alone. It's just not a big deal. Their biggest inning eaters were in the 160+ innings area. Our MiLB pitchers often need 15-20 pitches to get through an inning which means we're probably going to see them limited to 3-4 innings. Not sure how 40 starts at 3.2 innings and piggy-backing vs 30 starts at 4.2 innings gets prospects more innings or prepares them to be successful at the MLB level. The concept of piggybacking has been discussed ad nauseam around here. It doesn't add up. You wind up pitching your ace less in favor of your #6 guy more. There are only 26 rosters spots. This doesn't work in reality because you don't know when guys are going to pitch a good game or a bad one. This results in a bullpen which is too shallow, inconsistent workloads, routines and IMHO, elevated risk of injury.
  22. I read things which aren't there sometimes too, lol. I should slow down and trust that extra 3 seconds won't make a difference to my life as I saunter over to the sofa later in the day anyway LOL
  23. Nobody is taught to strike out. They're taught to swing hard at pitches they think they can hit hard, and not to swing at pitches they don't think they can hit hard. Joe Mauer and Byron Buxton are on record about how the velo for pitchers changed the game for hitters. In 2007, the median fastball was 90.7mph. The bottom quartile started at 87mph. Greg Maddux was highly effective throwing 80.9mph that year and the bottom of the charts saw fastballs in the 78mph range. 1995 probably had an average fastball of 85mph. Brain time to see the ball, 100ms Brain time to start a swing 25ms Muscle time to get the swing into the strike zone 150ms The time for a ball to reach home plate from release is about 385ms these days. The time to reach home plate in 1995 was probably 425ms. Decision time in 1995, on average for a fastball, was probably 145ms. Today, it's 105ms. Batters have about 40% less time to recognize a pitch today than they did back when slap singles and the average hitter could bat .290 with a 1/3rd of the league being .300 hitters. Now, a batter can go with the Luis Arraez method. Slow swings, slapping at the ball. The Tsuyoshi Nishioka approach. It doesn't work a lot.
  24. Not sure why Wallner is the same as every hitter who has a high K rate. There's little in common between him and Amick. Amick hits right handed, hasn't generated power at lower levels and isn't taking walks at AA. Outside a short little spurt in AA, Amick hasn't consistently generated power. Wallner hits left handed, always generated a ton of power, and he took a ton of walks to push his on base percentage up at AA. If you want to make a better comp from a results and batted ball standpoint, Amick is a lot more like a right handed hitting Trevor Larnach. Amick needs to make a huge improvement at the plate to be a viable option at MLB
  25. He's made of glass. This isn't a comment about being injured one time when he ran into a wall. It's from the constant trips to the IL. There's always a reason he's on the IL.
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