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bean5302

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Everything posted by bean5302

  1. https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/savant-player/zebby-matthews-805673?stats=statcast-r-pitching-mlb The top right movement profile chart shows that not to be the case. The slider and cutter break similar.
  2. Brooks Lee looks like a utility infielder to me, if his bat improves that is. He doesn't currently have the speed necessary to be hold his own in the outfield. Unfortunately, his biggest weakness at the MLB level this year was catching up to fastballs, and that's the pitch MLB caliber hitters really need to be able to hit. I don't think there's honestly a huge difference between the fastballs at AAA and the fastballs at the MLB level. It's the breaking pitches which seem to be the death knell for prospects so there's still some hope Lee can adjust, but Lee's performance in 2023 at the AAA level is not encouraging, either. The short time at AAA in 2024 showed huge ISO numbers for Lee in a SSS so it's tough to say how reliable the data is on him at all. Consider Buxton was pretty awful against fastballs this past year for the first 200 plate appearances (-4.2) before utterly obliterating them the rest of the year finishing at +11, and Lee's total ineptness (-5.7) for 185 PA doesn't look insurmountable. All I know is he was utterly overpowered at the plate against MLB pitching. He chased too much, he couldn't catch up to fastballs and he failed to drive balls at a passable level. He's certainly not going to win any gold gloves with his physical ability limitations so he's going to need to put some stuff together. "He's just a rookie" yep. He is, and there's plenty of reasons to be excited about his potential given how smooth he can look out there, and the fact he's already playing at the MLB level. Jackson Holliday is from the same draft class and produced very similar overall results at the plate with a wRC+ 63 campaign in a very similar sample size of around 200 PA. Only 4 position players from the 21 selections in the first round of 2022's draft class have made MLB, and most of the others haven't been lighting the world on fire in the minors, either. It's honestly just looking like a really weak class to me. 1. a20 SS Jackson Holliday wRC+ 63 - MLB 2. a20 OF Druw Jones wRC+ 125 - A Ball 4. a20 SS Termarr Johnson wRC+ 98 - AA 5. a20 OF Elijah Green wRC+ 94 - A Ball 6. a23 3B Jacob Berry wRC+ 75 - AAA 8. a23 SS Brooks Lee wRC+ 62 - MLB 9. a23 OF Gavin Cross wRC+ 115 - AA 11. a23 C Kevin Parada wRC+ 93 - AA 12. a23 3B Jace Jung wRC+ 102 - MLB 13. a23 SS Zach Neto wRC+ 114 - MLB 14. a20 SS Jett Williams wRC+ 192 - AAA in 30 PA (wRC+ 62 in 101 PA at AA) 16. a22 OF Chase DeLauter wRC+ 185 - AAA in 27 PA (wRC+ 118 in 128 PA at AA) 17. a20 OF Justin Crawford wRC+ 140 - AA 18. a19 3B Cam Collier wRC+ 129 - A+ 19. a23 C Daniel Susac wRC+ 103 - AA 21. a20 SS Cole Young wRC+ 119 - AA 24. a20 SS Mickey Romero wRC+ 118 - AA 25. a23 OF Spencer Jones wRC+ 124 - AA 27. a23 SS Eric Brown Jr. wRC+ 62 - AA 28. a23 OF Drew Gilbert wRC+ 85 - AAA 29. a20 1B Xavier Isaac wRC+ 113 - AA MLB = 19% AAA = 19% AA = 48% A+ = 5% A = 9% Just have to wait and see if Lee can adapt to MLB fastballs, and I suspect we'll know that by mid next year. Lee will almost certainly be on the opening day roster given the Twins' payroll crunch.
  3. Miranda is fine. He's a wRC+ 115ish hitter who is either going to be a DH or 1B. That's good enough for a 2+ WAR regular player at league minimum. He's a little like Luis Arraez with a lesser hit tool and a little more power. Miranda is also not a good splits/platoon guy. He hits righties and lefties well so he's got that advantage on the roster size as well.
  4. The best reason is to get a better chance at a higher draft pick... Baldelli has lost the team, few people like his in game decisions or the theories he steadfastly ties himself down with.
  5. Well, first off, as far as public knowledge goes, Falvey and Levine's contracts were up this past season. The fact Falvey is returning means the Twins have extended him either at the end of this year (I have my doubts on that) or secretly after the playoff victory last year as a recent Twins Daily article suggested a few weeks ago. Levine has interviewed for a couple other GM jobs and he didn't make it past the first round for the Red Sox most recently. Combined with how hidden away he is with Minnesota and the lack of knowledge regarding his actual contributions, it's not a good career move to stick around the Twins any longer at this point. Perhaps Levine was sticking around to see if he could supplant Falvey? In any case, best of luck to him, whatever opportunities he pursues.
  6. It's hard to find much older stuff on the web now with search engines being designed more for making money than finding relevant information. I think it stems back to Levine's conversations about spending strategy. The "boot to the throat" quote which never came to fruition. Levine always felt like his personal preference was to be more aggressive to me, while Falvey is clearly a Cleveland product, and dirt cheap aligns better with ownership as well.
  7. If people can't take a joke, don't read humorous articles. Joe Mauer is certainly not going to be offended by a ridiculous tongue in cheek piece like this. This was written to be a funny piece and lighten the air, but the PC police on overdrive have really worked hard to ruin the mood.
  8. None of these guys project as somebody worthy of regular playing time in the models right now.
  9. No way, just look at all the greatness Driveline did for Christian Vazquez! He's just waiting for that Silver Slugger award.
  10. Streaming the games is the future. MLB should own it's content and the cable networks can pay for it if they want. That's the only model which protects MLB and its teams from the utter disaster of the past couple years, and the long time problems they've had. Now is the time to make changes and protect the sport's assets with the RSN's largely out of the situation. Even if there is a 10-20% reduction in revenues, it won't make a huge impact on teams payroll.
  11. The more I think about it, the more I agree, Thad Levine is probably going to get the ax. So far as I can tell, Levine's job is to get coffee for Falvey and wash Falvey's car. That's the kind of person the Twins are letting go to correct this abomination of a season. Get that laundry guy the hell out, too! Royce Lewis can't play with stains on his shirt, and everybody knows the infield grass stain was still there a little bit after the All Star Break!
  12. I don't disagree with you there, but mostly they just wind up there because a team got stuck with them or those starters signed MiLB contracts with invites. Alex Wood - I suppose a good comp for Paddack to support your position would be Alex Wood (pun recognized while typing, I now claim it was intended), who the Athletics signed to a 1 year $8.5MM deal. Cal Quantrill - The Rockies locked down Cal Quantrill for 1 year $6.5MM, but he was excellent in 2021-2022 before his terrible 2023. Spencer Turnbull is a pretty fair comp IMHO, signed with the Phillies for $2MM. A terrible team who has trouble recruiting / signing pitching might be interested in Paddack (Rockies/Athletics), I suppose, but that's not a lot of market. If Paddack is going to have much market other than the Abyssal Plains, the Twins are going to need to eat contract.
  13. I get the feeling you just really like Pablo Lopez or articles about him because the last few weeks is where Lopez salvaged a miserable season, not where he "tired down." Looking at Lopez's performance and the Twins' collapse this season. The collapse is tied to the last 6 weeks of the season where Lopez made 8 starts. Quality Start 6.0+ IP, 3ER or fewer. QS2 = 5.0+ IP, ERA under 4.00. Pre-collapse Lopez = 4.67 ERA, 3.83 FIP, 3.31 xFIP, 50% Quality Starts, 54% QS2 8/18-9/29 Lopez = 2.50 ERA, 3.15 FIP, 3.50 xFIP, 75% Quality Starts, 75% QS2% Lopez ranked #87 in ERA in 2024 for the 156 starters with 70+ innings pitched. Lopez ranked #47 in ERA in 2023 for the 150 starters with 70+ innings pitched. Lopez ranked #74 in ERA in 2022 for the 153 starters with 70+ innings pitched. The only season Lopez has looked like a potential ace in his entire career was his injury shortened 2021. Like Maeda's 2020. I consider FIP stats for Lopez to be guidelines to compare his seasons rather than valuable in comparing him to other pitchers as he almost always significantly underperforms the FIP metrics.
  14. Paddack would be taking a MiLB deal if he was a free agent. Why would any team give up anything of value for him without the Twins eating a ton of salary? I think people believe Paddack was good, but he never was. Doesn't strike many guys out, doesn't generally issue a lot of free passes, but gives up a ton of hits. He's like a less talented version of Kyle Gibson, but if Gibson was hurt 1/2 the year or more every year.
  15. I think FIP can be helpful, but its honestly a super primitive stat prone to error so using it as a single data source like gospel is a bad idea in my opinion. Most pitchers are going to perform at their FIP over the long haul, but there are pitchers like Pablo Lopez, for instance, who almost always perform worse than their FIP in real life.
  16. Stop it. We both know it was all David Popkins fault. The Twins are absolutely ready for a World Series run now!
  17. Margot wasn't a CF. You're also creating a false dilemma as it wasn't Taylor vs. Margot or else! We do not have a top 3 farm system. Brooks Lee and David Festa graduated. The Twins did have a top 3 farm system the year before Falvey as well. Falvey can't budget appropriately. He doesn't address needs before addressing wants. 4 playoff appearances in 8 years. 1 playoff series win. Falvey may have kept this franchise from becoming derelict, but he certainly hasn't elevated this franchise at all.
  18. I've decided to grade the players based on expectations and purely based on "hitting" Buxton. B - He played 25% more games than could have been reasonably expected and he did so with a .279/.335/.524 triple slash that fueled the wRC+ 142 result. Thankfully, he ended on one of his patented hot streaks to inflate his numbers, but that doesn't wipe out the 2 months of below league average production to start the season so he gets docked a point to "B" Castro. B - Castro did exactly the same thing he did last year, which is to be a bit above average hitter. Considering last year was a big step forward for Castro, just holding his own wasn't guaranteed. Solid B. Correa. C - While his production at the plate was the best of his career at .310/.388/.517, Correa missed a ton of games. Playing in only 86 games is a serious knock against the expected performance for him. He gets a C. Farmer. F - His late season batting production aside, Farmer was miserable at the plate for most of the year while also seemingly being responsible for a TOOTBLAN on a regular basis when he did get onto the field. A .214/.293/.353 wRC+ 85 campaign was not only poor by league standards, but even lower than modest expectations for him coming into the season. Jeffers. D - While a lot of Twins fans seem to think Jeffers is a great hitter, I do not and did not. Last year's production was not only lucky, but it even felt lucky to me. Jeffers continued to drive the ball hard and was on fire to open the season, but he was utterly worthless multiple months of the year. His overall production is where I expected him to be .226/.300/.432 wRC+ 107, but the Twins needed Jeffers to be more steady. Julien. F - I don't think I need to say much here. Though I do think Julien was treated poorly by the organization, he just wasn't even remotely good. He needs to make adjustments and get out of his own head or his career is over. Kepler. F - After last year's surge, expectations were raised for Kepler coming into a free agency year and the recent changes to the shift. Instead, he laid an egg. While his .253/.302/.380 wRC+ 94 performance wasn't unplayable, he was for nearly 60 games of the year due to his constant injuries. Between constantly missing time and another season with his power vanishing into the clouds and long slumps, Kepler gets an F. Kirilloff. F - This might be touch unfair since I didn't think Kirilloff was an MLB quality player to begin with, but I didn't think he'd be that bad. His .201/.270/.384 wRC+ 83 performance looked a lot like his 2022, but without the BABIP gods' help. Turning in the worst hitting performance of his career, Kirilloff sunk to new lows trying to dodge a demotion with a back injury nobody could identify or treat. Larnach. A - Anything less than an "A" for Larnach is a total disservice IMHO. Relegated to pre-arbitration with options injury replacement depth, it seemed like the writing was on the wall. Virtually unplayable strikeout rates for the mediocre power he produced, Larnach was a league average bat who needed shielding from lefties. Good enough to play for a decent team in a pinch, but certainly not starter grade. Larnach completely reinvented his game in 2024 appearing in 112 games and 400 plate appearances, he produced at a .259/.338/.434 wRC+ 121 pace. Far, FAR above expectations. Baldelli's broken spreadsheet macros still made sure Larnach didn't see PAs against lefties so no clue if he'd be better with a few more of those, but Larnach continued to hit steadily all year. Lee. F - So my expectations for Lee have been utility infielder for a while, but it seems the Twins and a lot of other fans had "All Star" written on his forehead after Spring Training... Anyway, "he was a rookie!!" isn't really a great excuse for that kind of production, especially given how consistently overpowered he was at the plate. .221/.265/.320 wRC+ 62. He was expected to make the MLB club this year, and people expected him to be good. On top of that, Lee missed huge swaths of the season with injuries. Lewis. F - My favorite Twins player and the player with the highest ceiling on the club since Joe Mauer IMHO. I expected Lewis would put up a healthy 6+ WAR season this year. I really did. An opening day quad injury sucked the wind right out of the sails. The dream of a healthy season seems... a lot further away now, but once he was back, he destroyed baseballs again, and it was a sight to see. Until it wasn't. Lewis had been struggling for a while when Baldelli shoved a 2B assignment down his throat when Lewis was already seemingly on edge. Lewis sputtered to a miserable finish with his home run power turning into warning track power, and the first real glimpses of Lewis' indominable optimism turning into infighting with Carlos Correa at the end. He still finished the year with an above average overall .233/.295/.452 wRC+ 109 season, but having missed half the year and slumped hard for the last 2 months, it was a colossal disappointment. Martin. C - Didn't expect much, didn't get much. His performance at the plate was almost exactly in line with several projection tools. .253/.318/.352 wRC+ 94. Margot. F - Come on. Do I really need to explain? .238/.289/.337 wRC+ 79. Much worse than that for a good portion of the year, Margot's going to enjoy a MiLB contract next year. Set an all time MLB record for futility at the plate as a pinch hitter going 0-30. Luckily for him, there's no grade worse than "F" and we are grading "hitters" not defense here. Miranda. A - Late season slump aside, like Larnach, Miranda didn't make the roster out of Spring Training, and apparently expectations were very low after a shoulder injury sapped Miranda's production last year. He responded by being one of the most fun Twins hitters to watch most of the year, finishing with a .284/.322/.441 wRC+ 115 performance. Like Larnach, far exceeding expectations at the plate coming into the season, and at one point, far higher than that. Santana. B - Let's be honest. Most people expected Santana to produce around league average, with a bit of optimism. Instead, he responded with a season looking a lot more like his late prime than his late twilight. After starting the season terribly, his bat finished with a .238/.328/.420 wRC+ 114 season well above expectations. Vazquez. F - .221/.248/.327 wRC+ 60. One of the worst hitters MLB has ever seen accumulating 300 plate appearances, Vazquez managed a pitiful 3.5% BB rate while also demonstrating a poor hit tool, bad base running and weak power. Any hopes of a rebound from last year are dashed. Wallner. A - As I said before the season started, Wallner is a beast. .259/.372/.523 wRC+ 155 and he continued to hit even as the rest of the team slumped. Right on pace for a 4 WAR campaign as a corner outfielder. Hopefully, he'll get the opportunity to see more plate appearances next year and Wallner can adapt his swing further to reduce some strikeouts to solidify his bat as one of the best in MLB.
  19. MLBTradeRumors.com released their arbitration estimates for the 30 teams. The Twins have the 2nd highest number of Arb eligible players in MLB behind the Cubs' 14. Most teams have 10 or fewer. MLBTR also expects Royce Lewis to hit Super 2 status. I am surprised only with the seemingly very low figure for Griffin Jax. Fangraphs' model has Jax at more like $4.5MM if I remember right, but who knows? https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/10/projected-arbitration-salaries-for-2025.html Twins (13) Willi Castro (5.017): $6.2MM Jorge Alcala (4.165): $1.7MM (Twins hold $1.5MM club option/$55K buyout) Ryan Jeffers (4.089): $4.7MM Michael Tonkin (4.074): $1.5MM Justin Topa (4.044): $1.3MM Alex Kirilloff (3.141): $1.8MM Bailey Ober (3.093): $4.3MM Brock Stewart (3.093): $800K Griffin Jax (3.091): $2.6MM Joe Ryan (3.033): $3.8MM Trevor Larnach (3.009): $2.1MM Jhoan Duran (3.000): $3.7MM Royce Lewis (2.142): $2.3MM
  20. LOL, it's all the hitting coach's fault. The job will go to whatever coach wants to move their career on and up into MLB and is willing to work as scapegoat for owners, mangers and executives making bad decisions.
  21. It's the most tone deaf part of the 'we're running a business here' type quotes from the Pohlads. I wonder how any of their businesses are successful at this point.
  22. Nice deflection, there. Obviously wasn't the point of my post. Sorry the facts didn't help your case.
  23. Paddack does not have trade value. The Twins might be able to move him as part of a trade if they kick in 1/2 his salary like the Mariners did with Desclafani. Adding up Paddack's typical SSS's over his 3 years with the Twins, you've got a pitcher with a 4.82 ERA with only 1 good season as a starter in his career (rookie 2019). No MLB team looking to compete for a playoff position would trust Paddack with a rotation spot, and no team would pay $7.5MM for MiLB emergency depth when you can get those guys on MiLB contracts. Paddack would be awfully lucky to secure more than a MiLB contract with an opt out right now. Vazquez is bad, but the Twins could move him if they ate half his salary. The problem is the team has nobody to replace him in the system, and a free agent catcher who is going to be better than Vazquez for significantly less than $5MM in savings we'd have is going to be picked from a pretty small potential pool. Correa has the NTC, and sure, maybe he'd waive it. Great. What team would want him? How many teams would be willing to take on 4yrs $135MM guaranteed remaining, plus the 4 potential vesting options after that? How many teams could afford that and need a SS? Here are the teams who got less than 2.5 WAR from their shortstops this year. Pirates, Diamondbacks, Nationals, Rays, White Sox, Braves, Athletics, Marlins, Guardians, Tigers. Easy to eliminate the Pirates, Rays, Athletics, Guardians as the low budget teams. Easy to eliminate the White Sox and Marlins since they're terrible and probably not going to compete soon. 4 left. 1. Diamondbacks are trying to tie up guys like Gallen and looking for pitching. Perdomo (2.0 WAR) was adequate and just 24 years old. No need for Correa, probably not a lot of payroll flexibility for him, either. 2. Nationals - This could be a fit if the Nationals are ready to go all-in, but that feels like a stretch. 3. Braves - They don't have the payroll capacity. They've already been struggling with their commitments. 4. Tigers - Not with Baez still on the books, and they're not bailing the Twins out in the division. Basically, there is 1 potential trade partner, IMHO. That's the Washington Nationals, and that's only if the Nationals are going all-in, and if they are willing to blow the doors off the budget with Correa vs. a much less payroll risky signing like Willy Adams or Ha-Seong Kim. Considering Correa's massive negative trade value, I don't see this happening. Buxton - NTC is not getting waived, the Twins have nobody behind him who can cover CF, and I'm not sure how many teams would be interested in 80 games from Buxton. Lopez wouldn't do much more than just clear payroll since he's a 3-4 win pitcher with a salary in line with his production and a 3 year contract. I think the Twins could move him, but they won't get much back, and then they'll be short their "ace."
  24. Career 3.65 FIP. Career 3.91 ERA. It's a career thing. Like Ricky Nolasco. Also, 4.08 vs. 3.65 is a gap far too wide for the defense, so even if you built in Twins defensive woes, it wouldn't add up. Which defensive metric would you like? OAA? Twins = 0. Dead average. UZR? Most people around here hate that one, but it shows the Twins as the worst defense in MLB with -30 runs. DRS at -19 runs. The Twins pitched 1440.1 innings last year. Using OAA, FIP and ERA should be equal. Using UZR, ERA should be 0.18 higher than FIP. Using DRS, ERA should be 0.11 higher than FIP. Lopez is 0.43 higher. Doesn't add up. After that, how about explaining how Lopez's FIP gap is larger than all the rest of the starters with 100+ innings like Ober (-0.18), Ryan (-0.18), and Woods Richardson (-0.05)? How is it guys like Ryan, and Ober have career FIPs so much closer to their ERAs as well? Not sorry to trample on the Pablo Lopez, Ace who can single handedly win playoff series', Perennial Cy Young Favorite, Best pitcher in the history of baseball, guaranteed! movement around here.
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