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Mahoning

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Everything posted by Mahoning

  1. The problem with trading Vazquez is that they have NO catchers to replace him, and Jeffers has not shown that he can play every day -- certainly not play ever day and hit at all. the problem with Miranda at first base is that he, too, has never shown that he can hit all year long, and you need offense from that position. Casas has a short history, but where there is of it awfully good. The problem with trading Lee is that he is apparently the Twins hope for third base, now that they have decided that Royce Lewis can't play shortstop or third either (what happened?) And the problem with trading Correa is that they have no one to replace him at shortstop, where he is magnificent.
  2. The Twins remind me of the old days before free agency when the team you had was the team you developed, through your farm system and trades. No help is coming via the front office. This is your team, simple as that. So, yes, everything depends on Larnach and Lewis and Lee and Miranda. When I was a kid in northeastern Ohio I can remember broadcasters saying things like, "If only Max Alvis has the kind of season he's capable of . . . ." Well, alas, he did, and the Tribe finished below .500 again. Let's hope Trevor Larnach is not Max Alvis.
  3. One of the things an analytics does, sometimes, is deprive athletes of the chance to compete. This is especially true of pitchers. Not so long ago they took pride in finishing what they started -- or, put another way, competing and taking responsibility. Now they are trained to go six innings and pass the baton. Under the current regime there can never again be a Bob Gibson (or a Bert Blyleven for that matter.) How can that be good for baseball?
  4. Pure fantasy, but that's what baseball winters are for. The trade proposed is basically Suzuki for a backup catcher and a top reliever, as Paddack's utility is a complete unknown. The Twins certainly need power, but they have no minor league catchers and the bullpen is hardly one of the best in baseball, so vast holes would be opened. On the other hand, maybe Suzuki could help them land Sasaki!
  5. It's an entertaining speculation, but probably not more than that. It's hard to imagine either Verlander or Scherzer wanting to come to Minnesota to finish their careers, nor is there any reason to spend money on OLD players. But, take a stab at Sasaki? It would be worth a try.
  6. Management seems to be under the impression that keeping payroll relatively low will make the team easier to sell. But finishing fourth again (which, barring surprises, seems likely) makes low attendance and revenue probable, driving the price down. Wouldn't you rather sell a winning outfit? This team, even with a bunch of bargain-basement signings, is a team without real stars. No fan says, "I can't wait to see Ramon Laureano play!"
  7. It's an attractive pipe dream, though Miranda at first would have a chance to be a giant step down from Santana. And now that the Twins have announced a new GM, everything is up in the air. Jeremy Zoll was reportedly the lead negotiator in the Polanco trade, a complete dud, and the Sonny Gray trade, which cost some really good players. So I guess he is not afraid to deal. They might as well deal if they can. Maybe they could find someone -- Robles? JD Martinez? -- who plays 150 games and hits the whole season through.
  8. They'd be better off keeping Santana, but, yes, they should give Kiriloff one more chance. With either him or Miranda at first, though, it's a big step down.
  9. As was expressed here, the ownership has benefited enormously from public investment, then repays it with locutions like "business decisions" which "I won't go into." Put another way: "I will take what you give me, but I will not come clean." This invites nothing but cynicism from the public. What would it cost the Pohlads to tell the truth about the team's finances? The answer would be "nothing," -- unless there is something to hide. When you rely on public support for your venture, secrecy spits in the public face.
  10. A late-season collapse can cost a manager his job. It's too early to say "collapse" for sure, but they've made a good start on one.
  11. Imagine having a rotation with two starters who might regularly go eight or even nine! But Rocco won't let that happen. The only way pitchers get stronger is to go longer. If you keep them short, they stay short. Ober wants to explore his potential. the Twins won't let him do that.
  12. I'd like to hear an umpire interviewed about so-called pitch framing, which I think is total nonsense. I've umpired many games, and the idea that a catcher influences me is absurd. By the time the ball reaches his mitt I have already decided, and I venture to say this is true for all umpires.
  13. Others have alluded to this, so at the risk of repetition . . . MLB is in the entertainment business. Arraez entertains. Even if he doesn't score (over which he has little control), he creates action, movement, and the possibility of scoring. Gallo, except for his solo homer every ten days or so, produces only frustration for the fan. If the two are somehow statistically equal (which I doubt), EVERYONE will prefer Arraez's entertainment value. And if they are equal, why are the Twins so bad and the Marlins so (comparatively) good?
  14. Since Rocco made his "this is madness" comment nothing has changed except Correa now bats leadoff. Buxton is back to striking out all the time, Gallo is still ventilating the ballpark with his whiffs. The FO made a plausible bet that Correa, Buxton, Polanco, and Miranda would provide sufficient offense, and it has all gone terribly wrong. The madness continues. Please have mercy on Sonny by trading him to a contender; he deserves it.
  15. Before today his BA with RISP was .184. Seven hits and 19 strikeouts. Whiff. He's not going to get better.
  16. He just popped out with the bases loaded against the Tigers, but at least he hit the ball, which is rare. He and Buxton in the middle of the lineup are death to the offense -- whiff, whiff, whiff. He's 30 and any contact between his bat and a pitched ball is purely coincidental. Yet there he is in the lineup almost every day. The Twins will finish third.
  17. Can we talk about the giant hole in the middle of the lineup, someone whose initials are BB? He hasn't driven in a run in three weeks. Neither has Joey Gallo. Whff, whiff, whiff. Neither is on a pace to drive in 70! Right now you'd rather have Willi Castro at the plate than either of them. Everthing comes to a thudding standstill when they come to bat. You can't win much that way. Give me Wallner.
  18. Apparently Madison Bumgarner is on the trading block. The Twins have some prospects. Kiriloff? And Bundy's future is not bright.
  19. Well, to rely on Ober, Ryan, and Bundy is madness. All if them could easily go down with injury or blow up, making the 2021 Twins look pitching-rich by comparison. Stockpiling arms makes plenty of sense.
  20. I see people lobbying for Larnach and Rooker. Good grief, two more .200 hitters with some power. If what you like is an offense based on solo homers, there you go. Kepler, another .200 hitter, seems totally expendable. You can get that for the major league minimum, not $9 million. If he were gone he would not be missed. I think Nick Gordon needs to be given a chance to play every day: Speed!
  21. Rocco may be in over his head, I have no idea, but can anyone say what is the RIGHT way to manage a team whose pitching staff has collapsed? That said, I hope that the organization will train youngsters like Winder to go long and not be persuaded that six competent innings is a major accomplishment.
  22. Everyone -- especially Bremer and Morneau -- seems to believe that 2019 was the REAL Kepler, whereas the evidence is mounting that it was an extreme anomaly.
  23. Add me to the list of those who appreciate Jim Kaat. What a breath of fresh air! Unlike the babbling Morneau and Smalley, who mumble at least twice and mostly just repeat the standard "wisdom," Kaat speaks clearly, adds some information, and says it just once. Last night he marveled at Rortvedt missing ball after ball because, at least in part, he sits on the ground so he can't shift to block balls. Kaat wondered why.
  24. It's obvious: Time to bring back Astudillo, this time as a pitcher. He can't be any worse than Ober and Shoemaker, and unlike three-ball-count-on-every-hitter Ober, Astudillo would move the game along!
  25. Small sample sizes for Larnach (who also blundered on the bases) and Kiriloff. Eddie is on pace to drive in 100 (again!) To me that counts more that OPS, etc. In ballgames runs count, OPS doesn't. The Twins, ostensibly, were built to win THIS YEAR. Replacing a known run-producer with two unproven (and still unproven) rookies seems inconsistent with that (now failed) approach. It's unlikely that between the two of them Kiriloff and Larnach will match Eddie this year.
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