Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

ashbury

Verified Member
  • Posts

    40,842
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    463

 Content Type 

Profiles

News

Minnesota Twins Videos

2026 Minnesota Twins Top Prospects Ranking

2022 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

Minnesota Twins Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

Guides & Resources

2023 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

The Minnesota Twins Players Project

2024 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

2025 Minnesota Twins Draft Pick Tracker

Forums

Blogs

Events

Store

Downloads

Gallery

Everything posted by ashbury

  1. Of course with hindsight you take the Hall of Famer, and put up with any of the "negatives" I listed. I'm saying that without hindsight, I gamble on picking the Hall of Famer who plays CF or SS or SP, if I possibly can, because they come with fewer headaches. #assetmanagement.
  2. Joe Mauer, though I loved him dearly, cured me of ever wanting to draft a catcher in the high first round. A good catcher generally contributes in only 2/3 of a team's games. And if he's better than that, so that his bat demands a DH slot on his resting days, then you deprive yourself of the ability to go get a Nelson Cruz type, meaning your DH isn't that great on the day your catcher is actually catching, also possibly being tempted to carry a third catcher to cover when he's DHing, and otherwise generally putting yourself in a continual strain on roster management even during his peak years. I'll get my starting catchers from supplemental/compensation* first-round picks, or rounds 2 and 3, thank you very much. If one then overachieves and you have a stud at catcher after all, it's a problem you can live with, assuming you got a stud at some other position with a higher pick first. Up the middle is the way to go, I agree, though. Even at that, if those start to look overly picked-over, by #8 you do have to be pragmatic. I wish the pitching crop were more promising, but it's just not. * they keep changing the exact rules
  3. If we were drafting at 20 and a player like this fell to us, he'd be an interesting bat-only gamble. A DH has to profile as a .900 OPS type, like peak Nelson Cruz, to be of any eventual value. At #8, I'd rather not. / Edit - ha, failed to read all the way through the thread, and DocBauer hit the points I wanted to make.
  4. The one-time Bomba Squad gets beaten by 3 solo homers, while they scratch out an orphan tally during a double play.
  5. You don't suppose having a broken bone in his spine might have had a teensy effect?
  6. Unless I am suffering from selective memory, wins suddenly are hard to come by for our farm teams, particularly the three highest ones.
  7. Or, help deplete the bullpen by one. They run with a pitching staff of 13, 5 starters and 8 relievers. Those 8 starters are available only once every 5 games, typically, while the relievers might appear in every other game (or consecutively, in a pinch). Now if you assign two pitchers in piggyback, neither one is available sooner than the same five games as before, and you probably will still need to utilize a closer for some of their games, and/or an emergency reliever if either one of the two has a bad outing. That leaves 7 relievers to cover the other 4 games in the rotation, in their usual alternating fashion. They're maybe a little more rested up than otherwise, at least the less-talented ones, due to that one day out of five, but I'm not sure this offsets much. It might be close to a wash overall, and when things go wrong you're basically down a reliever for the coming four games I'm not saying it can't be done, but it seems to me it makes the manager's job just that little bit harder, not easier.
  8. I may have missed this being mentioned elsewhere, but a source tells me that two walk-off losses followed by two walk-off wins has never happened before, at least in the American League.
  9. B-r.com offers a daily email recap, and this morning's shows Buxton's shot as the biggest game-changing play of the day across the majors.
  10. Losing to the Guardians was bad. I think by now most TD members know how I feel about bad things: I don't like them.
  11. I'm about as big a "process" guy as anyone else at the site. but I wouldn't take it that far. Results at the end of the day are what will determine the front office's future - at some point if the results are bad you would have to question the process itself. We are a year or three from knowing the answers on this trade, but eventually it will be how you judge it, along with a myriad of other decisions the FO makes.
  12. Great reference list for the coming month! Overwhelming in fact.
  13. Been a while since I took an independent look but I think I'd be ecstatic if we got Green.
  14. He said he wanted to be around his family less?
  15. I made a slight tweak right away to my comment to include mention of those higher up in the organization. It does show up in the text you quoted, so I guess it was just one of those TD weirdnesses in the user interface. But yeah, it was in jest. Zero trade value.
  16. Then I'm sure he will fetch a fine return in trade. Rocco, implore your bosses to pull the trigger now on whatever best offer is on the table.
  17. As one who rebutted, I'm sorry you felt it got personal. That wasn't my intent.
  18. It's a stylistic turn to state such an assumption as fact. That opinion piece in the NY paper provided no new information regarding Correa.
  19. Balancing against that is I want a player that other teams may "really like". In the trade market, up-the-middle talent rules. Note that the sheen is off our trade acquisition Austin Martin now that it looks questionable he will stick at SS or CF. I don't believe in totally building by trade, so picking "a player they really like" can be a sound strategy. Just so long as they don't sour on their shiny new corner bat and then find he has zero trade value at all.
  20. Best Player Available, of course, but I'm tired of corner players whose bats can't miss, except they do miss and turn out to be just average (or less). Up the middle is more valuable if they turn out to be just average too. Or of course pitching if the front office isn't scared off by the negatives of each candidate. I don't want a catcher with a top pick. I really don't know whom I'd pick if one of the consensus top five or so doesn't unexpectedly fall to me. The argument made here for Neto looks good. Corner bat remains the "safe" pick so as to not be accused of a "reach".
  21. If Bundy can continue the good results of his last two starts, it will be someone else who steps aside for Winder. Who? Dunno. Maybe a 6-man rotation for a while until something intervenes.
×
×
  • Create New...