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ashbury

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Everything posted by ashbury

  1. I'd have given Jimmy Kerrigan the same look-see, but he got released. Let Jake Cave re-establish his value, if any, for another team.
  2. Generally I despise grammar/spelling flames, but in this case you were being generous by saying only 3-4. As stated at this site by a man exactly as wise as myself, "if it's not worth your time to do at least a proof-reading pass of what you're about to submit, maybe it's not worth your readers' time either." That said, my reaction to the content of the OP is that apparently our FO didn't see enough of an upgrade to make it worth their topping the Padres' offer. Seems to me a package centered around the somewhat redundant Spencer Steer would have done the job. Maybe they are saving their ammunition for a bigger target. If not, they really are doubling down on their confidence of a young arm or two breaking through in a big way. Their confidence and optimism has convinced me... to at least see the season through a couple of weeks before I dig out my pitchfork and light a torch.
  3. Yeah, if I had a chance to chat over beers with our FO, that would lead into a question I'd want to ask them. They draft college players, players who (as in Contreras's record) seemed to be making normal progress year over year while in school, like you would expect of young men starting to complete their maturation in their late teens and early 20s. Then it takes that player essentially as long as a high-schooler to work their way up the Twins' ladder. Brent Rooker is exhibit B, Sabato's looking like another "big" bat that will take its sweet time to develop. Seems like other teams draft college guys who pay dividends in just a season or two. I'm not saying the Twins promote too slowly. Not at all. I'm saying these college bats don't demonstrate the progress necessary to promote quickly. I can accept that college instruction isn't quite on a par with the pros in the minor leagues. But Contreras is a example where it's almost like they had to throw out everything he had learned up to the point he was drafted, and he starts from scratch at age 22 and then it still takes him years to reach AAA. My question over beers to our FO is, why?
  4. The difference now, with no third catcher on the 40-man, is that any kind of injury to a catcher that takes more than a couple of days to heal will require a corresponding 40-man removal that could prove untimely. Godoy's big selling point was that he does have minor league options remaining, so his spot on the 40 gave the team flexibility to stash him in St Paul. Sisco, if he's ever added to the 40, does not; so adding him and then using him for short term duty, while Sanchez or Jeffers heals up, will then require yet another 40-man move, unless the plan in that case is to carry 3 catchers. Btw, who is our emergency third catcher for an inning or three to close out a game? I seem to remember mention of someone having had some experience in school - thought it was Rooker but can't find it.
  5. The simple answer to the headline question is yes, he plausibly could, as opposed to the 0.0000001% chance that you might assign all but a handful of players. Likely? No. But Trout's over 30 and you have to factor in the chance that his decline phase has begun, while Buxton is more than 2 years younger. Someone will pass Trout for the current honor, someday, and if it's soon, Buxton has the chops to be the one, if he stays injury free and also demonstrates he's actually reached a new level of sustainable performance. A 1% chance is certainly a lot more plausible than 0.0000001%. If the question were rephrased or reinterpreted to mean can Buxton reach Trout's extended peak for multiple seasons, I'm back to the 0.0000001% range of confidence. That ship has sailed.
  6. Many times I am annoyed by what I see as paths of least resistance (loading up on corner bats, accepting two lesser players in trade for one, giving up up-the-middle talent too easily), historically in this franchise and not simply most recently. But for asset stewardship at this time of the year, I agree 100% with Seth above, that going with whomever is on the 40-man now should take precedence unless a non-roster candidate is super compelling. That same candidate will be available to add, the first time a 60-day IL move has to be made, for example.
  7. Fair enough. And I hope that's how it plays out. (His splits last year would bear that out.) I guess I was just figuring that his initial usage pattern might tend toward the LOOGYish, as they break a young pitcher into the majors. But with only 3 lefties on the entire 40-man, LOOGY might be too much of a luxury and they'll just go ahead and see what he's got.
  8. But you did close an argument in this thread with "The Twins' front office can only make attempts." Unless... you draw a distinction between "attempt" and "try".
  9. Before reading the article but just viewing the headline, I was going to say B+ also, or maybe just B. Had they not signed Correa (and all the machinations that led to that), it would be C- territory or worse due to inaction with the pitching staff, and with the creative Correa signing it remains the uncertain pitching that keeps the grade below A. In a few months, that grade could be re-evaluated upward or downward (which is true of any off-season, but I think more so this year than most), because several of the moves have good upside if everything works out but significant downside if one bad outcome leads to another and another and a 2021-style avalanche occurs. The FO is gambling heavily on rookies, particularly among the pitchers, producing right out of the chute. Hope they're right. If so, then the gambles on old retread arms won't matter too greatly, and if those work out too, it could be a fun season. That's an adjective I wasn't prepared to use a month ago.
  10. The Twins 40-man is thin in the lefty department, so I see Moran making the team, but not among the top arms in this pecking order. More a LOOGY, modified by the rule on minimum batters faced. Which is also kind of Thielbar's role (though he's reasonably effective against righties too), so watch out for opponents stacking their batting orders with left-handed hitters.
  11. If Jake Cave or Kyle Garlick is an answer, I refuse to consider the question. Aside from that, here's hoping that Max breaks through to the next level. It's not too late for a career year!
  12. AAA would be a splendid, splendid place for the poor fellow to recuperate and make sure there are no lingering effects.
  13. I was just thinking that 3 catchers is a reasonable luxury for a 28 man squad but not for 26. But, when you get down to the nuts and bolts, it's not even as simple as that. Part of my dilemma is not viewing Sanchez as a catcher.
  14. Ugh. Wrong era of the Doobs' repertoire. Tom Johnston, Patrick Simmons, or GTFO.
  15. I don't want a stud at catcher. Oh, sure, I'd take one if he dropped into our laps. But at the expense of passing up a stud at a different position? Nope. Joe Mauer cured me of that. And I think Joe's a Hall of Famer. But a catcher doesn't play enough games compared to other position players, and nobody has the impact on a given game that a pitcher does. Moreover, if your catcher is really that much of a stud, then you will want him as DH on the days you rest his legs, and that puts pressure on your roster. A stud at catcher is a rich team's luxury, in the sense that they probably also can afford a stud DH, meaning that you pay the stud catcher the big bucks to sit, on his days off, like any normal catcher should. I like catchers taken in the 2nd round, don't get me wrong. Rortvedt was an ideal bet.
  16. When's the last time in your estimation we had one of those?
  17. I want Larnach to prove something for a month at AAA. So I'm very much OK with his demotion. Rooker is the easiest final cut for me, again with a challenge to prove something at AAA (either that he's elite and not just passable at bat and can be a DH, or else that he's learned to play a position, any position). Two pitchers, that would be Moran and then, um, I dunno, maybe Stashak. Looking ahead to when it's time to cut down 2 further in May, Godoy looks like one - 12 position players is pretty thin but we have a lot of positional flexibility. One more pitcher, but chances are that in a month's time that decision will make itself, likewise for position players actually, now that I think of it.
  18. Communication is easier than ever now. Build a good relationship in person during several weeks in the Spring, and you can stay in touch by text or Zoom or whatnot and have it be nearly the same for several months, to a degree that wouldn't be nearly as beneficial without those first weeks.
  19. Yeah, in 14 plate appearances he's struck out 5 times, walked twice, had a sac bunt, and a sac fly. So in the 5 remaining chances, where it seems he put the ball in play normally, it fell in safely for a base hit. Yeah, that rate of .800 is sustainable, to support his .333 BA.
  20. Yay! We have someone who can make major-league plays at SS!
  21. Scouts have this slick trick called "looking at the family tree". Nick's father Tom Gordon at five-nine and 160 pounds could have been a slight tipoff versus whatever the scouts noticed in Sanó's bloodlines that led to reports I recall stipulating "assuming he doesn't grow out of the position."
  22. Like, because it's impossible to post in blue or some other color, or in a different font, already?
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