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stringer bell

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Everything posted by stringer bell

  1. Kepler is the lefty in the lineup. Okay I guess. Get some work done fellas.
  2. I get Apple TV+, so I kind of welcome a different perspective. I have heard enough of the D-Train. Don’t know who will be the commentary.
  3. Kepler is the lefty in the lineup. Okay I guess. Get some work done fellas.
  4. Paddack will be under contract and take a starting role if healthy.
  5. There were precious few lefties to face early and Jeffers(pretty much like everyone else) didn’t do that well against them anyway.
  6. Yes, you’re right. I meant to put the no Twins comment to refer to the top 10.
  7. I would say he doesn't have a great arm or great instincts. His hands actually look okay to me.
  8. I think it's really tough to try to give him time at a new position while he is up with the Twins. Also, he probably needs as many reps at second to make himself "acceptable" as a second baseman at the major league level. Especially with a guy who hasn't shown any aptitude to play anywhere defensively, what do you do?
  9. One factor in all of this is that Wallner has been used exclusively as a right fielder AFAIK. As long as Kepler and Buxton are on the active roster, there is no place for Wallner to play consistently.
  10. They (the Royals) saved Jordan Lyles for the Guards (1-11 6.68 ERA). I guess they didn't want to be accused of helping the Twins.
  11. The Twins have completed a sweep of the KC Royals and increased their lead in the AL Central to two games. Just to show they are impartial, the Royals play Cleveland next and send out the worst starting pitcher in MLB (Jordan Lyles) to face the Guardians tonight. The Twins have an off day today and face the Baltimore Orioles for the second weekend in a row, this time at Target Field. The Orioles are a team on the rise. After being the only bad team for years in the AL East, they have become respectable and have a much better record than the Twins. They have been given many top draft choices this decade and those draft choices are bearing fruit. Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Hendrickson, Jordan Westburg and Colton Couser have all been added in the last two years with more premium prospects in the system. Their pitching staff has been built mostly by trial and error--keep churning guys through the system and some will work out--including Jorge López who was flipped to the Twins at last year's trade deadline. On the pitching staff, the '23 Orioles have four pitchers who at one time were property of the Twins, including probably the number one loss on a Rule V claim in recent history. Here's a look at four pitchers who have gone from the Twins directly or indirectly to the Orioles. #4--Kyle Gibson. Kyle Gibson was a #1 draft pick by the Twins. A college pitcher, he debuted midseason in 2013 and gave the Twins six and a half years of starts. Gibson was promoted as a sinkerballer who threw hard enough to get strikeouts and I suspect his stuff would have played better in another era. His body of work is middle of the road, but he has been better than that for stretches, including an All-Star selection in 2021. I have met Kyle and he is one of my favorite ballplayers. Since his time with the Twins, Gibson pitched for Texas and Philadelphia before signing as a free agent with the Orioles. #3--Danny Coulombe. Coulombe pitched parts of three seasons with the Twins. He is a left handed middle reliever and in his time with the Twins he was mostly effective. For the third year in a row, he signed a minor league contract with the Twins. Now 33 years of age, this year's contract had an opt-out clause in the contract. If another club wanted to offer a major league roster spot Coulombe could opt out of his contract with the Twins. The Orioles offered and the Twins had to let him go. Given his history, and the fact that Coulombe signed three straight minor league contracts with the Twins, I think it is defensible that the Twins didn't put him on the major league roster solely to keep him in the organization. On the other hand, did they really need to keep a long reliever (Cole Sands) and Emilio Pagán? Coulombe has performed very well for the Os. His ERA is under 3 and he is averaging over 11 Ks per nine innings. #2--Yennier Cano. Cano was signed by the Twins in 2019 as a 25-year old. He put up excellent strikeout numbers, but displayed command issues. Regardless, Cano advanced through the Twins upper minors and made his debut last year. He got hit hard. The pattern would be some outstanding pitches followed by non-competitive waste pitches and then a grooved fastball or breaking ball. Too many walks, too many pitches out of the strike zone and too many homers. Cano was included in the trade that landed Jorge López and few (including me) thought much about him being added as a throw-in, especially since he was already 28 years old. Baltimore kept him in the majors to close out the year and he continued to be ineffective. However, in 2023, soOmething has clicked. Cano was unscored on in April, allowed no hits and no walks in 11 innings. He pitched very well in May, as well, but has appeared a bit more vulnerable as time has gone on. He's going to the All-Star game and is a great story. #1-Tyler Wells. There's been a lot of angst that Danny Coulombe and Yennier Cano have been important bullpen pieces for the Orioles this year. Less has been said about probably the O's best starter Tyler Wells. Wells was a 2016 draftee for the Twins who had advanced through their organization. During the 2020 COVID year, he didn't compete and was left unprotected in the Rule V draft. The Orioles picked him and he stuck with the club in 2021. He pitched out of the (bad) Orioles bullpen in 2021 and posted okay numbers for a guy who had only pitched 32 innings above A ball. Pitching around injuries, Wells stayed on the major league roster in 2022 and joined the rotation. in 2022. Wells was pretty good last year (7-7 4.25 ERA) and this year has been much better than that. He leads all qualified MLB pitchers in WHIP (Joe Ryan is second) and is 6-4 with a 3.19 ERA. The only thing keeping Wells from being a Cy Yound contender is that he has yielded 21 homers this year while having a pitcher-friendly home park. IMHO, this is the current one that got away for the Twins.
  12. My point is that it isn't automatic that the Twins should be dismissed as a serious World Series contender this year. Trading away assets that can help them win this year (Gray, Maeda) just doesn't make sense when they have been gift-wrapped a chance to compete in the playoffs. To the OP, is it the same for Kepler? He has some value, but if I'm the GM and I can find an upgrade, I'd take it. I'm not sure who that might be, but as noted the Braves found three outfielders for a minimal price three years ago and won the World Series.
  13. I don’t buy that they are a hopeless case just because they stumbled for most of the first half. The recent past is filled with teams that didn’t look like championship caliber, but turned it around (Off the top of my head—‘19 Nationals, ‘21 Braves and ‘22 Phils). The pitching has been top notch and it’s supposed to be between 60 and 75 percent of the game. There is so much room for improvement from established players (Correa, Buxton & Polanco) and some young guys might step forward (Lewis, Kirilloff, Julien Jeffers). The Twins have been handed an invitation to the playoffs. I think they should take that invitation.
  14. López was outstanding. I would rate his performance a tick behind Joe Ryan's shutout last month, just because he beat a last place team and he really didn't need to save the bullpen, as Ryan did. Having three really good starters in their late 20s (López, Ryan, Ober) bodes well for the future of Twins Baseball.
  15. Given that the Twins are in first place and their pitching staff might be the best they've ever had, I think the priority at the trade deadline is to make the club better this year.
  16. He is probably going to lead the team in innings and Ks. He probably won't get his ERA below either of Gray or Ryan, but he will give the team a lot of value.
  17. Strike three, not a strike. Thank you, but you still owe us, Cuzzi.
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