Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

LastOnePicked

Verified Member
  • Posts

    1,391
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    6

 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 LastOnePicked

  1. Listened on the radio up until the disputed Kiriloff strikeout. I knew they were going to lose after that. As in, I would have bet my house on it, if I were a betting man. It's just an odd game of tone, momentum and vibe with this team. It's luck, sure, but it just also seems about bringing in negative energy with roster decisions. Heck, maybe it's the cosmic ripple of thousands of understandably-pessimistic fans, all imagining worst-case scenarios at the same time. I have no idea. Going to be a memorable year, one way or the other, Oof. But I'm past mad at this point. No reason to be mad anymore. I just marvel at the goofiness of it all.
  2. He's not particularly forthright about his health (if the comments we got from him were reflective of what he was saying to Twins staff), he's not particularly dominant, and he's not particularly young. I think we can do better elsewhere.
  3. Good win. Very good. Look, here's all I'm asking this year: If the Twins are going to be good, let them be good. Let's pile on, crush the division and build a little swagger for Fall. But if they're going to be bad, just be bad. Bring on change. Let's get out of this hazy middle ground, please. I know, I know, it doesn't always work that way.
  4. Listening ain't exactly a picnic either.
  5. No killer instinct. No sense of urgency. Not every bad game has to cause a huge spate of changes, but the trends for this club are impossible to ignore. Or so one would think.
  6. Here's what I think about the resurgent White Sox: Good. The Twins need more fierce competition, not less. If the Twins can't hang in this division, go rebuild. If they can, they should prove it against major league caliber competition. Who wants to win a joke division? Better competition will make the Twins better over time. It seems to have had that effect on the AL East.
  7. I've heard this before, but I don't understand the argument. What long-term decisions is a manager supposed to make for a team? I understand a "lame duck" congressional session, but it seems that you would want a major league manager on the "hot seat," to prove that they're deserving of an extension in the offseason. What did the Twins have to lose by letting Baldelli's previous contract play out to its conclusion.
  8. Now that's satire with a little teeth. I like it. And having the Rays return the tee for payroll flexibility? Brilliance. Twins aren't in top form right now, but the writers on TD are.
  9. I don't think they have a snowball's chance in a very hot place of winning the division. Cleveland will figure it out, just like last year. Chicago might even right the ship for 2nd place. The Twins have nothing in the tank.
  10. "I choose to believe that the tides will turn, and the veterans on this team will awaken to some degree, enabling the Twins to pull away and avert all-out disaster. I choose that because the alternative is too depressing to contemplate." Good article, but being clear-eyed isn't depressing - it's liberating. We've just come off three games against a great team. Great teams are fun to watch. Draft. Scout. Buy low. Sell high. Develop. This is NOT the Twins. The Twins are not great. So, become great. Rebuild. Start now. Follow Baltimore or Tampa as an example. Let the youngsters play, Take your lumps with a new staff. Yup, it's 3-6 years of losing records. If we had started in 2021, we'd only be a few years from coming out the other end. I don't find what's happening depressing. When you have a FO that prioritizes injury-prone players and a poor manager who can't inspire, you get a middling team at best. We're just seeing the natural result. It just represents a chance for large-scale change. That's the only way forward.
  11. Yup. TheRays are just good. They scout well, draft well, sell high, buy low and develop, develop, develop. They make things happen. The Twins buy high, sell low, and use Spring Training for egg toss games. They wait for things to bounce their way, and have endless excuses when they don't. Watching (well, listening) to these two teams these last few days has made the difference very clear.
  12. I don't think this can be overstated, or said loudly enough. Spot on. Twins should make plenty of trades this summer, but not as buyers. Addition by subtraction will do.
  13. We don't need him. 😃 Correa's postgame comments are alarming. This is becoming a mental issue for this team, and they are losing faith, fire and drive. Rocco is again completely incapable of providing a distraction, a spark or a redirection. Should have been fired in 2021, but certainly after 2022. Changes need to be made now. Like right now. Yes, this team has bigger issues. They need a new FO and new organizational philosophy. But this season can perhaps be salvaged with a new voice in the dugout.
  14. Bump it back even a year, and I'd agree even more. Total rebuild should have started in 2021. We'd be well into Year 3 and have a pretty decent understanding of whom to keep as a building block and whom to drop. Who knows what we might have gotten for Buxton, too. Ah well, here we are instead. Ain't this fun.
  15. I'm usually quick to fault the FO, but I actually applauded this trade. I guess I had assumed (perhaps wrongly) that Arraez was injury-prone (he had some bad knee issues here) and that Lopez was on the cusp of becoming a #1 starter. I should have remembered that these Twins can't develop or sustain a top starter, and that the injury bug seems to hit harder here than elsewhere. Maybe it's a team's energy or mojo or collective spark or who knows what. It's depressing (though I am happy for Luis). We'll see where all this goes. If it ends like this - with Arraez reaching the fabled .400 and Lopez regressing to an iffy #4 starter - this will go down as yet another great FO blunder. Perhaps their last one here?
  16. I think the main problem is this - there's no one to get behind on this team. There's no "big dog" with a big bite. This FO has built around a perennially-injured former centerfielder, and then supplemented him with a former superstar SS who couldn't pass an offseason signing physical for other ballclubs. I don't like saying this about players I like, but you can't build around players who can't take the field or lead the charge. And with a milquetoast manager, there's no one for younger players to get inspired by or to at least have their yips diverted or distracted.
  17. That's because they're not a serious ballclub, and they haven't been for awhile. I know it's still a bit early. I know I'm too negative. But this is not a team I can see winning a division. Not even this division.
  18. It's almost if - and hear me out on this - this FO doesn't learn from past mistakes. They continue to sign injury-prone players, continue to jettison undervalued prospects who flourish elsewhere and continue to trust stat-based projections over on-field performance. 2023 is shaping up to be just another 2022.
  19. He's playing solid defensively in LF and CF for the surprising Detroit Tigers. And he has a higher BA and OBP than Byron Buxton. Not a superstar yet, sure, but not sure he makes your point here. He was certainly a tradable asset.
  20. It's not that trades are made that's the problem - it's HOW trades are made. When you give up massive value and get negative value in return, that's likely the result of haste and panic. If 40 man roster space is an issue, DFA veterans with no real upside or future (Kepler, Pagan) and let top talent develop for high-end return. Mahle had a history of injury, and Lopez had no history of success. These trades absolutely should be regretted.
  21. You're a Twins fan. You can answer that question already. :)
  22. I understand your points, but when you're in a pennant race as Summer starts, don't you want every possible advantage you can get in the lineup? There is no advantage to Kepler at this point, and when you're losing tight games - where a single crucial at-bat here and there makes the difference - you need to put your best out there. This isn't some slump - this is who Kepler is. I think that's my biggest frustration with this organization - there's just no killer instinct. "Close enough is good enough, we stick with our guys, we played our best game, there's always tomorrow." That kind of attitude is perfectly fine for kid's sports, but I find it disgusting when used by or for professionals. What's worse is that the Twins will need these games later on. A big division lead means you've got buffer to rotate in youngsters. Hanging on in July means hasty deadline trades and additional injury stresses. But this club just cannot and will not learn from their mistakes.
  23. I think the division will stop doing us all of these favors soon. And when that happens, look out. .500 baseball won't cut it.
  24. My frustration in all this stems from being stuck in "win-now" mode. Smart rebuilding teams look to pass off their "fools gold" players to teams who have to make quick decisions at the trade deadline. The Twins were - and are - in a bind. No playoff wins for 20 years. Fanbase is disappearing. They probably had to do something, but poor decisions are made like this. I'm just afraid we're going to see the same thing happen again this year, and the future is going to continue to suffer to serve the not-too-promising present.
  25. Twins practicing catch and release again with their top competitors. Okay for fishing, but terrible for winning a division.
×
×
  • Create New...