jmlease1
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Everything posted by jmlease1
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2022 Prospect Previews: Noah Miller
jmlease1 replied to Jamie Cameron's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
Why don't you see him sticking at SS? He appears to have the skills to compete there and of all his tools right now the glove looks the best. The concerns seem to be more about his offensive potential, and if he's a plus defensively, it's certainly easier to absorb a bad bat when it's at SS, even in today's game. I don't see him rushing through the system, but if he can start at Ft. Myers this season and go one level per year, this will look like a very good pick, I think. I'm always less worried about a player's power production a) in general, as I think it's easier to add, and b) for an 18 year old.- 12 replies
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- noah miller
- chase petty
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3 Twins Prospects That Need Healthy 2022 Seasons
jmlease1 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
It's still a high-profile program, though. They go to the College World Series, their players get drafted, and every player thinks they're invulnerable, so...- 16 replies
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- royce lewis
- matt canterino
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3 Twins Prospects That Need Healthy 2022 Seasons
jmlease1 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
You could easily put Balazovic and Winder on this list too.- 16 replies
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- royce lewis
- matt canterino
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2022 Prospect Previews: Chase Petty
jmlease1 replied to Jamie Cameron's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I suspect the height had something to do with it, and there were some questions about what secondary offerings Petty had, since he basically only threw fastballs in high school. I wouldn't be surprised if California vs. New Jersey had something to do with it: long seasons in CA with scouts everywhere and the hype gets going fast. Jersey? Less so. (Not like playing in Kenosha or something like that, but still) I'm always nervous about picking high school pitchers, but in this spot, it's a smart risk to take. The upside is worth it. It's much scarier in the top five (I'm having Kohl Stewart flashbacks). -
2022 Prospect Previews: Chase Petty
jmlease1 replied to Jamie Cameron's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
If I had to bet, I'd say he spend the whole year at Ft. Myers, in part because of his age and the sophisticated complex the Twins have built up there, giving them maximum resources in place to support his development. Unless he's just crushing it so thoroughly that it demands a promotion to Cedar Rapids. But I would bet on Ft. Myers this year and if he's performing well, more aggressive promotion to follow after that (If he's doing well starting the year in Cedar Rapids, an early promotion to AA, etc). And I'm fine with that. The kid is 19 with a thunderbolt for a right arm. Get him off to the best, smartest start you can at Ft. Myers and it will serve him well to advance quickly through the system. I'd say if things go well he'll be in MLB late 2024/early2025. -
2022 Prospect Previews: Chase Petty
jmlease1 replied to Jamie Cameron's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
we'll know a lot more about how fast he can progress after this season. If he can dominate in a full-season of pro ball, then he could move quickly, especially because it doesn't look like he has major mechanical issues they really need to iron out. But 2023 is pretty unrealistic. -
3 Twins Pitchers Due to Bounce Back in 2022
jmlease1 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Dobnak is an easy choice to bounce back simply because he should be healthy. A healthy Dobnak isn't a bad pitcher and should be able to slide in as a 5th starter type. I like the Cotton pickup as a bullpen guy because he's cheap, right-handed and has a shot to be very solid. I don't know that bounce back is really the right category for him, because he was pretty good for Texas last year. I don't see him as a starting option; he really hasn't done that since 2017...and he wasn't great at it. I'm guessing Texas looked at his WHIP and didn't think the success was all that sustainable, which is fair, but he seems worth taking a shot on. I think his long-term success in the bullpen depends on two things: whether his reduced hr/9 is a result of the move to the bullpen and his current approach, or a small sample mirage and if he can keep the BB/9 manageable. Bundy is unlikely to be the guy he was in 2020, but 2019 is doable. The 2020 performance screams small sample size. The real question is whether or not he's healthy and if he can keep the ball in the park. When he's keeping the ball in the park at a reasonable rate, he's a decent pitcher who can chew up innings. When it spikes up over 2 per 9, he's in the trash heap. (see 2021 and 2018) He was a decent risk to take a flyer on, but expecting anything like 2020 is foolish.- 12 replies
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- jharel cotton
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2022 Prospect Previews: Chase Petty
jmlease1 replied to Jamie Cameron's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
It's going to be very fun to see what he can do at 19 in A-ball. He doesn't look like a guy who needs to grow/fill-in for his body all that much, which should help him. But he's going to need to learn more about how to pitch, how to set up hitters, etc because you simply can't destroy everyone in pro ball with 100 mph gas like you can in HS. If he can master that changeup then he's going to be destructive. The fastball should play on anyone, and if he's got an off-speed pitch to play up against lefties then he's going to be in really good shape because that fastball-slide combo should be deadly against righties. High school pitchers are risky, but this is the kind of upside play I like to see when picking late in the round. -
I've been a huge fan of Greinke for a long time, but everything about him right now suggests that he's at the end of the line. Will he get crushed and be an embarrassment out there? Eh, probably not, because he's such a smart pitcher that he'll still be able to get over more times than he should...but hoo boy. There's just not anything in his numbers (and age is a number too) that suggests to me he's going to find any kind of resurgence or even hold with last year's pace. There's real risk that Greinke is JA Happ, Part 2. The upside is the hope that he can grind out 150 innings at a 4.50 ERA. Not sure I'm excited about that? Now, considering how short we are in starters...maybe 1 year of Greinke isn't so bad while the young guys find their footing. The odds are very good that Greinke will at least start the season healthy and ready, and a short spring training probably won't hurt him as much as some? But this ain't Greinke from 5 years ago and we need to understand that.
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- zach greinke
- joe ryan
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Seth's 2022 Twins Top Prospect Summary
jmlease1 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I think this is pretty spot on. the utter youth on the international signings is going to keep most of them out of the rankings until they've been in the system for a couple of years, because there's so little to evaluate them on and you expect even their tools to be behind the older players coming from stateside. a 16-17 year old kid is going to have to be awfully special to crack a list like this. I don't think it's any kind of indictment of the organization, which has been one of the more engaged ones in the international market (investing in central america, paying attention to places like australia, etc)- 22 replies
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- royce lewis
- jose miranda
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Top 20 Minnesota Twins Assets of 2022: Part 4 (1-5)
jmlease1 replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Which is also why Josh Donaldson isn't on this list, even though he might still be a very good hitter and effective player in 2022; between his age, injury history, and salary he probably has negative value as a trade asset and it's difficult to plan on him being a significant contributor in 2023 (even though again...he might be). I'm a big Austin Martin guy: I think the power will come, but his control of the strike zone and ability to get hits is going to play regardless. I keeping thinking about him playing in LF with Buxton in CF and every fly ball pitcher in MLB going "yeah, I wanna play there".- 13 replies
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- austin martin
- royce lewis
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Top 5 Derek Falvey Twins Moves
jmlease1 replied to Ted Schwerzler 's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Joe Ryan is already in rotation and looks like a real pitcher. we got him for half a season of a 40-year old DH in a lost season, and added Drew Strotman as well, whose floor looks like "bullpen weapon" and still might make it as a starter. Hell, we even saved money on the deal. Even if both pitchers flame out, it was a smart deal...and Ryan sure doesn't look like a guy who is going to flame out. Buxton put up 4.5 bWAR in 61 games last year. pro-rated to 150 games, that's an 11 bWAR season! That's Wllie freakin' Mays. Of course he's a generational talent. He is a spectacularly talented player who can do things on the field only a handful a players in all of baseball can do. Yes, he's missed a lot of time and one of the most important abilities is availability...but this FO has managed to put together a contract that keeps the most exciting player I've ever seen in a Twins uniform here while protecting the organization if he's not healthy. He's got the same kind of talent that Joe Mauer had before the concussions. You can reasonably talk about him in the same sentence as Mike Trout, who has put up 7 or 8 MVP-caliber seasons in 10 years. he is truly great...and I hope he annihilates the league next year and the twins have to pay him every possible bonus.- 19 replies
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- nelson cruz
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Top 5 Derek Falvey Twins Moves
jmlease1 replied to Ted Schwerzler 's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I thought about this one a lot, and for me it came to signing Pineda cost us nothing but cash and Maeda we had to give up a legitimate prospect who would have been a solid bullpen piece. I would still do the Maeda deal 100 out of 100, but signing Pineda was a clever move that required some extra creativity but cost the team less, so in terms of front-office moves I credit it a bit higher. The Odorizzi deal certainly could qualify, as we did very well on that one: Odo was ok the first season in MN, very good the second year, before injuries wrecked his walk year...and we got back the prospect we dealt for free (who has gotten back on track with the team to the point that he's a reasonable SS option in the organization again). Can't ask for much better in a trade, really.- 19 replies
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- nelson cruz
- michael pineda
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Top 5 Derek Falvey Twins Moves
jmlease1 replied to Ted Schwerzler 's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I think the moves are correct, but I'd put both of the Cruz moves above the Pineda signing.- 19 replies
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- nelson cruz
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Part 6: Seth's Top 30 Twins Pitching Prospects (1-5)
jmlease1 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I probably would have done the order differently...and I admit I really have trouble knowing exactly how to rank Joe Ryan who is rookie-eligible, but also sort of graduated. So, I'll leave Ryan where he is? the other 4 guys (all of whom I really like), I probably go Balazovic, Winder, Canterino, Woods-Richardson...and then immediately feel bad for not ranking woods-richardson high enough. I think W-R got messed up by the Olympics and not pitching in japan and having all that time off, so I don't take his 2021 all that seriously as an indicator of his real ability. I think he's a terrific pitcher and it's amazing to me that some people are treating him almost as a throw-in with Martin in the Berrios deal. It's a nice top five and stronger than anything we've had in some time. I worry about the elbow and shoulder injuries and I worry that the lockout may impact development on guys that need normal years. these guys got skipped a year of competitive baseball in 2020, had a still semi-goofy COVID year, and now have the lockout following all of that. UGH.- 33 replies
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- matt canterino
- joe ryan
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Part 5: Seth's Top 30 Twins Hitting Prospects (6-10)
jmlease1 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I'm a big fan of Celestino and I think he could be the ideal 4th OF for the Twins, possibly even this season. RH bat is great with guys like Kirilloff, Kepler, and Larnach around and his ability to play any OF spot could be really useful, especially with Buxton's injury history. Really liked how well he played in AAA after getting thrown into the deep end of the pool in MLB well before he was ready. Says some things about his mental toughness, I think. I do believe in his defense, I just think he was overthinking it when he got called up so early. He's a nice player, I'm excited to see what he can do. Sabato is the guy I'm less excited about. While I appreciate his understanding of the strike zone and ability and willingness to take a walk, I'm still very concerned about his ability to make contact. When he does it goes a long damn way, but a college bat with his eye should have been able to do better in low-A, even if it is the FSL. I hope the Cedar Rapids stint is more representative of his ability, but that wasn't a terribly long stretch and he could have just been on a hot stretch. We'll see. I'll be interested to see where he starts the season: Cedar Rapids or Wichita? As we've seen with Rooker, you have to make contact for that power to play and Sabato has little positional flexibility to improve his standing. I can see why someone would pick him over Wallner right now (the walks and power projection are appealing) but I'm not one of them. They look like similar hitters right now and Wallner can at least play in the OF (might not cover a ton of ground, but he's got a fine arm out there) and Sabato looks like a DH who can function at 1B. Maybe the Cedar Rapids Sabato is who he really is (I hope so), but I just have trouble minimizing how brutal he was in Ft. Myers. Julien is really intriguing. I'm not worried about where he'll play if he can keep raking like this; you find a position for a guy if he gets on base and smacks the ball around like this. The K's are worrisome, though. You can get away with it in A-ball when pitchers will give you free ones because they simply can't put the ball in the zone consistently, but the more you advance the less it works. You have to be able to make contact when the ball is in the zone. If Julien can get his K rate down in the 20-25% range, he's going to be a player to watch who will rise quickly. If he can't, I think that BA is going to plummet.- 16 replies
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- kalai rosario
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I'm not sure I'd qualify Kirilloff or Winder as "sleepers"; Kirilloff is a top prospect who hit well in his rookie campaign before getting injured. Expectations are high for him. Winder was the Twins representative in the Futures Game and is being touted as a top pitching prospect who is ready to step into the rotation if healthy. I think the expectations are too high for what these guys can do to qualify them as sleepers, really. Moran on the other hand...I'm a big fan and I do think people are sleeping on him. He's still got some things to work on in terms of his command, but that changeup is filthy and will make him effective against righties and lefties and he's going to be a weapon early, IMHO. I kinda think people are sleeping on Duffy at this point: there seems to be this growing consensus that he's tailing off as a player and won't be counted on for the back end of the bullpen any longer, that his velocity is down, blah blah blah. I think he's primed for the bounceback season and while I don't expect him to have some insane strand rate again, I do think he could be a critical set-up man again and have a terrific season.
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- randy dobnak
- ryan jeffers
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Part 5: Seth's Top 30 Twins Pitching Prospects (6-10)
jmlease1 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I think that's fair. I tend to weight pro performance a bit more in trying to project than maybe some, partly because there's so many things that can go wrong with young pitchers. So when I see a guy like Sands or Varland succeeding at every level they're be asked to pitch at, I probably rate them a little higher than guys who basically have thrown few or no professional innings, even if they're a bit older. Some of this also may shake out a bit better when we're not coming off the first year back in minor league ball too; do guys like them get penalized (whether knowingly or not) because they missed a development year, whereas Petty does not? There's still a bit of a glut in prospect-land right now, IMHO where it's more challenging to really place everyone on the development path because of that missing year. How many guys got injured because they didn't have competitive baseball in 2020? How many needed extra time to adjust to being back in games? I think you could make a case for grouping guys from 6-15 into two pools: 1) young guys with big tools, little pro experience, and high ceilings, 2) older guys with possibly lesser tools but more pro performance (who missed a development year). Not easy to know which ones out of either pool will keep rising up. Except Duran, who is in the high minors and just needs health or he's going to end up in the bullpen. I do feel good that we're talking about guys like Petty, Sands, Hajjar, Varland, and Duran and we haven't even hit the top 5 yet! There's a lot of talent in the pitching pipeline and it could be very exciting if the team is successful in developing a decent percentage of it.- 26 replies
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- steve hajjar
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Cleveland and the Twin Cities are pretty comparable markets. The Cleveland market area (which includes Canton and Akron) has about 3.6M people; the Twin Cities market area is about 3.7M. Both are mid-sized markets. The advantage the Twins have is MN has no other teams and the closest other franchises are KC/MKE/Chicago. Cleveland has to compete with Cincinnati in their own state. But there are a lot more people in OH to pull from as well...
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Part 5: Seth's Top 30 Twins Pitching Prospects (6-10)
jmlease1 replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
This is where I think philosophy really comes into play and the challenge of performance vs projection makes it an interesting debate on the rankings. I tend to value professional experience over projection on prospect rankings and would probably push guys like Raya and Povich further down the rankings in favor of Sands/Varland from the last set. I just feel better about a guy that has shown the ability to dominate A-ball over someone who doesn't have any professional innings in competitive baseball (or functionally doesn't). With pitching being the hardest thing to project (my opinion), the scholarship bonus for draft position should be reduced a little, and we shouldn't always be seduced by the power of the new. With the brand new guys, we can project anything we want upon them and presume that they will be able to perform. Hajjar was a good pick with a nice college track record, so I'm fine with him in this group. I think there's an error on Chase Petty's stats; he pitched in 2 games for the Twins minor league system and started 1. He's definitely getting a scholarship bonus based on his draft position...which is ok, but I discount that more and more the further you get from the 1st round. Duran has all the tools and pitches to be a front-line starter...we'll see if he can pair that up with the health you need. I'm hoping last season was an aberration born of not having had a minor league season in 2020 and that he'll be able to get it back together. My fear is that the shenanigans going on with the CBA will again put his development back and it will mess up his season. But the upside is terrific.- 26 replies
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- steve hajjar
- jhoan duran
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Top 20 Minnesota Twins Assets of 2022: Part 3 (6-10)
jmlease1 replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I can't decide if Garver ranks too high for me here or not; he's getting older and has injuries, and he's only got two more years of team control left...but at the same time there's such a dearth of MLB catchers who can also hit that someone who can mash like Garver still has significant value, either on the field or in trade. Tough one to rate for me. But it also explains why Jeffers lands this high on the list too: catchers that give you anything on offense are so hard to find that a guy with an OPS+ of 83 last year still added positive value beyond their defense. I'm really excited about Ober and Ryan and look forward to watching their continued development.- 16 replies
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I think the only way Smeltzer makes it back on the roster is if there's a rash of injuries in the bullpen with at least one serious enough to open a slot on the 40-man. He's just a little too hittable to survive long stints, I think. Maybe the new slider will give him new life as a bullpen option, but he's behind about 8-10 guys for next man up in the rotation.
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3 Prospects That Can Be Next Season's José Miranda
jmlease1 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
To be fair to Sabato, he has shown very good strike zone recognition, which is a really good skill to have. The question on him after his horrid stretch in low A is will he make enough contact; in high A's small sample size he looked like a serious hitter. But I think the Rooker comp isn't unfair until he shows he can make enough consistent contact on pitches in the zone to really make that prodigious power play- 19 replies
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- jose miranda
- aaron sabato
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3 Prospects That Can Be Next Season's José Miranda
jmlease1 replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I think this might be the best potential "Miranda Breakout" idea: talented player who is liked within the system, but hasn't really put it together yet and isn't all that high on people's prospect rankings now. Javier has all the tools but hasn't really put it together. He could be exactly the kind of guy who seizes the opportunity and have it all click. I think Martin is going to have an excellent season (I'm very high on him and not terribly worried about his power production at this point) but his path doesn't feel like miranda's. Miranda had a nice rookie ball season and then meandered a bit in A ball, with middling performances that didn't stand out much for a couple of years, then exploded, destroying everything in his path in AA & AAA. Martin's already had a much better season in AA than Miranda had ever done prior to his breakout, and it was his first year of pro ball. Sabato is a possibility, but I'm not as high on him. He's a K machine and I have real concerns about his ability to make consistent contact. We'll see. It shouldn't have taken him so long to start beating up on A-ball pitchers as a college bat coming out of the ACC, so his time in Ft. Myers was a red flag for me. He did much, much better when he got to Cedar Rapids, but that's a small sample.- 19 replies
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- jose miranda
- aaron sabato
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The Twins Need Buxton Insurance
jmlease1 replied to Ted Schwerzler 's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I think Celestino will be the answer as Buxton insurance. He may not be ready for the 4th OF role out of spring training (but I'd bet he'll compete for it), but I do think he's much more ready to step in if Buxton gets hurt in say late May/early June and we need someone to play CF every day. Kepler can fill in occasionally right now if Buxton needs a day off, if Celestino doesn't head north with the big club. I also think that Martin might be ready as early as midseason to step in if there's a run of injuries again. Gordon is a decent enough stop-gap and if he makes the team as a utility guy, maybe he's the one who gives Buxton a break in the OF every now and then. (I don't see him as hitting enough to be an every day player...but I'm rooting for the dude to prove me wrong.) All of this is by way of saying: not really interested in spending any real money on a backup to one of the best players in baseball, and definitely not interested in burning any prospect capital to bring in a backup, especially with the young options we have in the system. The depth chart (for everyday CFs) probably looks like: Buxton, Celestino, Martin with Gordon & Kepler as short-term fill-in options. That's not bad and significantly better than where we were last season, as Celestino was just getting started in AA, Martin wasn't with the franchise, and Gordon had never played an inning in CF, leaving us basically with Cave & Kepler as backup option. (yes, some of this was our own doing, as we let Wade go to keep Cave and didn't protect Baddoo...but that's the way it goes.)- 24 replies
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