jmlease1
Verified Member-
Posts
5,458 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
30
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
2026 Minnesota Twins Draft Pick Tracker
Forums
Blogs
Events
Store
Downloads
Gallery
Everything posted by jmlease1
-
It's pretty unusual these days for a player to get picked high in the draft and not sign. They almost always have it worked out in advance when they pick a player whether or not he'll sign at his slot value or have determined how much above or below slot will get the job done. The days of a high pick declining to sign with a particular franchise to go to college or play indy ball and re-enter the draft is pretty much dead. Once you get into the lower rounds, sure, but not top picks.
- 30 replies
-
- walker jenkins
- luke keaschall
- (and 5 more)
-
Polanco was not good last year and became a free agent, and was so sought after he had to take a pay cut. Let's not pretend otherwise, ok? He's been a good hitter this year, but is now relegated to almost exclusively playing DH because of his injury history and increasing lack of mobility, so he's no longer really even versatile. I don't believe you need to have significant HR pop to be an effective MLB hitter and play OF/DH. While that may be the normal mode, you can get to good offensive production in multiple ways, and if Gonzalez continues to be a good line-drive hitter with doubles power and the occasional dinger, it'll be fine. The Arraez comp is interesting, but ignores how much more power production GG has already shown in the minors; Arraez never topped a .450 SLG in any season the minors (no, 3 games of A-ball in 2017 doesn't count). GG has done it multiple times already and might finish this season with a SLG over .500 (something Arraez never came close to). That's plenty of pop to be effective even if you're not clobbering homers. GG isn't just a slap hitter rolling up singles for an empty BA. Maybe he won't be able to sustain it as he advances, but right now, he's hitting line drives, taking walks when they're there, and showing off an impressive hit tool. The problem with Arraez wasn't that he didn't hit homers, it was when he wasn't hitting doubles either or taking walks he needed to hit an ungodly amount of singles in order to have real value. GG has a history of adding 70-80 pts to his OBP beyond his BA. Arraez was more like 50 pts in the minors (which he improved on early in MLB, but has shrunk to 30 pts in the past 2 seasons, which is a real reason why he's not effective now). GG is showing more pop in his bat as well. If he can be a guy with a triple slash of .300/.370/.430 do we really care how he gets there? (BTW, that would be better than any OF the Twins have in MLB right now not named Byron Buxton) GG is healthy this year and raking. Can't wait to see him in AAA.
-
It'll be interesting to see what kind of market there is for Bader if/when the Twins become sellers. He's filled the role the Twins brought him in for nicely, though I do worry about him getting exposed with too many PAs, but his defense is clearly still first-class. You'd think someone would be interested, especially with his very reasonable contract. It's notable that Kepler had been so bad; while I had zero interest in retaining him for the Twins, especially at this kind of price, I thought someone would give him a mutli-year deal. Looks like the rest of the league outside of Philly saw a player in decline too that was unlikely to bounce back. Philly has mostly been protecting him against LHP (which he still can't hit) but he's also struggling against RHP and the defense has been surprisingly bad. Sorry, Max.
-
we'll where the team stands after the trade deadline. Seems like that's the right time to juggle the rosters a bit, when you know exactly what you have. But Culpepper & GG have been doing everything right so far, and I'm really impressed with how well they've taken to AA. That said, it is still only 19 games at AA for Culpepper, and Jenkins is only at 26 for the season after the injury. Fedko is a guy I'd like to see get moved up: not sure we'll learn anything more about him in AA at 25, so if there's any belief in him at all as a player, he should get tested at AAA soon.
- 19 replies
-
- ryan fitzgerald
- peyton carr
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
It's cute that you're still evaluating a player based on RBIs. A very good win against a bad team. I'd feel better about avoiding the sweep if Colorado wasn't a shockingly awful team, and the two stinkers the Twins put up out the gate have cast a real pall on the road trip for me. But can't do anything about that now. Be great if this gets Royce Lewis going, finally. He's still got plenty of talent, and I'm not ready to give up on him. Correa is slowly grinding his way back too; nice to see the OPS over .700 again. will be interesting to see if the Twins can salvage the trip with good performances in LA. For those who are pushing and pushing the Twins to blow things up and sell off, the Rockies are a good example of how it goes wrong. This is an awful team with no hope in the near future. Now, the Twins system isn't empty and even in a fire sale there will still be more MLB talent left on the roster than what we see in Colorado right now, but...
- 35 replies
-
- joe ryan
- royce lewis
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
I'm not all that surprised that the Twins went with a pitcher with a different arsenal than what's they've acquired recently. We've seen them add different pitches to a player's mix as they've developed before, including after they've reached MLB, and they've gone for outliers before (i.e., Cory Lewis and his knuckleball). I would argue that the clearest pattern the Twins have in drafting is to go for value wherever they're picking and that they try not to be too dogmatic in only picking certain types of player. When we see "shifts" in who they're drafting I would argue it's more about where they see the best value in that particular draft. Riley Quick is an interesting pick with a lot of upside and the potential to progress quickly. While I don't think the Twins seek out pitchers coming off a serious arm injury, they're not afraid of it either and will go there when they see a high-value opportunity, and I think that's how they viewed Quick. Should be worth checking out.
-
Try again. My point on the Ryan trade was that even an organization as well-respected as TB can miss on what they have in their own players. Do you really think they would still have done that deal in hindsight? They missed on IDing Ryan's potential. Miller had better be a gold glove MLB SS, because otherwise he has almost no value. Great, he finally barely cleared a .700 OPS in AA to get to league average in a relatively small sample size. Even if he's Andrelton Simmons on defense (unlikely), he's going to get smoked at the plate unless something changes. (BTW, Simmons had a .791 OPS in AA against a league average of .709) Simmons could at least hit some when he first came up; Miller looks more like end of career Simmons at the plate, which pushed him out of the league at 32 because while he was still a fine defensive SS he was a zero at the plate. But my point stands: no team is so good at player development that you should ignore their cast-offs or refuse to trade with them. Teams will miss on guys. Players might need a new perspective to get their own stuff together. What works on one guy might not work on another. Is it going to happen here? Probably not, Davis looks fairly marginal. But you can't let organizational reputation block you from making a deal.
-
Dodgers have a fine track record on pitcher development, but they ain't perfect (they've notably needed acquire relievers other ways at different points). Same with TB: they're great at player development, but the Twins still plucked Joe Ryan off them cheap and turned him up another notch to where he's a deserving all-star. Let's not give so much credit to another organization. (I mean, I was told repeatedly that Noah Miller was going to turn into a starting SS with the Dodgers and they were going to fix all of the damage we'd supposedly done to him. How's that working out? Because he still looks like the exact same all-glove no-hit guy he's always been.) It's a low wattage move, but normally I'd be ok with buying a guy off another team like this to see if there's something you can turn around. I'm less enthusiastic here, because it's taking up a 40-man slot, which makes it less likely the Twins will consider adding someone like Sabato and giving him a chance to see if he can do anything this season absent more significant changes at the deadline...which I just don't see happening. It's...fine. I'm ok with churning the back of the 40-man to try and uncover a diamond in the rough. This guy's had some injuries and control problems and is a relatively recent convert to relieving, and the Twins have a pretty good track record in converting failed starters into bullpen weapons, so I can understand the thinking. I'm just not sure it's the best use of the last slot on the 40-man right now.
-
I guess my concern on Long is trying to judge whether he's a) just a younger version of Sabato, and b) what that really means? Is he clearly better than Sabato? I don't know; he's got a better track record overall in pro ball, bit lesser in college, and advanced faster...but is he actually better or just younger? I feel like for hitters where there's a concern about what their contact rates will look like in MLB...it's just really hard to know if they can get it done until you actually see it. That last step is a treacherous one. I'd feel better if I had a better grasp on whether Sabato was more like Brent Rooker (needed time to figure it out) or just a guy having a good minor league season at 26.
- 48 replies
-
- willi castro
- danny coulombe
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
I'd be stunned. There's almost nothing to suggest that the Twins will drop a veteran from the roster when there's any other semi-reasonable choice. While it might be the best option, when Keaschall comes back Kiersey is going to be the one who gets dropped, because he can get sent to AAA and the Twins won't lose an asset. Is this the most optimal move? Maybe (probably) not, but there's almost zero chance the Twins drop France from the roster when Keaschall comes back. Having been burned badly on not having enough depth before (a lost season when the OF depth got annihilated) and getting dinged on infield depth even this season, they're just not going to do it. Now, I'd argue the ability to grab someone like Clemens and make it work suggests that they need to be more aggressive about dropping non-performing veterans, but there's nothing that suggests the Twins staff sees it that way.
-
I think we will see more of Clemens at 1B and less of France, unless the Twins add a bat, in which case we might see zero of France. It's probably the right decision; France has been in a huge slump, Clemens has been fine defensively, and Clemens power production plays, even if he's missing a lot. France's bat to ball skills at least make him a reasonable pinch-hitting option late in a game so he has some utility on the bench. The smarter move might be to just move on from France, who hasn't been particularly good at the plate ( a good month is a .745 OPS, which isn't impressive) and doesn't hit LHP very well. But the Twins are deeply paranoid about losing veteran depth and seem unlikely to cut him, even with his contract to being guaranteed. I don't know if Sabato will be anything or not, and he's got a lot more failure on his resume than success, but he's been crunching LHP and seems like he could at least fill the small side of a platoon with Clemens. But I think the Twins are too gun-shy to do it. Frankly, I've been amazed they've been culling ABs from France; they seemed to adore him even when he was bad in May....
-
Most of the trade rumors on Buxton are coming from outside of MN, probably from people who want him playing for a team they cover regularly, rather than having to go to MN to watch him play.
- 86 replies
-
- jhoan duran
- griffin jax
- (and 4 more)
-
Feels like unless the Twins collapse out the gate after the all-star break the only way a trade happens is if they can work a 3-way deal involving one of their top relievers. The teams looking to add a closer/elite set-up man aren't likely going to have a quality MLB bat available to move in the deal and if they're making a playoff push will want to deal in prospects. So maybe there's a 3-way deal that can be made where a team that's heading for the beach already gives up the bat in exchange for the playoff-bound team's prospects. But that's awfully complex and can fall apart quickly. But it's the sort of move that might be worth looking hard at if the Twins are above .500 at the deadline, and I'd certainly be able to support it. Team has ABs available at DH, 1B, or OF for a guy who can hit, especially if they really punish LHP. I suspect little will happen. Pohlads won't authorize more spending, Twins won't be looking to move a prime reliever for prospects, and I don't think the team will fall on its face out the gate hard enough where a fire sale is even that logical (except for the people who gave up on the team months ago, want to blow everything up, and have all the front office & coaching staff fired in favor of the Ghost of Tommy Lasorda or something)
- 86 replies
-
- jhoan duran
- griffin jax
- (and 4 more)
-
Since we now know the Ishbia play was at least as much if not more about making a play for CWS, the more public aspects make more sense. I'm not that surprised there isn't a lot of detail out there; most billionaires don't like losing, so they're not going to want their names out there unless they have the deal locked up or close to it. And this way, 10 years from now one of them can leak to a friendly reporter that they were in the running to buy the team and would have done so much better than whatever other billionaire they want to take a shot at...
-
I wouldn't trust Rob Manfred as far as I could throw him (and I have a bad back, so I ain't getting far). MLB commissioners have generally been sleazebags who don't give two sh!ts for the fans, and Manfred is a shady tool of the owners as much as any commissioner has been since...Ueberroth, maybe? (that guy was a piece of work to be sure) That said, I hope he's not lying through his misbegotten teeth for once and a Twins sale is moving forward. While I don't share the contempt for the current front office & manager that many around here have, I do think the ownership situation has only harmed the team in the last couple of seasons, and their track record of poor business (outside of getting Target Field built largely on someone else's dime) decisions and inability to grow the fanbase over the past 20 years makes me ready to take on whatever risk we might find in new ownership. I don't see the fanbase growing under this ownership, or real financial gains for the club that would foster more investment in the on-field product (outside of jacking up ticket prices, maybe). I don't see any opportunity for bold moves occurring while ownership is seeking an exit. I don't see anything happening that wouldn't involve the Pohlad family improving their bottom line. Do I expect we'll sudden be in the land of milk & honey with new owners, with a big bump to the payroll, and everything suddenly working out right? Nah. But things under the Pohalds have ground to a halt, and after nearly 50 seasons I'm ready to roll the dice on someone new. Worked out ok with the Vikings, been ok for the Wild, so who knows. New owners should know exactly what they're getting into with the decline of the RSNs too. But this is a big market with the potential for a huge reach. Maybe the new owners could actually tap that, instead of consistently fumbling.
-
I think your final sentence is a little too broad. It may not be a position the organization prioritizes in the draft, but if it was one they didn't prioritize at all they never would have signed Vazquez. Developing MLB-quality catchers seems to be the hardest thing to do these days; finding one who can both be quality defensively and hit their weight ain't easy. Would the Twins be better off if they put a lot more draft capital into catching? Maybe, or maybe they just be looking at a lot more busts and people ripping them for wasting draft capital... I think they recognize it's a position of organizational need (it's why they took a flier on Cartaya, for example) but there's very little indication that they draft for need, and considering the development time it takes for most prospects (and the risk associated), I tend to agree. Even though I'd like to see more catching options coming up through the system (he said, hypocritcally).
-
A good weekend (even a great weekend) isn't enough to get me too excited about Ferrer yet. He's doing ok, but one big weekend isn't enough to make any kind of call on whether his prospect status has changed or anything. Raya's recent work is a little more notable. We're not talking about 1-2 good starts, we're looking at 4 straight, which may be an indicator that he's figured something out. I'll be interested to see where he sits in another month, but it's encouraging to see him going in the right direction. He's pitching in a league with a lot of offense, so these strong results are nice to see. I suspect that if he'd had this string of success in hand a few weeks ago he might have gotten tapped for the Adams role. With Zebby doing rehab starts, I suspect we won't see Raya up soon, but when Adams goes back down Raya might be positioned well to take the slot if needed again before Pablo gets back. DeBarge is interesting. The steal are impressive, but the reality is it's not that hard to run in A-ball: the pitchers aren't that focused on/skilled at holding runners on, and the catching is often a little all over the place too. That say, the volume is impressive and shows a tool in his bag. But his overall hitting has fallen off after a hot start, with a not so great June and a bad July. His speed and positional flexibility make him interesting, but he's got to be more consistent at the plate and be more of a threat at the plate or it won't matter if he's got a good eye at the plate because more advanced pitchers will overwhelm him and not be concerned enough about his ability to do damage on a "get over" pitch that those easy walks he gets from A-ball pitchers that can't find the zone dry up. One note that I'm very curious about, and it might just be a statistic fluke, but he's been great at home and trash on the road (.953 OPS vs .558). Maybe he's struggling a little to adjust to the travel schedule? Can't sleep on the road?
- 25 replies
-
- marco raya
- jaime ferrer
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
This is the part of the draft where expecting to really know much about the players true prospects is beyond me. I'll be interested to see where these guys are in a year or so and see if anyone has broken out. I expect someone will, but I really don't have any idea who that will be right now? Interesting to grab a 6'11" pitcher. Twins do have some experience in working with tall guys, but this is a real outlier. Sure will be fun if her figures it our though!
-
Buck did great, and more importantly got to make an important and positive memory with his kids. Man, those moonshots he was launching in round 1 were fun.
- 6 replies
-
- byron buxton
- oneil cruz
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
I think that's right: some of these folks are much more likely to get moved up to AAA if the Twins trade away some position players at the deadline and open up MLB slots for guys like Martin, Julien, etc. I think the Twins want guys like GG and Culpepper playing every day and will be less concerned whether they do it in AA or AAA, but just want them getting consistent ABs and time in the field. Fedko's case is a little more interesting, as he's 26 and hasn't really been on the prospect radar. I'd say he's more likely to get a move to test how he does at a higher level. Interesting how the breakout prospects this season have been mostly on the position side. Thrilled to see Zebby looking good. The sooner we can get him back to take the Adams slot, the better.
- 9 replies
-
- brandon winokur
- zebby matthews
- (and 8 more)
-
I think one of the things we're seeing in this draft is that the Twins aren't all that dogmatic in their player profiling for what they "want" in a draft pick. To me, I look at this draft and see a team looking to get the most value they can with wherever they're picking. Lot of variety in this group to me, but all are reasonable/interesting picks for where they went. I don't think the Twins show a lot of interest in drafting for need, as a rule. Which is probably going to frustrate those who are worrying about the dearth of catching prospects in the system (I have concerns myself) or 1B depth. But considering how much of a crapshoot player development still is...I'm not too hung up on it.
- 39 replies
-
- 2025 mlb draft
- marek houston
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
"don't blame this kid for Delmon Young. don't blame this kid for Delmon Young..." That's going to be my mantra on this one. he's not his uncle. Hopefully he's not genetically predisposed to being an awful defensive player. Dmitri was a fine hitter. Delmon never lived up to expectations, but had some quality seasons at the plate. Both were awful in the field.
-
Prielipp is the only one out of that group that had a major arm surgery before the Twins drafted him. (Paddack was acquired via trade, as was Mahle, but Mahle hadn't had a major surgery) Canterino was perfectly healthy when they drafted him but is just looked like Rice University ruined him. I doubt the Twins are a significant outlier on drafting players that have had a TJ; it's an unfortunate reality that it's no longer a rare procedure. In this case, it's someone who is already well past his TJ and has been back pitching, and having TJ is not the kiss of death against a fine career. Seems like a value pick here. I suspect he would not have been there if he were further removed from surgery. If finding consistency with his slider is his biggest issue right now, that does sort of fit into the Twins teaching repertoire, doesn't it? Hard not to be intrigues with his stuff, and depending on how his offseason goes, he could be someone that rises quite quickly in the system.

