jmlease1
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Everything posted by jmlease1
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Eeles is a heck of a story. Good for the twins in giving him a chance out of an independent league. Better on Eeles for taking the opportunity and running with it. He crushed A-ball and has been great in AAA. he's essentially created a career for himself in professional baseball. That's pretty amazing. If he can keep hitting like this he's going to get a chance. The next leap is the hardest one, but who can say? he might just do it. I'd love to know more about his defense: he's playing all over the place and seems to be doing ok? The Twins prize positional flexibility (I'll admit, I'm a big fan of it too) so that certainly will help his cause if he can function in a lot of roles. He's taking walks, swiping bags, and there seems to be enough pop in his bat that he's not just a no-threat singles hitter. Short doesn't mean you can't play. I doubt they bump him up to AAA if they didn't think he had a chance.
- 16 replies
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- payton eeles
- kody funderburk
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It's a complicated issue. Is it max effort stressors as players continue to push the tolerances of the human body, or repetitive stress issues from year round training? Both? Are we seeing the results of playing so many more games at younger ages and getting into travel teams and so forth at younger ages? What's the impact of kids specializing in one sport at younger and younger ages? I don't have kids and I'm not involved in youth sports any longer and even I hear about coaches pushing kids to pick one sport over another as they're hitting middle school FFS. May have been real benefits to kids playing different sports or just having an actual off-season where they weren't constantly playing and/or training. i think it's going to be hard to regulate at the MLB level via rule changes. Maybe the real solutions start much earlier?
- 42 replies
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- carlos correa
- byron buxton
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Haven't seen anyone say we're WS bound, but can't we be happy about a win? I mean, dang.
- 58 replies
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- zebby matthews
- byron buxton
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Haven't seen anyone say we're WS bound, but can't we be happy about a win? I mean, dang.
- 58 replies
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- zebby matthews
- byron buxton
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A good win. Nice job by Matthews; it would be awesome if he's figuring some things out and forces hitters to adjust to him down the stretch rather than him needing to adjust more. I would still like to see more from the offense; 4 runs isn't bad, but sure would be nice to see the team put up 6 again and make it a little easier to breathe when the bullpen is trying to hold the lead.
- 58 replies
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- zebby matthews
- byron buxton
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Really tough beat for the Twins offense, getting runners on base and doing little with them after the initial flurry. Have to do better than the 3 runs. I'm also going to take a moment to bash the tv broadcast duo: Provus decided to try and be funny last night, comparing a Cleveland hitter to Jeffrey Jones, the actor who played Ed Rooney in Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Nice try, except that Jones is a convicted sex offender. Maybe don't comp a player to a criminal like that, my guy. The ed Rooney comp might have been a little cringe, but specifically calling out the actor by name and comparing a player to a convict is bad form. Maybe less funny from you, more call the game, especially if you're not doing the research. less gross, but still problematic: Perk confessing that he's never seen Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Oy.
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I think there's a decent chance that both start back in AA, just because of the crowd in Saint Paul. I'm expecting Varland to graduate into the bullpen and SWR has done enough to earn a presumption for MLB rotation in 2025, but Ryan and Paddack are going to be back so that would mean Festa, Matthews, Morris, Adams, and Nowlin might make up the initial AAA crop. That would keep Raya, Lewis, and Culpepper in AA to start. but regardless of how it shuffles out, I'm pretty excited to have that many starting pitching prospects in the high minors for 2025.
- 9 replies
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- c.j. culpepper
- alex isola
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Is it no leash, or they're just running too far out on it? If they're needing 20+ pitches to get through every inning, then no, they're not lasting out there. Festa 72 pitches and 3 BBs in 3 2/3 SWR 69 pitches and 3 BBs in 3 Zebby 61 pitches and 2 BBs in 3 1/3 They haven't exactly been efficient lately. Festa's the only one who has done 3 scoreless to start. but this is also the Kobayashi Maru for the manager: if he leaves Festa, SWR, or Matthews out there as their pitch counts rise and they wobble through innings and they get hammered, he's a fool for not pulling them sooner as they "obviously" didn't have it; if he yanks them before they collapse and the bullpen fails, he's a fool for not rising with his starter.
- 25 replies
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- pablo lopez
- zebby matthews
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Dang, I kind of forgot about Culpepper! I expect he'll start back in AA, but if he stays healthy he'll be Saint Paul next season as the pitching pipeline continues to roll on. Wish Walker Jenkins had more time to get acclimated to AA before the end of the season. Really wonder if they'll send him to the AFL since he missed a big chunk of time at the start of the season or if they'll just let him have an offseason. He might not have immediately set Wichita on fire, but I think he's probably ready for it next season. What a talent.
- 9 replies
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- c.j. culpepper
- alex isola
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The Jhoan Durán Panic Is Hugely Overblown
jmlease1 replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
Hopefully we can get Correa back on the field so he can help steady the defense. He's so steady back there, so smart with his positioning that it helps everyone. he's definitely been a little more nervy for us lately, but a lot of the underlying numbers are still very good. He's had a bizarre level of balls drop in for hits when guys actually manage to put one in play lately, and you have to think that will even out. I also have to keep reminding myself that this is only his 3rd season in MLB! -
Glad to see Cory Lewis finishing the year strong. he certainly looks like he's back in the groove and I expect we'll have him in AAA next season. It's going to be very interesting to see how the Twins figure out the back end of the rotation in MLB and staff AAA to start next season, but there should be very good depth from the jump and if/when we need starting pitcher reinforcements in MLB we're going to be drawing on real prospects again, which is exactly where we want to be. (My guess on the rotations as of right now: MLB is Lopez, Ober, Ryan, SWR, Paddack and AAA is Festa, Matthews, Morris, Adams, Lewis, Nowlin. yes, i think they'll run a 6-man in AAA. But maybe Nowlin or Lewis starts in AA. I think Varland is done being a starter; he's been passed by SWR, Festa, and Matthews and there's enough other depth that they're better off moving him to the bullpen and letting him be a force there. I'm betting Raya repeats AA at the start of the season.) That's real depth. will any of the AAA guys emerge as a playoff-caliber starter? we'll see but there's plenty to like from guys like Festa, Matthews, and Lewis. Lot of good development being done in the the minors. Now, if we could just keep the hitters healthy...
- 9 replies
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- jeferson morales
- carson mccusker
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Glad to see Rosario healthy to finish the season. I'm a fan of his and he's had a solid enough season despite the injuries in his first crack at AA. I think winter ball might do him some good since he missed so much time. Noah Miller is showing exactly why the Twins traded him. He just can't hit much. Nice for him to get a couple of doubles, but overall he's not much of a threat at the plate and pitchers are treating him accordingly. The glove is excellent and the only reason he's in AA, but he'll be back in Tulsa next season. he's still young enough to develop into a better hitter, but he's got a big hill to climb.
- 10 replies
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- payton eeles
- diego a castillo
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As noted on the broadcast, Matthews appeared to be having a blister problem last night. That might have been part of his struggles last night as well as the early hook. I'll take the series win: if the Twins get back to winning series down the stretch they'll be in the playoffs for sure, where they belong. Nice to see Royce bust out last night, although it's too bad he didn't convert the Grand Slam. Missed it by THAT much. Keep grinding, boys!
- 27 replies
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- royce lewis
- zebby matthews
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I think this is the issue: we're seeing too many guys get thrown out where the play isn't close. If it was a bunch of close plays and the ball gets there just in time or it was a perfect strike or a great tag or something...that's one thing. Even if all of them happen to go against the team then you're talking about great plays by the other team or bad luck and it's ok. but it's not just one or two memorable ones where the guy is out easily. There's a whole litany at this point. Maybe it means that the players need to know when to take the foot off the gas earlier coming around second knowing they won't have enough in the tank to make it home...but it sure feels like Watkins needs to have better judgment and be a little more conservative in sending our fairly slow and oft-injured roster.
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Winning is the best deodorant. Nice to see the bats get going early and often. The big blast from Farmer made a difference. Pablo looked pretty good, so it was a bit odd to see him have the wobbly inning, but still nice to see him roll through 7 with good efficiency. His velocity looks good, the movement on the sweeper is pretty nasty. I'm terrible at estimating HR distances. I would have thought that Wallner's was longer, because boy howdy that was a blast. Certainly no doubt about it!
- 43 replies
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- pablo lopez
- kyle farmer
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Rocco Baldelli has a .529 Win % with the MN Twins (as you noted: 2019 counts). Since that fantastic season, he also had a .600 Win % in 2020, then 2 losing seasons, another playoff team in 2023 and despite the horrid stretch their in right now, the Twins are still likely to finish with a winning record and still have pretty good odds of making the playoffs. But I find it interesting that you so easily find a way to discount Baldelli's best seasons with the club? Let's take Ron Gardenhire if we want to a) do the "how's he been lately?" bit, and b) address the issue of whether Rocco would get another managing job if he wanted one, since that was the point I was trying to make anyways. Gardy had a .507 Win % with the franchise in 13 seasons. 8 winning seasons, 5 losing ones. he never cracked 60% wins in his career, though he came close a couple of times. Following the 2010 season, easily his best season in several years, the team absolutely cratered and Gardy never had another winning season as Twins manager. Rocco may have had a couple of poor seasons after his initial success, but the team also rebounded to win their first playoff series in over 20 years and first playoff game since Gardy's 3rd season as manager. YMMV on whether the Twins stuck with Gardy too long or not, but the reality is Gardy had 10 consecutive seasons to end his tenure with the franchise where they did not win a playoff game. That said, Gardy, despite his exceptionally long tenure and relationship with the Twins and being more than 15 years older than Rocco is now got another chance to manage in MLB. It didn't go well for him, but that's another matter. The case for Rocco not getting another chance to manage in MLB if the team fires him at the end of the season is basically a group of fans saying "I don't like him".
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The fact that you think a former AL Manager of the Year with a quality record and win % and a sterling reputation around MLB won't get another chance to manage says a lot. If Rocco loses his job in the offseason, the only reason he won't manage another team is if he decides he doesn't want to do it. He made good money as a player, has made good money as a manager and doesn't need it. But if he's willing to go to Miami or Texas or Anaheim etc he'll definitely be managing again. If he wants it.
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The real issue this team is facing right now is that they've been missing guys like Correa, Buxton, and Ryan for a long stretch now (and Ryan ain't coming back). That's a talent deficit, and it makes it harder to find room to rest guys. What I find ridiculous is this idea that the Twins need more "fire" (whatever the hell that means) or that players can't be tired because they're paid a lot. There's absolutely no way that these players don't care about the result and aren't giving their best effort; I dare anyone to call someone on the roster a malingerer and actually have anything to back it up other than being mad about their performance or because they just don't like that player's game. (hint: no one will have anything. no one.) They're struggling right now, and it sucks. The manager will probably get fired if they collapse all the way out of the playoffs, not because it's really Rocco's fault or because he's a bad manager but because it's a lot easier to change the manager than to change the players. Sometimes it even works, just getting a different voice can matter even if they're saying the same things. But unless this front office changes (and I know there are many on this site who want nothing more), the next manager won't substantively change all that much, it'll just be a change in personality.
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Twins Minor League Report (9/6): Playoff Hopes Dashed
jmlease1 replied to Tom Froemming's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
Going to be a lot of starting pitching depth at AAA next season, which is great. Not going to be much room for a retread veteran there, which seems fine. Wonder if Lewis might start the season in AA just because of the crowding (and the fact that he missed a fair amount of time this year). Assuming no FA signings, the MLB rotation could be: Lopez, Ober, Ryan, SWR, and Paddack with AAA having Festa, Matthews, Morris, Raya, and Lewis (I think Varland moves to the bullpen from the jump next season). That's quite a bit of starting pitching depth. (and we still have guys like Culpepper, Adams, Jones, and Nowlin coming along) Good progress by the hitters this season in the minors, but the injuries were a bummer. Jenkins is the real deal, I keep having to remind myself that it's his first full pro season, because he's not acting like it. Thought GG and Doncon did fine in Cedar Rapids at age 20. Hopefully Keaschall comes back strong from the surgery; he was doing great before getting hurt. Emma will be the first OF called up next season, I think, and he has star power. Always interesting how you can have a ton of talent in the minors and the teams don't win, but guys cycle through quickly at times.- 13 replies
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- marco raya
- payton eeles
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I think the Twins absolutely learned that lesson (maybe too well) about having backup and injury replacement options, which is why we acquired Margot, rather than just running with Martin. We went into this season with many options behind Buxton this season: Margot (in theory), Castro, then Martin, plus Helman, Kiersey... and of course in 2023 we had Michael A. Taylor. We're not calling up guys out of A-ball to start games on the MLB roster any longer.
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Walker Jenkins continues to impress. Please stay healthy! I keep having to remind myself that this is his first full season in pro ball. But I'm increasingly of the opinion that he will start next season in AA. Maybe the Twins will want to see more than 35-40 games at high A, but...maybe not! He's so good.
- 8 replies
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- yunior severino
- carson mccusker
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I'm not sure it matters much where he starts next season; I suspect he'll be in Wichita pretty quickly even if he starts in Cedar Rapids. he's flying through the minors at his age and I expect he'll make his MLB debut in 2026. What a talent.
- 8 replies
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- ty langenberg
- brandon winokur
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He's exceptionally well-suited to play RF, where his cannon of an arm plays up and his range is less of an issue. His speed is more than enough to cover the area, but it does take him a while to get going, so he's not going to do as well on those balls where you need a great jump to get there. that's not as important in RF, though. he'll handle the balls that he can get under just fine, and has the ability to play balls effectively off the wall and keep runners from freely advancing. It's going to be interesting to see how he manages at the plate. He's right in his physical prime so it shouldn't be a surprise that a player who has always crushed baseballs is absolutely crushing baseballs. He's hitting the ball hard, he's hitting it in the air, and it goes a long way. If he makes enough contact, he should be able to do this, for as long as he's able to catch up to fastballs. I think where things fell apart for Sano was when the injuries started to take their toll and he couldn't catch up to the good fastball up in the zone any longer, but YMMV. nothing wrong with having a player with a unique profile. Wallner has a full season's worth of MLB games under his belt now and has put up an OPS+ of 140. He's improved at the plate every season, despite the Ks. Maybe he's just a different guy?
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I'm going to be interested to see if/where Doncon lands on the prospect list next year. He's had a solid season this year, showing real improvement over his last year with the Dodgers and earning his way up to high A at 20. He's still playing plenty of SS, which says there's still decent performance defensively. It's a bummer that he missed basically all of August, so hopefully he can get in a little more game time before the end of the minor league season, but it seems like a successful one for him. I'm guessing he starts next season in Cedar Rapids and we'll see if he can earn his way to AA by midseason. His trade partner Noah Miller got promoted to AA recently, and has struggled with the bat. While his glove is excellent, I think we can see exactly why the Twins were ready to move on from him: he's simply no threat at the plate at all. While it's a small sample size in AA so far, it looks like facing pitchers with better command is going to be a real problem: he can't buff his numbers with walks the same way, not against guys who aren't afraid to throw him a strike and have the ability to do it when they need it. He's showing no real pop in his bat and without superior contact skills, even his excellent glove isn't going to be enough. I don't think the Dodgers "fixed" anything here. he's still fairly young and could develop as a hitter, but in 3 full seasons of professional baseball, he hasn't improved at the plate. Winokur is finishing the season strong, and that's good to see. he certainly had some challenges this season, but seems to have found his power stroke again. I think he'll move up to Cedar Rapids as well next year.
- 8 replies
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- ty langenberg
- brandon winokur
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So happy to see E-Man off the IL and playing. Hope he finishes the season strong in AAA. He was absolutely mashing it before he got hurt. I expect him to start in AAA next season but we will certainly see him in MLB in 2025. Huge talent. Good to have Laweryson pitch well, but he's really had a rough last 2 seasons. I really thought he was going to become a bullpen option for the Twins by now after he looked so good in 2022, but he wasn't very good in 2023 in AAA and got demoted to AA this year...and has somehow been worse? Oof. Outside of some injuries it's been a very good year for the farm system , I think.
- 4 replies
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- emmanuel rodriguez
- byron buxton
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