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Everything posted by The Great Hambino
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Bell is another addition to the amorphous blob of mediocrity gumming up 1B/DH Caratini potentially could raise the floor the most, but that's partially due to simply replacing Vasquez, who was a bottomless pit at the plate. At least he provides some cover for the position next year. This was probably my favorite move. Rogers was needed, but he's not a high leverage option on a good team anymore. The amount of proven high leverage options in the bullpen still maxes out at one, and that's being very generous toward Sands. The trades were little more than shuffling deck chairs. Depth has improved, but something will have gone wrong if any of them find themselves to be regular starters this year. You could argue that every move raised their floor and that none raised their ceiling. They need to raise the ceiling if they're serious about being competitive. And since there are no more ceiling-raising moves to be made without sending out some near-major league ready prospects (which they aren't going to do), then they're just wishing/hoping/praying on internal development to raise that ceiling. In other words, they're putting out what's largely the same starting unit as the end of last year and expecting different results. Is there a word for that?
- 66 replies
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- josh bell
- taylor rogers
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Agreed. At this point, ending the season with a clear path forward for 2027 and beyond would be a success in my mind. Part of being able to sort out the bullpen will be some of the young starters realizing their potential and establishing themselves as core pieces of the future rotation. If no one can establish themselves there, then they're not really in a much better position come this time next year. I't's much better for the bullpen if they're making tough decisions about moving excess starting pitching potential - either to the bullpen or as a trade piece to balance out the roster - than having to keep some shaky starting pitching in the rotation out of necessity
- 69 replies
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- taylor rogers
- justin topa
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Every year it seems like 10-12 of the 15 modern day finalists belong in the HOF. How they ever end up with fewer than the max of 5 going in is a failure of process. What they ought to do is start with a yes/no vote for every candidate without any constraints. No having to choose which deserving HOFer gets your vote. Then take the group with >80% of the vote and have your comparative discussions just within that group. When voters have to resort to game theory to decide whom to give their votes, you end up with artificially lower vote percentages than you'd get from a straight yes/no, because not all voters apply their game theory the same way. Kinda like the guy (I forget who) explained not voting for Belichick because he wanted to vote for the three senior players and could only cast three votes. Apply whatever caps you want to a class after votes are cast, not before. Oh well. At least Eli didn't get in (and I WILL die on that hill!)
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NFL Playoffs/Early Offseason
The Great Hambino replied to TheLeviathan's topic in Minnesota Vikings Talk
The way the HOF finalist voting is structured, this means Roger Craig was deemed more HOF-worthy than Bill Belichick and Robert Kraft. An argument could be made that an improvement in process might be a good idea. ETA: as wackadoodle as the veteran/coach/contributor process was, I think the standard group produced a very good class. IMO, those were the four most deserving HOFers of the 15 finalists. But am I alone in thinking it's weird that Isaac Bruce is in the hall while Torry Holt isn't? -
One positive aspect of the pitching portion of the roster: outside of Pablo, SWR, Rogers, and Topa, every pitcher currently on the 40-man has options remaining, many of them with multiple remaining. That should, in theory, allow them to be patient and flexible as the younger guys sort out their roles and grow into new ones if necessary. Whether their apparent desperation to win this year allows them to be patient remains to be seen
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I thought that might be the case but I wasn't sure. So I guess 24-25 teams then could be possibly under the MLB umbrella come negotiation time. I'm not convinced the Cubs' set-up is on solid ground. And even if they don't cede all control to MLB, there's potential options - licensing agreements, etc - to get all teams onto a single platform for distribution. Or perhaps revenue sharing can be modified for teams outside of MLB distribution. The bottom line is the more teams that are distributed by MLB, the better it is for the Twins
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Of the teams that still have their own deals, how many would be considered secure enough to last long-term? Definitely Dodgers, Red Sox, Yankees, and Mets. Possibly the Cubs and Blue Jays. Are the NBC-backed RSNs (Phillies, Giants) on solid ground? The rest would seem to be extremely vulnerable. So that means by the time they're negotiating new rights, MLB could potentially have as many as 24-26 teams in the fold. That may be past the tipping point that forces the elites to play nice with everyone else in terms of local TV revenue
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If there's a silver lining to any of this, it means that Tom is much more concerned with their short-term prospects at the expense of long-term prospects (without any actual investment in terms of dollars), which could be an indication that they're looking to go back to market with the franchise post-CBA/TV rights renewals. Why care about what happens past 2028 if you're looking to sell the team? It's a flawed argument, but one you can see if you squint hard enough.
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He's on record that he's against trading any of their all-stars. Keeping them is part of his strategy because he foolishly believes that constitutes doing something for the fans. If I'm wrong - and to be clear, I hope I am because this roster is screaming for a rebuild and delaying moving Lopez/Ryan just serves to diminish their potential returns (especially Ryan) - then I would expect one or both to be moved before Opening Day. If that happens, then I'll happily concede that it was Falvey going against ownership wishes in retaining those assets
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This is where I disagree. In his initial press conference, when Gleeman pressed him on the thoughts of continuing the teardown, Tom had this to say: -------------------------------------------- The Twins signaled to teams at the end of November, after conversations with their new ownership structure, they plan to keep their All-Star players. It’s the “needle that we’re trying to thread,” Pohlad said, between fielding a competitive team next year while shifting to a younger core of the roster. “There was probably an argument to tear the whole thing down, get as much value as you can for our players, and really put an emphasis on two years from now or three years from now,” said Pohlad, who assumed control of the team from his brother Joe. “On paper, yeah, maybe that makes sense. But you can’t just look at things on paper. We owe the fanbase something. We owe our veteran and star players something. We owe this organization something. And that something is hope.” ----------------------------------------------- I don't know how to read this in any way other than Tom being fully on board with - insisting, in fact - that Lopez and Ryan had to be retained. If I'm wrong, then we should expect to see one or both traded before Opening Day now that Falvey is no longer there to prevent this from happening. And I'd be very happy to be wrong on this as I've been on Team Rebuild ever since the trade deadline
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Tom is still insisting that the team will be competitive in 2026. He said that explicitly during is media rounds after they announced Falvey is leaving. That is a completely unrealistic expectation ETA: he also said this while begging reporters to "get off of payroll", meaning he is expecting this to be accomplished with diminished resources.
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FWIW, FanGraphs has downgraded the Twins' win projection to 77 with their latest update after accounting for the bulk of this offseason's transactions
- 50 replies
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- bryon buxton
- pablo lopez
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I'm going to make a few assumptions here that could change my opinion of how this all went down if they aren't true: 1. Tom had no involvement in the trade deadline strategy. I haven't seen anything to suggest that he did. 2. Falvey wasn't leaving meaningful budgeted money on the table in this offseason. Comments from both Tom's camp and Falvey's camp seem to suggest there's room for another modestly-priced reliever, but nothing that would suggest a budget even approaching last year's budget 3. The decision to part ways happened a few weeks ago. Again, this seems to have been suggested by both Tom and Falvey 4. Tom's strategy is insisting that the roster they had at the end of last season minus approx. $30MM in payroll budget will be competitive in 2026. If all that is true, then there was no possible way for Falvey to execute ownership's strategy on the baseball side of things, and certainly not by mid-January. The strategy is built upon the ideas that the team is good enough to compete as is with a drastically reduced budget, and that simply retaining players that were already a part of this failed roster constitutes giving the fans hope. That is an objectively terrible strategy. If Falvey was failing on the business side of things (which he never should've been put in charge of to begin with, to be honest), then Tom could've relieved him of just that portion of his responsibilities. If Falvey had left over that (plausible), then we're talking about a mutual parting, not a firing. Ask yourselves this: if you are continuing to insist that the roster Falvey put together under the constraints listed above will be competitive, why would he need to be fired? If you had already determined that he was going to be fired, why'd you trot him out front and center at TwinsFest? If Falvey's vision was so unworkable, then why are you handing the reigns over to his inexperienced underling? As far as I know, there's nothing interim about Zoll's current position. This isn't to say that Falvey was doing a great job or anything. There are strong arguments that he could've been justifiably fired at multiple points going back to at least the end of the 2024 season. But to suggest that Tom had needed time to evaluate the direction of the organization as if he was some complete outsider isn't really accurate. Tom hadn't been involved in all the day-to-day operations, but he wasn't completely out of the loop either. He was already on the board of directors. He'd been heavily involved in the sale process. He should've been at least semi-aware of the operations and the direction the team had chosen at the deadline. If he thought that Falvey's team outlook didn't align with his preferred strategy going forward, then he should've shown him the door at the same time as Joe. It was reported that the decision to pull Joe out and replace thim with Tom happened about a month before the switch was announced. These conversations about alignment on strategy should've been happening at that time. But once you've decided to keep him, then you have to let Falvey's execution on the baseball side play out. If/when the team shows that isn't competitive, you fire him then and have Zoll handle the trade deadline. But to fire him now due to improper execution of a strategy implemented after last year's trade deadline makes no sense to me.
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The 2022 trade deadline that brought us Mahle and Jorge Lopez belongs in the worst-moves discussion You could argue that no single draft pick belongs in a conversation like this given their inherent low likelihood of meaningful success at the major league level, but if one did, the Keoni Cavaco pick might belong among the worst moves made. It was a real head scratcher at the time, and guys like Corbin Carroll and Bryson Stott were picked in the immediate aftermath. On the other hand, the Polanco/Kepler extensions were great examples of smart moves mid-market teams can make to help extend their competitive windows in a relatively cost-controlled manner. They handicapped their opportunity to capitalize with subsequent awful moves, but they could've really been cooking if they'd had some better success with some of the moves that ended up on the bad part of this list Speaking of Polanco, the remaining potential of Gabe Gonzalez and and Polanco's rough 2024 knock that trade out of contention for the bad part of this list. It wasn't good, but there are levels to this suckitude. It can't compete with those on the list
- 60 replies
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- derek falvey
- pablo lopez
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Dilfer, but a well-trained golden retriever could've won the Super Bowl with that defense I know golden retrievers are better known for their receiving skills, but you know what I mean
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Apparently Brzezinski will run the draft. Does KOC ascend to the dual role?
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Because there's no equivalent of Zoll on the business side (as far as I know), they don't need to hire a head of baseball right now. And your potential pool for candidates on the business side is much deeper since that person doesn't necessarily need to come from baseball. Now that I think of it, I don't ever recall hearing or seeing much of Zoll at all until the ownership structure changed. Then all of a sudden he was at the big kid table for pressers and whatnot. Excuse me while I go get the Reynolds Wrap; I think I need a new hat
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If this really truly was a mutual decision - and that's a pretty big if - then the most plausible explanation I can think of given the comments about "ownership transitions" and "leadership an structure of the club" is that the new people in charge saw that it was not a good idea to have one guy running both business and baseball ops, and Falvey wasn't too hot on the idea of a demotion. I have no explanation for the timing. Seems like the kind of decision that should've been happening when Tom took over
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Keith Law ranks the MLB farm systems
The Great Hambino replied to tony&rodney's topic in Twins Minor League Talk
I don't know what to make of being ranked #21 here but #8 elsewhere, like ESPN. I'd expect there to be some variance, but top 10 vs bottom 10 is quite the range -
Under. 69-93 after another selling trade deadline I am optimistic ... for 2028
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In this game of "What Happened to Danny?", I see your Santana and raise you a Valencia 3rd in ROY voting, then a positively Outman-ian decline. And like your guy Santana, had himself a mini-renaissance elsewhere
- 85 replies
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- pierson ohl
- edouard julien
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NFL Playoffs/Early Offseason
The Great Hambino replied to TheLeviathan's topic in Minnesota Vikings Talk
I don't know why any HC candidate would be shying away from the Browns' QB situation. You get to choose between two Pro Bowlers!! -
FA reliever incoming? For as much heat as Julien and his iron glove got, not too bad of an ROI for an 18th round pick. And he can always say he hit a homer in a tight playoff elimination game
- 85 replies
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- pierson ohl
- edouard julien
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