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Everything posted by The Great Hambino
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I pledge to purchase ZERO commercial real estate until the team is sold. That'll show em
- 288 replies
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- jim pohlad
- joe pohlad
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Looking back, he used the phrase "a transaction will take place". He's technically right!
- 288 replies
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- jim pohlad
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There is zero chance Joe Pohlad has any idea what this sentence means. Here's what I'm afraid of: now Derek "I Was Just Following Orders" Falvey has complete autonomy to run the baseball ops however he sees fit with no threat to his job as long as he adheres to the budget. If I'm reading that right, then expect to see some, let's call them avant-garde philosophies as he tries to be the next Billy Beane. Also, Rocco isn't going anywhere. His boss has no pressure to win, so why would he be replaced if he's going along with the program?
- 288 replies
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- jim pohlad
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Whatever the pecking order is in determining who among the group of prospect/recent prospect starting pitcher options they have to determine the future rotation (and by exclusion, the future bullpen), Adams and Ohl are certainly at the bottom of it. There's no reason not to give them some cracks at short relief to see how their stuff plays in short bursts. If they stick, then whatever amount of pocket change that gets allocated to bringing in relievers this offseason would need to be spread out across one fewer acquisition. So they can get target 2 $1.5MM guys instead of 3 $1MM guys. That was a depressing sentence to type.
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My point is it's not going to continue decreasing at that rate, and will be partially offset by revenue sharing if it does, so they're pretty near their revenue floor at this point. And they're more likely to maintain their profit margins by cutting costs than by trying to increase their revenue. Confirmation of this will come this winter with what they do to payroll. I think every action they've taken recently has been something they would do if they were planning to run a shoestring budget on payroll. I don't think they're motivated by the risk of further revenue loss to spend more.
- 288 replies
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- jim pohlad
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My understanding is that those linear relationships are for much lower amounts than what had been in place with Bally's, so they're not moving the needle much one way or the other. Getting packaged together with centralized revenue certainly would help, but like you said, it's to be seen if they can get enough teams to make it viable. On top of that, how easy is it going to be shopping MLB media rights in the aftermath of a work stoppage? No wonder they couldn't find a buyer at their number
- 288 replies
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- jim pohlad
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I don't think TV revenues can plummet any further. Stadium revenues I suppose could, but but that would at least partially be offset by increased revenue sharing. They're pretty close to their revenue floor. <Please turn on "Sound of Silence" by Simon & Garfunkel while reading this next passage for the full experience> Now being almost a full season with TwinsTV as the new normal, they have an idea of what future revenues they can expect. What I think and fear is happening is a gutting of payroll to levels that will maintain their profit margin. They don't need to try to increase revenue by spending more. Increased spending involves risk that they they won't increase revenues to offset the additional expense. From their cynical point of view, why risk that guaranteed profit obtained by slashing salaries? In other words, the Twins have officially adopted the Pirates' business model. I think we Twins fans now are left rooting for a complete re-shaping of baseball's economics in the next CBA. That's the only thing that could save us from budgetball in perpetuity
- 288 replies
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- jim pohlad
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I dunno, other sports have been able to come to an agreement on revenue definition Getting the elites onboard is going to be a real problem, but I can think of two ways to get their buy-in: 1) Have some sort of weighted revenue distribution that distributes more revenue to the biggest revenue generators. Sorta like how the ACC got Clemson and Florida State to avoid blowing up the conference. 2) The small and mid market teams get a big enough voting bloc to ratify a proposal without the elites. The Yankees might/will throw a fit, but their value goes waaaaaay down if they don't have anyone to play against
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Interesting question If I don't know the position, I'm going hit>power>field>run>arm. It gets fuzzy at the bottom since run and arm are pretty interconnected to your field tool. There's just a low ceiling on how valuable you can be if you can't hit. On the other hand, you can be Luis Arraez if your only tool is hit.
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If there's that big of a spread, then the floor and cap aren't actually doing anything because they aren't meaningfully changing spending habits on either end. The NFL, NBA, and NHL all have a floor between 75%-90% of their cap. In order to make this work, they need to agree on this spread, then work backward to adjust the revenue sharing to make it work. The revenue sharing piece will be hardest to get buy-in from the large markets. And the players have to get on the same page to make gains on the bottom end of their spectrum - higher minimum salaries, shorter path to free agency, etc - in exchange for allowing a cap. Basically, both parties are going to have a hard time agreeing internally on what to propose to the other party. And caps are usually pegged to a percentage of revenue, so they have to agree both on that percentage as well as what constitutes revenue. So, yeah. It's a mess
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I don't want this to come across as a criticism of the article, because I think it's very helpful to see the status quo heading into next year. But while this is a very interesting starting point, there's basically zero chance that this is the 2026 opening day roster. If the vet starters are retained, then they should be making some real investments in the roster to capitalize on the remaining Ryan/Lopez years. If they are traded away (IMO the likelier scenario), then they're embracing a full-on rebuild and any roster investment will be used to fill what they currently can't - backup CF (Outman ain't it), catching depth, live bodies for the bullpen option/DFA train (while some of the starting prospects will move to the bullpen eventually, they will need placeholders while they get their chance to audition for the rotation). I see two distinct ways they can pivot, likely dependent on the ownership situation. But continuing to straddle that line into next year I think would be the worst of both worlds. It is going to take time to sort our the rotation and bullpen pieces, and banking on several position player prospects hitting their 2026 ceilings (which is what would have to happen for this to be a competitive lineup without some real additions) doesn't seem like a super viable plan.
- 64 replies
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- joe ryan
- pablo lopez
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Yeah, pegging it to a fixed time period like Rule V eligibility is the most straightforward way I can think of to fix that issue. I don't think I fully agree on the cap, because I think a floor is needed to create competitive balance as much as a cap (I think the Pirates of the world are as responsible for the competitive imbalance in baseball as the Dodgers - okay not as responsible, but definitely don't get the level of blame they deserve), and you don't get a floor without a cap
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If they really are working on things that can't be worked on in the majors for some reason, then fine. But I feel like service time manipulation has some role in this decision, and if it does, that sucks. I know it's probably as likely as Rob Manfred and Bryce Harper enjoying a nice family vacation together, but I hope anything that disincentivizes teams from putting their 26 best available players on the active roster gets exterminated in the next CBA. You don't hear about NFL teams keeping guys on the practice squad or NBA teams keeping guys in the G League to squeeze out more control on a technicality. Anticompetitive behaviors like this have to go if players are ever going bend on a salary cap
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Five Ways the Twins Can Salvage 2025
The Great Hambino replied to Eric Blonigen's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I think the shelving of Vasquez may have flipped Gasper's hourglass back over. How telling is it that Gasper got the start over Pereda behind the plate when Jeffers DH'd on Sunday? I feel like there are better uses of a 26-man roster spot than someone whose primary role is 3rd catcher. If Pereda isn't worth a look there, then what exactly is he doing up with the big club? -
The odds of a Star Wars-themed Luke Keaschall bobblehead giveaway at Target Field occurring at some point during the 2026 season have been taken off the board
- 52 replies
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- jose urena
- ryan jeffers
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I’d like to get a final verdict on some of the s-or-get-off-the-pot position players like Martin, Julien, even Outman. Play them now so they don’t have do to as much guessing next spring. If they, especially Outman, can’t show something the rest of the year, might be time to cut bait and let the next wave get those opportunities Also, since they’re relying pretty heavily on building a bullpen out of the spare parts remaining from their young rotation hopefuls, I’d like to see some of the rotation long shots like Ohl and maybe Adams get a crack at some one inning relief. See if they have something worth building on in that department; see if they have some stuff that could translate to a one-inning role
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In an era of the elite teams pretty much cornering the elite free agent market, I'm guessing fans of the New York teams would've expected a combined championships total of greater than zero
- 17 replies
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- carlos correa
- byron buxton
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It's amazing how removing all expectations can improve the enjoyment of watching this team play I find it now much easier to focus on the good, whereas watching them fade from contention made it easier to focus on the bad
- 37 replies
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- luke keaschall
- kody clemens
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