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TJSweens

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Everything posted by TJSweens

  1. Lee doesn't have the arm for 3B. We also don't know that hit bat plays at a corner position. His defensive profile fits 2B. Keaschall will ultimately be LF or 1B as he is brutal at 2B. In general I think the Twins place way too much emphasis on versatility. You wind up with a scenario where nobody is truly good at any one position.
  2. While I put very little stock in WAR, I agree with your point. Guys like Arraez and Bell don't move the meter and the Twins are not willing to go out and get players that do move the meter. They go out and get place holders and wait for a future that never comes.
  3. Not last year. Vazquez - .545 OPS. Jackson - .763.
  4. If he can strike out batters at the rate he struck out, he will win a Cy Young.
  5. I'm not advocating that either. I just think it's just a good idea to move Lee to a position that suits his skill set. 2B seems to Lee's destiny. Might as well move him there now. There are other stop gap options out there while we wait on Culpepper.
  6. No, but moving Lee to a position that doesn't demand range like SS seems like a prudent move.
  7. Defensively, he isn't good enough to play SS. Offensively, he isn't good enough to play a corner position. You can't throw a rock in this organization without hitting that
  8. Yep. The MLB draft is predictably unpredictable. A couple of the guys listed here may drop to the middle of the round. Cholowsky and Emerson may not even wind up being the top 2.
  9. I used to have an acquaintance who is a good friend of Walters. He admitted that Walters will just make stuff up to fill a column or try to create a self fulfilling prophecy. His best example of the latter was the constant Rick Majerus as the next Gophers coach rumors. The Gophers AD never talked to Majerus, but Walters kept pushing it with his trademarked "a little birdie says".
  10. I would have kept any one of these 4 on the 40 man roster over Julien. I'm baffled as to why they insist on giving another shot to a guy who has proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that he can't hit or field.
  11. I would add to that...no occasional moves to the OF. I'm tired of the mix and match, play everyone in 2 or 3 positions approach. You wind up with players who are a jack of all trades and a master of none. All kinds of defensive inconsistencies spring up from that.
  12. Ober has also hit the wall hard in September. In 2023 he got shut down the first 2 weeks of September after a few 4 and 5 inning starts in and was only used as an opener or out of the pen in the playoffs. In 2022 he was on and off the IL with groin issues. I think stikk think Ober has residual value. One year can be explained away. Two can't. I'd gage the market now. If there is no interest then of course, sit. I just think there be more interest than you realize.
  13. SWR could be a case of selling high. Ober would definitely not be selling high, but I'm worried that his value could evaporate completely with another year. Ever since Ober first made the majors I have been waiting for the other shoe to drop. I was wary of a long limbed, 6'9" pitcher who couldn't at least sit 93 mph with his fastball. His 91 mph fastball worked because of his extension. It had that "sneaky fast" quality. Just losing 1 mph made a huge difference. Then he to 89 and things got even worse. Ober also tends to wear down in the second half. I think the Twins already got the best they or anyone will get from Ober. I'd move him while he still has some residual value.
  14. What really is the core of this team? A 32 year old star CF who has lost his best years to injuries, an above average catcher on his last year of team control and a couple of very good 29 year old starting pitchers. That's a small core. The Twins won't spend enough in free agency to supplement a core like that. By the time our top prospects are productive major league players, this bunch will be older and likely at the end of their time with the Twins. I just think the least bad option is to finish the dismantling process and maximize the potential under the new CBA.
  15. This is another...if I were a president of baseball operations working for a bunch of cheap, tight fisted, miserly SOB's who would I sign...articles. I don't think Miguel Andujar fits the bill. Even if we stipulate that the Twins could make him their RHB first baseman, he can't stay on the field and the Twins will not shell out $5 to $7 million for a guy like that. The Twins do their free agent shopping at Axman Surplus. The Twins will wait until everyone else has picked through the bargain rack and then find somebody willing to sign a minor league deal with an invitation to spring training. That's how they got Ty France. If Andujar is still around at that point, then maybe.
  16. I'm sorry, but I don't see an "overall pitching staff that is undeniably deep on quality". I see Ryan and Lopez. Ryan has been good, but always has a problem finishing the year. Last year it was a virus. Before that, a shoulder strain. Before that a groin strain. Now Lopez is coming off an injury plagued season. Ober seems to wear down every year and now he has lost velocity that he didn't have a lot of to begin with. SWR is very good at home and terrible on the road. After that comes, Matthews, Bradley, Abel, Festa, Raya, Prielipp, Soto, etc, who are all so promising that people want to move most of them to the bullpen. Speaking of the bullpen...on second thought, I'd rather not.
  17. An all star, platinum glove CF with 30 HR power who can steal bases and is at a below market deal for 3 years should Garner a return of any of the prospects listed after #1.
  18. I agree with all of that and move Ober too. The Twins won't commit to anything until the revenue sharing and potential cap are resolved. By the time that happens, Buxton will be 35 with Ryan, Lopez, Oberr and Jeffers also in their 30's and free agents. The next potential Twins contender won't be built around any of those guys. It will be built around Jenkins, Rodriguez, Culpeper, Tait and whatever collection of in house and acquired pitchers emerge,
  19. There is precedent in Twins history as well. In 1982 Calvin Griffith decide his team was going nowhere and nothing to build around. Calvin had his own purge. Pretty well burned it to the ground. Then he brought up Hrbek, Gaetti, Laudner, Bush and Viola. He acquired minor leaguers like Tom Brunansky and Greg Gagne. We all know what the class of 82 accomplished.
  20. The way I look at it, with the pending lockout, the Twins aren't likely to return to relevance until 2028 at the earliest. They aren't likely to make any investment into their product until revenue sharing and cap issues are resolved. The players the Twins traded away will all be in their 30's by then. What the great purge did was expand the prospect base that should be major league ready at that point.
  21. Varland was moved to the bullpen where he had success. He was a complete failure as a starter. The plan was to see if he could close until Toronto called and offered Kendry Rojas who was perceived as too good to pass up. Rojas could actually be the starter you described.
  22. I understand your rationale. It's is not without merit. Personally, if the guy has the upside as a starter that they claim, I would rather they go through the tedious process of stretching him out even if it is in the minors. Prielipp won't be able to build up to starter innings in the pen. As I said before, when the Twins move a starter to the pen, it tends to be permanent. To me that is a waste when a pitcher has top of the rotation potential.
  23. I think most of these names are just place holders until Jenkins, Rodriguez and Culpepper are ready and or are past the threat of super 2 status.
  24. I think Stevenson is stretching the context of what Falvey is saying a bit. Falvey says he is excited about the potential of the group of pitchers. Not specifically in terms of the bullpen. Raya fits the definition of a failed starter with a big arm like Louie was. Prielipp doesn't. They may be considering it, but Falvey's comments are a long way from wanting it or even leaning that way.
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