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mikelink45

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Everything posted by mikelink45

  1. I have no solution, but like me most season ticket holders are not in the demographic this articles addresses and I am fearful of the sports future as it moved down the spectrum - Vikings, Timberwolves, Lynx, Wild, United and fishing, hunting, lake cabins, boating, concerts, picnics. Not sure where to put the Twins. I know that driving 100 miles to a game with the team playing lousy is not motivating - especially when the concessions and parking eat up more money. I am not even motivated to listen on the radio anymore. I just catch the 10 minute MLB.com summary which in this season is too long.
  2. If the article is about drawing a younger generation it is not through season ticket packages - it is about marketing young stars - giving the team an identity the youth can get connected to like Ant on the Timberwolves. The games have sped up which is good, but the Twins forgot the play exciting ball part of the equation.
  3. Bullpen Usage Chart: WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT Jax 22 0 26 0 0 48 Varland 19 0 18 0 6 43 Topa 0 0 17 24 0 41
  4. Twins Video Ad ends in 1 Box Score: Starting Pitcher: Joe Ryan: 5 IP, 8 H, 6 ER, 1 BB, 5 K (93 Pitches, 65 Strikes, 69.9%) Home Runs: Byron Buxton (4) Bottom 3 WPA: Ryan (-.286), Edouard Julien (-.097), Brooks Lee (-.093) Win Probability Chart (Via Fangraphs): The Twins wrapped up their series in Atlanta today after gifting the Braves two winnable games and awakening the perennial contender from its early season doldrums. Joe Ryan got the start for Minnesota, coming off an outing against the Mets in which he labored but gave the Twins five strong innings. As a California "Deadhead" laboring isn't Ryan's favorite vibe. Teams know that when the righthander is healthy and throwing well, the only way to counter him is to work long at-bats and hope to wear Ryan down, with a solo home run or two thrown in. Unfortunately for Ryan today, the home plate umpire called two clear strikes as balls to second place hitter Austin Riley, extending Ryan's pitch count and turning what looked like a quick inning, into a much longer affair. The horrid Marcell Ozuna worked a walk and Matt Olson finally caught up with a mistake fastball and rocketed a two-run home run to give the Braves a 2-0 lead. Ryan threw 32 pitches in the frame. That could have been workable except the Twins anemic offense offered no early fight against Braves journeyman starter Kenny Powers Grant Holmes. Following the long inning for Ryan, the Twins went down in order on eight pitches, forcing Ryan back out with hardly a chance to sit down. He retired the first two hitters of the second fairly easily, but then a barrage of singles scored a third run. The third was similar- after two outs, Michael Harris turned on a hanging splitter and roped it for a double, and then the highly touted rookie Drake Baldwin pounced on a 92 MPH fastball not quite high enough in the zone, and pummeled it the other way for a two-run home run. The Twins at least made Holmes work in the fourth. After Trevor Larnach ripped a one out single, so did Carlos Correa. Ryan Jeffers was hit by a pitch on his wrist and stayed in the game. After Luke Keaschall popped out, Holmes spiked a slider that Baldwin couldn't handle, allowing Larnach to score the first Twins run. Brooks Lee made good contact in his at-bat, but Harris tracked down the liner in the gap to record the final out. As expected, a rejuvenated Ryan then had his easiest inning, setting down the Braves 1-2-3. Holmes continued to struggle with his command, walking the free-swinging Harrison Bader to lead off the fifth before leaving a cutter up for Buxton to lace into the gap for a double. Holmes then walked Ty France, perhaps equal to Bader in free-swingedness, to load the bases. But Larnach struck out looking on the juiciest pitch of the at-bat, a fastball middle-in, and Correa tapped out to get Holmes off the hook. Ozuna, sadly still not incarcerated, jumped on an inside sinker from Ryan and delivered it into the left field bleachers. The Twins put two more runners on in the sixth, but Julien tapped out to strand the Twins' eighth runner in a span of three innings. Buxton did launch a no-doubt home run in the seventh to continue his strong stretch of games. Louis Varland, Jhoan Duran and Danny Coulombe pitched scoreless innings. All three are having nice years, at least. Trends: Healthy Hurt Performing Contributing Low Impact/Slumping IL/Minors C Ryan Jeffers Christian Vazquez 1B Ty France 2B Mickey Gasper ? Brooks Lee Edouard Julien 3B Royce Lewis Jose Miranda Jonah Bride SS Carlos Correa ? LF Trevor Larnach CF Byron Buxton ? Harrison Bader DaShawn Keirsey Jr. RF Matt Wallner UTIL Willi Castro ? Luke Keaschall ? SP1 Pablo Lopez Bailey Ober ? Joe Ryan SP2 Chris Paddack Simeon Woods Richardson CR Jhoan Duran ? Griffin Jax ? SR Brock Stewart Louis Varland ? Cole Sands MR Danny Coloumbe Justin Topa Michael Tonkin LR Randy Dobnak Jorge Alcala Kody Funderburk What’s Next: Bailey Ober (1-1, 6.16 ERA) takes on Davis Martin (1-2, 4.84 ERA) as the Twins open a series at Target Field against the White Sox. Martin has been functional thus, far, but his peripheral numbers are rough. Ober has been pretty good since his opening clunker in St. Louis and will look to continue to have success against a White Sox lineup against whom statistics do count. Bullpen Usage Chart: WED THU FRI SAT SUN TOT Jax 22 0 26 0 0 48 Varland 19 0 18 0 6 43 Topa 0 0 17 24 0 41
  5. Are we making Raya a RP? Because SP go more innings! Bring up McCusker - put Keaschall at 2B and McCusker at DH
  6. I have stated this before, but it summarizes my feelings about the Pohlads - How can such super rich people not understand public relations? Do they think there is sympathy for the rich when they make bad decisions? Do we care that you might only get 1.5 billion instead of 1.7? Come on Pohlads, try to read TD and get an idea of how fans think and feel.
  7. Sometimes a new voice leads to systematic change and if the players believe in it the results can really be good. But if it is just an internal option I don't expect much to improve. I don't like Rocco getting in a rut like the Margot pinch hitting or the short leash on SP, but I am not looking at him as a villain. Bleacher reports has this interesting insight - "Since 1987, there have been 81 midseason managerial changes, one of which was in 1996 when Tommy Lasorda retired as Dodger manager after suffering a heart attack. Of those 80 changes due to firings, only 19 teams played better than . 500 baseball after the change was made, some just barely." Of course it is usually a bad team that changes managers so it is a really hard measurement. "Prior to 1987, there were 183 midseason changes (those not including the first or last 20 games of a season), with about 24 percent improving to a plus .500 team after the change." In a research paper by Beth Talentowski, '10 Illinois Wesleyan University the conclusions include this statement - "It would also be beneficial to look at other factors that influence team performance. Initially a third model was under consideration to assess which variable has the greatest impact on winning percentage. The additional variables under consideration are variables that are out of the manager‘s control yet are vital aspects of a sporting organization, such as salary cap, draft picks, slugging percentage, etc. The human capital theory suggests that proper use of inputs is enough for success, but what if the inputs are sub par?" Sometimes there are other factors that must be included like the owner and the Front Office, but that is beyond this essays parameters. However, the message to the players and the fans is that the team is at least looking for a change. And MLB is not the only place this solution is tried - look at this years NBA, the NFL, and even college sports. But the trouble is that we can analyze bat speed, ball spin and lots of other minutia, but we cannot measure leadership. Casey Stengel was a genius with the Yankees, not so much with the Mets. I look forward to another article where we analyze the entire system including those nameless analytic savants and that ever present Quality Control Coach.
  8. Not only has Topa never started - he had pitched the day before. I still think this was a really bad decision.
  9. The reflection on team play is also a reflection on the management - all the coaches. When I asked how many coaches the Twins have good old Google AI says, " The Minnesota Twins have 12 major league coaches for the 2025 season. This includes the manager, 3 hitting coaches, a bench coach, a third base/outfield coach, a first base/infield coach, an assistant bench coach/catching coach, a quality control coach, a pitching coach, an assistant pitching coach, and a bullpen coach. " While I am not a fan of Rocco I have seen a lot of lousy coaches (I think of Fred Haney and the 1957 - 58 Milwaukee Braves) who still win. And they did not have bench coaches assistant to the assistant hitting coaches, OF coaches, IF coaches, assistant pitching coaches and QUALITY CONTROL COACHES. What do this coaches do? Please do not replace Rocco with one of them. What is the Quality that is being controlled? Who is doing all the stat analysis? Does the pitching coach ever say - let's give him another inning or two (or maybe his assistant does)? So glad we keep getting new hitting coaches - wow three of them. And thanks to their combined efforts our line for the team (B/R) 211/282/338 621 OPS 16 HRs - so each one is responsible for .070 of BA and 207 OPS Looking at BR team stats we have lowest field average since 1981 - guess those OF/IF coaches are earning their money too. At least the bench hasn't collapsed so I guess the Bench Coach is holding his own.
  10. Its too bad such a depressing report is so accurate. Your poll - who is more clutch is like a sad joke at the end of this summary. The real answer is - nobody. Yes it is already time to think about trades. The Sox and Angels must be looking at next week with some glee. Yes - it is imperative we come out with a winning week so this review can have a positive off week.
  11. I got to believe the White Sox are looking forward to this series - they could get out of last place. Let's get some playoff excitement going - we will not slide to last!
  12. Oh man, does this hurt. How about a six man rotation and get Zebby up - maybe a seven and get Morris up too. Don't hurry with the post game interview - who cares? Julien's hot streak is over. Keaschall - thank you, no matter what else the season gives us you have provided a spark - not to the team, but to the fans. The only player hitting over 250 - Bader is at 250 and the rest - I guess its Buxton's turn to be hot and look like an all-star now that Eddie is done. And I look at these three relievers who did their job and wonder why Topa who has never started would be the opener when Varland knows how to start? Oh well, that was yesterday's misery.
  13. When Wallner, Lewis, Castro are back with health this story will disappear as will the two cast-offs. Desperate times for our struggling team.
  14. I am not a fan of the opener. I really don't see how it makes it better. The starter isn't used to coming in and the second inning and the relief picture isn't used to coming in in the first.
  15. The question arises again could the starter go further and depend less on the BP
  16. I put 75% of the blame on owners, 10% FO, 10% Baldelli - 5% on players, but they are who they have always been and if they are not good enough that is not their fault. The smartest thing they have done is bring up Keaschall - some excitement factor. The next best thing is Zebby because he has caught the fans imagination.
  17. This is the first time I have been excited by a Twins move this season. I hope they let him play through struggles and give him the support he needs. I just have not been impressed with the Twins handling of prospects so far.
  18. I love it. This is my most exciting moment of this season. Now give him a number of starts so he can settle in and start making a difference.
  19. The next poll for TD - How many games will Correa play over his six year contract? So far he has played 239/343 70%. He is signed through 2028 - that is 972 games - 676 games at current rate, but after a good first year he dropped significantly last year - the trend is not good.
  20. This is not about the tried and true Twin fans till death - there are not enough of us to fill the stadium. It is about TV, the general public and our choices. I have to admit I would rather be hiking, canoeing, skiing and I prefer radio. But I still watch and try to follow every day. BUT>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> this team is not fun. They do not play with enthusiasm so how can the fans be enthusiastic. Bonehead plays like Miranda, pitchers unable to throw to bases (we do pay them to throw) and poor defense, no speed, no power, no real stars. Sorry but Buxton is okay, but not a superstar and never will be. It is not just his injuries. His power is offset by his strikeouts, his defense is not what it was and he just is not someone I count on. He is great a few games - just okay most. Correa is making the Giants and Mets look smarter as they turned him down for leg issues. And now the wrist is impacting him. Excellent play potentially, but another TD post showed how he has diminished each year and now we have to have Castro at SS. Lewis is like so many of our prospects. Can Kiriloff get him a job selling real estate? Power, speed. great pitching draws fans. We just don't have anything that pushed the envelop in any of those lanes. I think Zebby has a following - maybe it is just his name, but if I was the Twins I would get him up and promote him like crazy. Right now the Wild and the Timberwolves are in the playoffs and the Twins are in the doldrums. So what is the incentive for the noncommitted?
  21. I agree - what can be done to reduce all these injuries - it just seems that with all the advances in medicine we should have some means to keeping these athletes healthy and on the field.
  22. Injuries are the story this year if we ignore the bad play and losing record (hard to do). Still think SP need to go deeper or there will be no BP left by the end of the year and we cannot count on Alcala and Funderburk for serious situations - not sure about Topa either and we used our three best today.
  23. I feel like McCusker has now gotten the Eeles position in my enjoyment of a minor league player. If Keaschall is not called up for DH, I would give Carson a chance. I do miss Eeles, when does he come back?
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