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mikelink45

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Everything posted by mikelink45

  1. How excited can I get when we do not have the youth infusion I hoped for and we are looking to catch the waiver wire dregs? Get rid of the mediocre - try to remember we had the number one ranked minor league - put them in the majors and lets really have some fun.
  2. When are the next cuts? We have three question marks = backup catcher, CF, and pitchers (5th starter and relief) and the old question of cagey vet versus young and struggling with upside. In 2015, we will not contend or be a 500 team - it is good to experiment with those who will be with us beyond 2015. I would choose May, Rosario, Pinto, Hamburger, Graham. So long Milone, Pelfrey, Schafer.
  3. Nice description of this Rubik cube. Since we have both Pelfrey and Stauffer clogging the pipe your summary is sound. Take those two out as I would and it becomes more attractive and I think better, especially if May gets the spot as he should (more upside and talent). Then we keep Graham and Hamburger, but most importantly, I hope the Twins do some trading. There are some bullpens, like Toronto that could really put value on our extras.
  4. This was one of those columns where I read what was written, thought about it and came away as confused as I began. Rosario - Hicks - Shafer. I like Rosario, it sounds like Molitor likes Rosario so only Shafer and Hicks are playing center! I want Rosario, but I will go to bed totally confused and hope for better in the future.
  5. Pelfrey slogged his way through - great. He was saved by two excellent plays and still he struggled his way through. Can we find more ways to give faint praise? It is time to move on.
  6. Do it - let's avoid the we can't afford our players situation down the line. If Buxton and Sano come in like we think the payroll is going to be blown out of the bank.
  7. Hughes learned in the big leagues. There is only so much learning in the minors. Let's start getting young arms in the bigs while they are still young. We put up with Nolasco, Correia... because they were vets. I want the Twins to get over that and start putting the young pitchers with major league coaches on major league mounds.
  8. They signed Stauffer hoping he had the right stuff if he doesn't; let's move on. I am tired of hearing about contract instead of ability.
  9. Boring is not the adjective that a time that lost 90 games four years in a row and are losing fans at a fast clip should want, yet that is what we have. Houston blew things up and brought in youth, now it is on the verge of turning things around. The cubs traded and brought up youth and everyone is excited by their chances. The White Sox did not pay for replacement players and they suddenly got exciting. But the Twins cut Meyer and insert Nolasco, Milone, Pelfry... wouldn't it have been exciting if the rotation had been Hughes, Meyer, May, Berrios, Gibson? Might not have won, but heck we still won't win. And what if we had Buxton, Rosario and Arcia in the outfield figuring things out and Sano on third and Mauer traded and young guys like Vargas and Pinto sharing time there and at DH? And Tomkins, Burdi, Achter in the bullpen with Graham, Perkins, and Fien. Somehow that would have been exciting even if we were still last in the division. Now my desire is for a trade as soon as possible for the pitchers and vets that clog the major league artery.
  10. I remember watching Sandy Koufax when he was the wild, no control pitcher with the Dodgers - they let him work out his issues and he became such a legend that no one remembers his beginning. Next HOFer Randy Johnson - it took him time, but it also took time on a major league mound to hone his skills. We are not a championship team - build for the future where the building can be most effective.
  11. The bench on a team of this caliber is not that interesting. It is a poor place to bury a player with real potential and with the DH there is not a lot that really needs doing. Better to call up with injuries. Probably the best thing the twins can do is have defensive replacements there.
  12. I thought it was appropriate to share this note from David Schoenfield - As Will Carroll said in Howard's piece, "Spend money on research. Call a summit and get all the best minds together. Just making it a focus is a good thing. Teams that have shown a focus on this, like the Rays and the Brewers, have shown a big difference. The White Sox medical staff actually saved a full year's of salary over an average team -- it's like a 'Buy 9, get the 10th free' -- over a decade of play. That's significant, but yet most teams are doing nothing." Too much money is at stake for baseball not to do more. And rather then making this a team-by-team issue, where teams try and find a market inefficiency in pitcher health, baseball should develop a central program for research and development into injuries, with results available to all 30 teams. The sport is starting to move slowly in that direction, such as maintaining an injury database, but that's just a small step. If every team contributed even $500,00 per year -- the cost of one rookie reliever -- that's $15 million to start up a program, with additional funds coming in each season.
  13. I think your postings add a lot to this site. I feel like we really begin to understand who the people are in the minors. Having them be more than a name and a stat really improves our experience. Of course, the Twins now have to face a more knowledgeable fan base and their quick shore answers no longer are acceptable.
  14. His mental approach to the game is the reason for not putting his natural athleticism into play. Thinking about hitting, not thinking about baserunning, not knowing the outs means he is in a cloud. Can the old mentor cut through this? The body has all the right assets - speed, balance... Come on Torii - do your job.
  15. I wish I were that smart - I know that I was able to prevent the rotator cuff surgery using some exercises that our Physical Therapist developed. It was a great success for me - but it is not that same as it would have to be for a major league pitcher and the stress they put on their arms. As a 70-year-old fan, I only speculate about all the improvements in health, conditioning, and analysis and wonder why we have not moved forward on what has become an epidemic. I remember when the first surgery was done and the amazement that we had when Dr. Jobe succeeded in this, but now we are at a place where we are seeing a rush to surgery and I hope someone is doing something on the other side. My old replaced hips testify to some of the great changes that have come in the health industry.
  16. The academy is a really great idea and nutrition is something that really needs attention, but it also brings up a question that I have no answer to. Is there anything that can be done to help prevent TJ surgery? Are there warm ups, compensatory muscles that can be developed with the right exercise? This is so costly to player and club I am waiting for a new development. I hope the academy actually has some classes (analytics anyone?) and becomes a means of developing the whole player.
  17. For a long time the "Twins way" was a hot and popular topic - it's just that the era has passed and the TR way has not generated any buzz like the Sox and the Cubs or other exciting teams. Until Buxton, Meyer, Berrios, Sano are on the roster it will and should stay that way. In our everyday Twins reading it is easy to see more than there really is and to feel like we are being underestimated, but my fear is that we may be guilty of overestimating our progress. Whether fantasy ranking, preseason predictions or just a national buzz I enjoy the perspectives just like I enjoy this site, but let us earn some respect before we are concerned about lacking it.
  18. I read the comment in another posting that Pelfrey takes a long time to warm up and is not suited to relief. TR has clogged up a system that we have been patiently waiting for over 4 years. Now is not the time for older, low upside, fillers. Youth is all I want. Let's see that vaunted minor league produce. Fill the bullpen and the rotation with the young guys and get Sano and Buxton up asap.
  19. It is time to pull the - if you want to be in the majors card = lose weight. Nice adolescence food attitude, but if this is a hurdle - address it. He might not like it, but the big checks in the majors are ahead and he will know it. Let's face the fact that he will not be Brooks Robinson, but then Harmon Killebrew is HOF and a long way from Brooks too. Let's hope there is enough to push a trade where we use strength and quality to get a good return. Plouffe should have good value now - as he ages that value goes down.
  20. Move him up quick. Don't waste him in the minors. Get the best in the lineup at Target field.
  21. It is difficult, for me, to see people so far from major league ready get ranked so high. Yes, he has potential, but I prefer to see the top spots go to the players who have a chance to play this year and next. Players like Kohl are certainly high on the overall list, but not top 5. With so many years left before the top level there are too many things that can go wrong. Maybe we need a prospect ranking and a wish list.
  22. The Cardinals get their arms to the majors and they work them with the major league staff as support. Young arms like Wacha can be damaged and some do not come back, but they got amazing production for Wacha in the past and if he does not come back they will still have succeeded as a team. We need to learn that lesson. If Meyer goes down, let it be in Major League production. Let the other pitchers and the pitching coach work with him here and as a starter.
  23. I am pessimistic if this season is supposed to be a winning year - look at the other clubs in our division and what they did and have, but optimistic about next year and the future - if we do not get enamored with the players who can make this a 500 club. Get the youth on board - it is easier to be a fan of a young team working its way up in the standings that a bunch of fringe okay players collecting their paychecks.
  24. This is one choice I could not see anyone complaining about. His weakness was his stinginess which was not only legendary, but wrong. His teams and players were hurt by this miserliness. I am curious if you could sit back and look at your 25 and consider the wholeness, then realign them again - would you change anything? And then there is the question of who are the top ten GMs in baseball today? I would certainly start with Beane, then Sabean, Since Dombroski is on your list he would be third - who fills out the list? Does Terry Ryan get on the list? I am not a Cashman fan and the last few years have shown his weakness when he does not have all the Steinbrenner overpaying, but does he have credits that will get him on the list? Andrew Friedman, Jed Hoyer (Theo Epstein is no longer GM so he is not eligible.) Thanks for generating the storyline.
  25. This is one of those step backward moves. Do we want to have okay, maybe even a little mediocre when we could develop Meyer or May? Is a left hander that important if that left hander cannot shut teams down. Remember our outfield defense - near league worst and tell me we need another pitch to contact guy. Have 35% chance is 30% higher than I would like. Having a neck issue myself, I cannot use that for the excuse it might be for others. A trending loss of velocity when his velocity cannot get him on the baseball freeway now is not encouraging. I see him as a nice AAA filler.
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