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tobi0040

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Blog Entries posted by tobi0040

  1. tobi0040
    How did we get here?
     
    The 2011-2014 swoon led to a lot of high draft picks . And the losses forced the Twins to look into the future and move veterans like Span and Revere for prospects. While it is ideal for a rebuilding team to time when all their prospects reach the big show, it has worked out a little too nice for the Twins. We find ourselves with too many bodies than reps. And those bodies are guys that by and large don’t need any more time in AAA.
     
    The current situation:
     
    Outfield – You have five guys going for three spots. Buxton is the second best prospect in the game. Sano was on pace for 36 HR last year and would have been getting MVP votes had he played all year. Rosario had an OPS in the .760’s last year while leading the league in OF assists. Arcia has shown the ability to be a productive MLB player at a young age. And Max Kepler is a top three prospect in one of the better systems in the league. These guys are all young and need to play every day. Arguably, Kepler could go back to AAA and Buxton might need a tweak if he doesn’t improve. But those would be short term fixes and wouldn’t likely buy a ton of time. I don't think you want Sano and Arcia in the same outfield, so I would think either Sano moves to DH or 3B or Arcia is the odd man out.
     
    Infield – You have Mauer and Dozier entrenched at first and second. And even though we have a lot of bodies, Escobar is likely the only immediate answer at SS. And Plouffe has been one of our better players the last two years. At catcher, John Ryan Murphy is a guy we traded for Aaron Hicks. So the Twins believe in him and want to see him succeed. And same goes for Park at DH. He has shown promise thus far and has a four year deal.
     
    Guys who are on the cusp
     
    Starters - Berrios and Meyer are ripping up AAA. And Duffey is having a good year so far after a very strong debut last year. Outside of Berrios, these guys are not that young and need to get MLB reps.
     
    Relievers – The big three I would argue are Chargois, Burdi, and Melotakis. But you have some other names that could also force the Twins to make some decisions, like Rogers and Reed.
     
    Other position players – Jorge Polanco has put up pretty solid numbers the last few years.
    How do the Twins solve this?
     
    Trade Plouffe and move Sano back to 3B. This would be ideal, but it is unclear what the market for Plouffe looks like. In all fairness, it is also unclear whether the Twins feel that Sano could ever play 3B again. But this is a move that would definitely be a positive. Note: I would target relievers, promising prospects in A ball, and/or a catcher in all trades.
     
    Trade Dozier – On the surface this doesn’t seem like it helps a ton. But you slide Polanco to 2B and at the same time, move a guy that suddenly has a few red flags (and is owed about $30M).
     
    Trade Nolasco – He has always been tradeable, assuming the Twins pay his full salary to pitch somewhere else. My hope is that he continues to pitch well and maybe the amount of salary the other team will pick up gets down to a level Terry Ryan deems appropriate. To me this is a no-brainer.
     
    Trade Milone – He is controlled for another two years and has a pretty decent track record, although his peripherals have never been great. So hopefully a market exists for Milone.
     
    A large trade – Think of a two or three for one type trade involving some combo of Plouffe, Polanco, Arcia, Rosario, Gibson, and someone like Gonsalves for a clear upgrade like Sonny Gray or Alex Cobb. This is the type of move that I think the Twins should consider. Because the reality is of all the bodies we have right now, we have a ton of guys that are still prospects or unproven. Flipping a few of them for a talent upgrade that is close to a guarantee, while at the same time solving the number crunch seems like a win-win to me.
     
    Move Plouffe to a super utility role – This is also something that should be considered. Plouffe is what he is at this point. He is a .720-.740 OPS guy who is probably past his prime. He is also making $7-8M a year and only controlled another year. He can play 3B, 1B, and I think would be fine in LF or RF if need be. So you move him around a bit. He plays every day against lefties and about half the time against righties (this would likely improve his overall numbers). It would also be very nice to have this caliber of guy around in the event of an injury as well.
     
    This one is likely a long shot. But move Park to 3B and move Sano to DH (either trade Plouffe or moving him to a super utility role). Park has played 1B and the OF, so he should be able to take grounders as well as throw. But I have no read on whether this is possible. Just throwing it out there.
     
    Lastly, cut the weakest link from the pen, move Milone or Nolasco to the pen and bring up Meyer/Berrios/Duffey.
     
    The worst way forward in my opinion is not making any moves at all. This will stunt development of the very key players this franchise is counting on (by keeping them in AAA too long or by not playing everyday for the Twins).
     
    Well, what say you? What is the best path forward for the Twins?
  2. tobi0040
    Mauer was the 4th ranked #1 pick in baseball history. Very interseting, you could make the case for guys like Price, but it goes to show you how good he has been, even if he has tailed off.
     
    Puts the complaining in context.
     
    http://espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/id/12998550/mlb-draft-ranking-best-no-1-overall-draft-picks
  3. tobi0040
    When will Buxton be called up?
     
    He is ripping up AA (.880 OPS, 3 HR, 5 3B, 7 SB).
     
    We have seen Terry move position players quicker, like Santana, Vargas, Arcia, and Hicks. We have a need in CF. And I think they would love a little extra buzz this year.
     
    I think after the super 2 deadline he is up.
  4. tobi0040
    Scott Boras, still complaining about Kris Bryant and Addison Russell, thinks a panel should decide if a young player is ready to make the team out of spring training.
     
    Coincidentally, this would benefit Scott Boras.
     
    I think a rule or panel that would make a team give up roster decisions to a third party is...um, far-fetched at best.
     
     
    http://espn.go.com/chicago/mlb/story/_/id/12737070/agent-scott-boras-wants-panel-rule-readiness-players-prior-end-spring-training
  5. tobi0040
    ESPN rankings for SABR metrics
     
    Twins were in the skeptic category, second from the worst.
     
    Some teams have quants from nasa and Phd's, we have "an mba from local st thomas"
     
    Kc and cleveland get good grades
     
     
    http://espn.go.com/espn/feature/story/_/id/12331388/the-great-analytics-rankings#mlb-sfg
  6. tobi0040
    My friend asked Terry to handicap CF at Twinsfest. He did not mention Hicks at all. The first name he mentioned was Eddie Rosario. When asked about CF versus a corner, Terry said Eddie is definitely good enough to play CF.
     
    He seemed to hint again, at Sano in the OF if Plouffe continues to improve
     
    Open to Meyer in the pen. Said last year he was throwing instead of pitching, which caused his location issues.
     
    One prospect he thought would make a huge jump is Kohl Stewart. Seemed very high on him.
     
    He kept saying Ricky gets a do-over and needs to get straightened out
  7. tobi0040
    Here is my off-season plan.
     
    What am I trying to accomplish?
     
    -Being realistic with payroll, both on dollars and years
     
    -Improve the team this year and in the near future
     
    -Keep key positions open for guys like Sano and Buxton, and allow young pitchers to emerge.
     
    -Address our real needs of OF defense and starting pitching
     
    Starting Rotation
     
    The Twins ranked second to last in starting ERA last year, behind only the Rockies who play a mile in the air. That is not good. While it is tempting for the Twins to pencil in Hughes, Nolasco, Gibson, Meyer, and May for next season and stand pat, I think that would be a huge mistake. This group needs to add more talent. On top of that, someone will get hurt or be ineffective next year. You just can’t pencil in five guys and hope nothing bad happens. If the worst thing that can happen is you create a healthy competition for the 5th spot or push a guy like May to the pen for awhile, that is OK with me.
     
    Let’s face it, the Twins are NOT signing Scherzer, Lester, or Shields. There are some tempting trade opportunities out there like Cole Hamels. But I think it would be a mistake for the Twins to move prospects for a guy making $20M+ a year. Right now we have payroll flexibility and young prospects, we don’t need to blow both on one roster spot. I think any other name out there does not make a ton of sense for the Twins. We don’t need more Correia’s, Worley’s, or Pelfrey’s. If we are going to give up starts next year, give them up to a guy that is a clear upgrade and more than a one year proposition.
     
    Verdict: Sign Ervin Santana to a 3 year, $45M deal with a team option for a 4th year and a buyout. I would probably be okay with the 4th year that vests based on 180+ plus innings a year for the three years. Ervin has been a workhorse, averaging 207 innings a year over the last five years. Outside of the poor 2012 in which he had an ERA of 5.16, his ERA has been consistently good 3.92, 3.38, 3.24, and 3.95. In my view he would be our second best pitcher behind Phil Hughes.
     
    Outfield:
     
    Our OF defense last year was a complete disaster and we had a debacle in CF all year. Josh Willingham is gone and my guess is Oswaldo Arcia is handed a corner spot and he probably should. He ended last year with an OPS of .750, 20 HR’s in 100 games, (4th in OPS on the team) while proving to be a liability defensively (annualized -2.4 dWAR). Other guys in the mix are Hicks, and potentially later in the year Buxton and Rosario. I view Jordan Schafer as a 4th OF. What the Twins should NOT do is sign a guy that may hit a bit and play poor defense, I am thinking Torii Hunter, Melky Cabrera, Nick Markakis. Let’s let another team make that mistake and fix our actual need.
     
    Verdict: Sign Colby Rasmus to a 3 year deal for $36M (yahoo projected salary). This signing does a few things. Colby has played almost all of his career games in center and has a positive dWAR of 2.4 over his career. He could start in CF and move to a corner when Buxton arrives. I would expect he would provide plus defense in a corner, which would be a huge upgrade from last year. If we have a bunch of OF prospects turn out in two years, Rasmus has a career OPS of .788 against righties, which would make him a very ideal platoon guy (albeit an expenseive one that one year). I believe this move would stabilize both the offense and defense. He does have an appealing bat as well. He has a career .751 OPS and has averaged 21 HR and 22.5 2B a year over the last three years (while missing about 90 games over that stretch). He had a very good year in 2013, with 22 HR and an OPS of .840. His OBP and K numbers are not good, but he is still 28 and I think the what he provides defensively is going to make this a good signing.
     
     
    Infield, Pen, and DH
     
    I think the move is to stand pat. Paul Molitor has said he is going to play Danny Santana at short stop. He should be given every chance there. You have Suzuki, Dozier, Mauer, and Plouffe rounding out the infield and Escobar as the utility guy. Pinto should be given a shot to prove himself as a backup catcher getting 60 games. If Molitor concludes that Pinto is not a catcher, he should be traded for a team that has not concluded that and we should sign a backup catcher. Vargas should be handed DH and told to smack the ball around.
     
    Our pen is loaded with young guys that should be given a shot, like Burdi, Reed, and Tonkin. No need to spend there or block these guys.
     
    I am guessing these two signings bring payroll to about $85M and improve the team. What do you think?
  8. tobi0040
    Did anyone read Ruesse's article about the Twins season ticket holders? Here are the cliffs notes:
     
    -Twins had 17,000 season ticket holders last year. He expects that to drop to 12,000 this year
     
    -If you drop 5K a game from this years total, you have 1.85M. The lowest since 2001 in the Dome.
     
    -The Twins response is the same as always. Terry quoting that money will be no obstacle and Pohlad saying we will stick to 50%.
     
    -Also brought up the competition within the market. Wild are a better team. Wolves are at least interesting. And Vikings are getting a new stadium. Much of the corporates signed up for 5 year deals and those are expiring
     
     
    http://www.startribune.com/sports/blogs/279691702.html
  9. tobi0040
    The 2016 Minnesota Twins
     
    Some of the young players have emerged and a few others are close or knocking on the door, I thought it would be a good opportunity to look at the 2016 roster (and get a free pizza).
     
    Position Players - Near Locks:
     
    1B – Joe Mauer – Joe Mauer will be under contract thru 2018 and it is really hard to see a scenario where Joe is not with the team. His contract is next to immovable, even if he was having a typical .330, 10 HR pace. He, of course is not. I have never been a huge proponent of playing a guy to play for someone else and the Twins aren’t going to do that. My person view is that the Twins view Joe's contract as part player contract, part marketing expense anyway
     
    3B/DH Miguel Sano – Sano should break through in June of next year and be a fixture on this team. Even at the low end of his range, .250 and 30 HR, some BB’s, he will hit his way into the lineup. The best case is 3B, otherwise he could DH or play corner OF as a long shot.
     
    CF – Byron Buxton – I was arguing with my friend about the likelihood of Buxton flopping. He is in the camp of prospects fail and some truth exists to that theory. My only caveat was barring a serious injury, this kid will be the CF for the Twins. That may be as early as spring training next year, but more likely June or August/September of next year. My point was that Buxton is going to provide plus defense (both range and arm) in CF and he should be able to steal 35-40 bases even if for some reason he struggles to get on base. Given that, even if he hits .250 with 10 HR, he should provide value from that position. I know his ceiling is much, much higher than that all around. I think Carl Crawford offensively (.300, 15 HR, 60 SB) with much better defense.
     
    C – Kurt Suzuki, I felt I had to put Kurt on here because he is still under contract. Whether he is starting or splitting we will find out
     
    2B – Brian Dozier – With talent coming up at the position, the Twins could trade him and he would provide a ton of value. I would just rather have a 20-20 type 2B that plays good defense at a reasonable price on our team
     
    Position Players – In the mix
     
    Arcia – He is young and has potential with his bat. The issues thus far are left handed pitching and where he will play. He could DH obviously, but he may run into competition there. His odds are better if his defense in the OF improves.
     
    Rosario – Rosario has hit too well to not be in the mix. But the issue for him is position. My understanding is the Twins appreciate that he tried to become a 2B, but it didn’t really work out. He is in the mix for a corner OF spot, but will need to hit enough to justify the position.
     
    Hicks – Hicks is in a similar position as Rosario. He isn’t going to play CF and he may struggle to hit enough for a corner OF spot. He looks like he could get on base a ton if he could only hit about .260. I think Rosario and Hicks are in competition for one corner OF spot. We likely can’t have two softer hitting/good defensive players in the corners. Both should be able to stick as a 4th OF.
     
    Vargas – He is in the mix and having a great year. I just can’t put him as a lock given he may find a crowd at the DH spot and he may be the least flexible defensively. Prior to this year, he didn’t look like he was going to hit enough for the DH role
     
    Plouffe – In some ways, Plouffe’s future is dependent on whether or not Sano can stick at 3B. I think the Twins will have a tough time finding a better 3B if Sano can’t stick. If Sano does stick at 3B, I think Plouffe would be a great bench guy as he can play multiple positions and hit lefties very well. It would just be a matter of whether or not he would provide more value via trade
     
    Santana – He has hit well, but it is hard to see him sticking in the outfield on this team and it is hard to know how the Twins feel about him at short stop
     
    Polanco – I also don’t know how the Twins feel about him at SS. His best path would be if Dozier gets traded.
     
    Unlikely
     
    Pinto – I just don’t think the Twins will ever give this kid a chance at catcher and I don’t think he will hit enough for DH
     
    Gordon – I don’t believe he will be quite ready in 2016
     
    Starting Pitchers – Near Locks
     
    Hughes – I really loved the signing and I think even if this year is on the high end, he will be a valuable member of this rotation
     
    Gibson – Kyle has taken a step forward this year. It would be nice to see some more K’s and I think those will come in time given his minor league numbers
     
    Meyer – Barring injury, this kid is going to be special
     
    Nolasco – Still under contract and hopefully he rebounds. I don’t think we would be able to move that contract if he doesn’t and I doubt we will have five pitchers that are better. Especially if you think at least one of the “locks” is hurt.
     
    Starters – In the mix
     
    Berrios – I did not put him in the lock category. I wanted to, but I just hope this year was not an aberration
     
    May – I am higher on May than most people are, but his numbers the previous two years were not great at AA. He has the stuff, control maybe an issue but I think he will likely figure it out. If he fails as a starter, I think he could excel as a reliever a la Perkins. My guess is he would throw upper 90’s and he has a good breaking ball
     
    Milone – He has a good track record and career ERA across three seasons. So he has to be in the mix regardless of how fast he throws
     
    Unlikely
     
    Kohl Stewart – I don’t think Kohl will be quite ready, although I am high on him
     
    Thorpe – Probably a tad early, he may break through in 2016
     
    Relievers
     
    Perkins – Still under contract, hopefully still healthy and getting batters out
     
    Burdi – I think this kid is going to be special. Granted he was probably in the wrong league and he was recently promoted, but he had 25 k’s in 12 IP at Cedar Rapids
     
    Relievers – In the mix
     
    Frankly, too many to name and they could come from our minors, failed starters, or free agency. It is hard to speculate 2 years out. Tonkin, Guerra, and Achter should for sure be in the mix though
     
    When putting this list together, one thing that I find interesting is payroll. The only players at this point that will not be in their rookie deals are Mauer ($23M), Dozier (say $6M), Perkins ($5.5M), Suzuki ($6M), Nolasco ($11M) and Hughes ($8M). So you have $59M plus a bunch of rookies. Pretty interesting and room to supplement through free agency and lock up players early.
  10. tobi0040
    Why on earth is Suzuki batting second? Last year his OBP was .290, career .309. This literally makes no sense at all.If Mauer plays under Gardy for 15 years, it would be interesting to see how many more RBI's he would have at the end of his carreer with a guy that gets on base in front of him. Casilla, Suzuki, etc.http://scores.espn.go.com/mlb/boxscore?gameId=340331104&teams=minnesota-twins-vs-chicago-white-sox
  11. tobi0040
    Apparently the D-Backs are interested in moving Didi Gregorius and have discussed a deal with the Pirates.
     
    This would certainly be worth a call. He is a slick fielding 24 year old. He may never hit a ton, but he has a respectable .250 average, .329 OBP, .693 OPS in 380 MLB at bats as a 23 year old (7 HR). His numbers in the minors were between .700 and .750 OPS.
     
    I would not give up Buxton, Sano, Meyer, or Kohl. But he would be an upgrade at SS and he would fit in nicely with our young core.
    ohttp://a.espncdn.com/i/teamlogos/mlb/med/trans/pit.gif
    According to Jon Morosi of FOX Sports, the Pittsburgh Pirates "have had trade talks" with the Arizona Diamondbacks about shortstop Didi Gregorius. He also mentions the Yankees, Mets, Reds and Tigers as other teams that might yet enter the conversation for the presumed loser of the starting shortstop battle in Arizona.
  12. tobi0040
    According to Rhett Bollinger, Gibson is the only one in the running for the 5th starter that will have another start.
     
    Could he actually win the job and break camp with the team? Gibson as the 5th starter and Deduno in the bullpen would be ideal for me. I will never fault the Twins for breaking camp with the best possible team.
     
    http://www.rotoworld.com/content/playerpages/playerbreakingnews.asp?sport=MLB&id=5478&line=422105&spln=1
  13. tobi0040
    For years, the Twins were a money ball team that had a very good track record. Payroll fluctuated in the $50-60M range, yet the team made the playoffs in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2009, and 2010. That was about the ceiling, as the team made the second round just once in the six appearances. The villain that kept this team from advancing was always the metrodome. If the Twins had a stadium, payroll could go up and we could compete and make a serious run. Or so the through process went.
     
    Target Field opened in 2010 and the Twins increased payroll to $98M payroll (from $65M in 2009). The team made the playoffs and boosted payroll to $113M in 2011. It was time for a run. In 2011, the team totally flopped, going 63-99. Many things went wrong. Joe Mauer only played 82 games and was replaced by Drew Butera, who finished with a .449 OPS in 250 plate appearances (not a typo). Justin Morneau played in only 69 games. Liriano and Duensing has ERA’s north of 5.00. By any measure, it was a disaster year for the Twins.
     
    Nobody I know was at the table, but after the season the story goes that Bill Smith wanted to re-sign all the veterans and make another run, ownership was not interested. I can’t blame them, why spend $115M on a 63 win team? Why would 2012 have been any different? He was fired and Terry Ryan was brought back. I was more than giddy that Terry was back. Terry Ryan with an bigger checkbook seemed very appealing.
     
    Rebuilding and Team Direction
     
    I believe the Twins were caught in no man’s land. We let a slew of veterans go for nothing (or draft picks) and had a relatively weak farm system. This set up two additional 90+ loss seasons. Here we are, year three in what has to be described as a rebuilding effort. Las Vegas odds have the Twins winning 71 games, just a five game improvement over last year. Progress has been painfully slow.
     
    Outside of signing Miguel Sano, the Twins have boosted their farm system primarily through drafting #2 (Buxton) and #4 (Stewart), which is simply a function of having a bad record. The approach over the first two years has basically been wait and see. In 2011, the Twins only had four prospects in baseball America’s top 100 (Gibson 34, Hicks 45, Sano 60, and Benson 100). Why was wait and see the right approach for this situation? Let’s see what we have in Scott Diamond, Chris Parmelee, Vance Worley, Plouffe, etc. After a historically bad pitching staff in 2013, the Twins spent $85M on Ricky Nolasco, Phil Hughes, and Mike Pelfrey. The approach for the lineup appears has not changed.
     
    Of the 25 guys who will break camp with the Twins, how many are likely to be on a 2016 team? Ricky Nolasco, Joe Mauer, Phil Hughes, Glen Perkins, Brian Dozier, and a few bullpen guys. You would expect Meyer and Buxton to be up at some point this year and Sano next year. Other guys are likely to push their way through, like Gibson, Hicks, and potentially Trevor May. But is this all we have to show after 2-3 rebuilding years? Five locks, 2-3 more over the next year, and a few maybe’s?
     
    Personally, I think the Twins were way to slow to address their roster. Had we signed a pitcher or two as good or better than Ricky Nolasco in 2012, this team would be in a much better position. And why has the team done nothing to address a lineup that was 13th in the AL in 2013? Why are we watching Suzuki, Fryer, Florimon, Escobar, Pressley, Pelfrey, Correia, Mastroanni, Parmelee, Collabello, and Worley? I understand why the Twins would have not have wanted to sign a 3B or CF, but why have we not addressed SS, C, or DH? We have not had a top prospect at any one of these positions.
     
    Future Payroll
     
    The Twins were very active early on this offseason, signing Nolasco and Hughes. I was pretty excited. But that was about it. The only other MLB signings were Mike Pelfrey and Kurt Suzuki, which were less than exciting. Payroll should be about $82M this year. However, base payroll will fall to $70M in 2015 (assuming Correia and Willingham leave). Three rookies are close locks to lock down roster spots (Sano, Buxton, and Meyer). Two more, Arcia and Pinto are odds on favorites. It is a good bet at least 2-3 more will push their way through from the group of (Gibson, May, Rosario, and Santana). Translation, this team should have a payroll in about this range for the next few years.
     
    Stadiums and Fulfilling Promises
     
    The Twins usually cite 52% of revenue as a guide-post for payroll, as a number they won’t exceed. At under 40% of revenues in 2014 and the near future, are the Twins holding up their end of the bargain? Roughly $350M of the $550M stadium was paid for by the tax payers. The stadium has increased the value of the team by almost $300M, which is over $100M more than the Twins contributed (note the Forbes value was $580M prior to the cable deal, which pushed the value of the Twins to $700M). So it would be hard to argue that the stadium hasn’t been a transfer of wealth from the tax payer to the Pohlad’s. They get $300M and I get the right to spend $100 dollars once a year to bring my family to a game. Honestly, I would not care if I felt like the ownership group was doing everything they could, within reason to turn this team around and compete. But in year three, to see our DH role filled by a guy that will be 32 in May, coming off a terrible year, and signed on a minor league deal as well as a the short stop battle will be between a AA player (Florimon) and a 34 year old player that has been hurt and out of the league, also on a minor league contract? That is a tough pill to swallow.
     
    Well where does that leave someone like me? Like the quote in the movie Brokeback Mountain, I wish I knew how to quit you. But I can’t. I have been sold on the farm system and the hope of the future. I do vote with my feet to an extent. If we had an ownership group that wanted to break even each year and ratched up payroll to $115-$120M and field a more competitive team each year, I would probably be a 10 game a year guy. In the meantime, another year of I hope Corriea, Willingham, and Pelfrey start out hot so we can trade them and build for the future!
     
    Is it me, or is this getting a little old?
     
     
    http://www.forbes.com/teams/minnesota-twins/
     
    https://www.baseballprospectus.com/compensation/cots/american-league/minnesota-twins/
  14. tobi0040
    When I first heard that Mauer was moved to 1st, I was thrilled. Then I started to wonder, why first base?
     
    We have Arcia and Willingham in the corners. Mauer seems to be a better athlete and certainly has a better arm than both.
     
    Sano is at 3B and has been described as a project there. I can't imagine him being a better athlete than Mauer, even at 30. I hear Sano has a good arm, but I am giving Mauer the nod there as well.
     
    I can see Mauer playing 1B when he is 35, but he is 30 years old. The only thing that makes sense to me is 1B being a temporary position. We want Arcia and Sano to stick where we have them today and we want Willingham to audition in LF so we can potentially trade him to the NL.
     
    It seems like the best place, both offensively and defensively for Mauer would be one of those three places. Is it just a matter of time before he is moved again?
  15. tobi0040
    In 2009, Mark Reynolds set the single season mark with 223 strikeouts in a season. It should be noted that he hit 44 HR’s that year, had an OPS of .892 and finished 20th in the MVP voting.
     
    Here is quick look at some Twins pace given Reynolds 662 AB’s he had in 2009:
     
    Byron Buxton, on pace for 352 strikeouts (53.3% k rate). .497 OPS.
     
    Miguel Sano, on pace for 285 strikeouts (43.2% k rate). .766 OPS.
     
    Oswaldo Arcia, on pace for 245 strikeouts (37.1% k rate). .795 OPS.
     
    Park, on pace for 212 strikeouts (32.1% k rate). .853 OPS.
     
    Eddie Rosario, on pace for 172 strikeouts (26.1% k rate). .567 OPS.
     
    As a team, the 2013 Astros hold the all-time record of 1,535 strikeouts (25.5% rate). The Twins with their 24.4% rate would finish with 1,468 k’s with the same number of at bats. When I saw the 2013 Astros I thought, well the it worked out pretty well for them. They are good now, let’s stick with the young guys come hell or high water. But looking the 2013 team, very few of those hitters are part of the good young nucleus they have now. In fact, a 23 year old Jose Altuve was the only key guy that was among the top 8 in AB’s. He also struck out only 85 times in over 600 AB’s in 2013.
     
    My prediction is that the single season strikeout record will remain with the Astros, but Miguel Sano will set the individual record. I think Buxton will be spared by going back to AAA, which likely happens in the next week or two. He just is not putting up competitive at bats right now. It should be noted that Sano, Arcia, and Park have respectable if not good OPS numbers (Park especially). Given what Sano and Rosario did last year I stick with them up here. Sano could cut down on his swing a tad with two strikes and Rosario needs better plate discipline, but they should work that out with the Twins.
     
    The scary comparison is the 51 win 2013 Astros had an OPS of .674, in the same ballpark as the Twins .687. Now the Twins pitching this year has been much better (3.80 vs. 4.79), but the offensive numbers are alarming.
  16. tobi0040
    ESPN ranked the top players for 2016, using "70 ESPN experts". The list featured one Twins player, Miguel Sano. I was very surprised that he barely made the list at #96. I think he is massively underrated. Heck, I have seen Sano in the 20-30 range in fantasy rankings among position players.
     
    The ESPN list had relievers like Wade Davis in the low 20's. Rizzo and Bryant were 25-30, and Correa was 16th. I just don't see the gap between Sano and these guys as this wide. I could see him leap some of them this year.
     
    The top 10 is not out yet.
     
     
    http://espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/page/2016BBTN100_20-11/players-ranked-20-11
  17. tobi0040
    Swarzak outrighted to AAA and off the 40 man.
     
    https://www.fantasysp.com/player/mlb/Anthony_Swarzak/3766816/twins-sent-rhp-anthony-swarzak-outright-to-triple-a-rochester
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