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chpettit19

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Everything posted by chpettit19

  1. As the article mostly points out, Rutschman is more name than production at this point. I'm a 2 year sample size guy. You can have a down year and I'm not so worried. But you back it up with another one and I believe teams have to treat it more as who you are. Adley absolutely may snap back and be an all star type again, but the Orioles are likely going to be asking for a package in return reflective of his all star upside and it doesn't make any sense at all (not even a little tiny bit) for a team in the Twins position to pay that kind of a price to hope he completely changes course and gets back to being that. Adley has 1 more year of control than Jeffers. It's not like he has 5 more years left or something. He isn't controlled long enough to be a realistic part of the Twins next competitive window. Shoot, many of us are talking about trading Pablo, Ryan, and Ober because they're only controlled for 2 more years and will be into their 30s at that point. Basallo isn't blocked by Rutschman. Basallo and Rutschman will DH and play some first to get their bats in the lineup, if they're worth it. If Rutschman continues to get worse with the bat he won't be a concern at all when it comes to finding him extra PAs. Rutschman should not be the Twins top trade target. He doesn't fit their timeline, nor what I think the safe money is on for their spending/payroll. Giving up future assets for a win now piece doesn't at all fit where the Twins are in the team building cycle. Not even a little bit. Well, I suppose I should say it doesn't fit where the Twins should be in the team building cycle if they're doing what they should be doing. No telling what they'll actually do. I'm still not convinced they aren't trying to win now and in the future so who knows, maybe they should trade for Adley Rutschman.
  2. I hadn't seen that, thanks for the info. Smart move by them. I think getting your elite prospect's feet wet the year before and then letting them have a full go at the RoY award the next year is the smart move.
  3. If Baltimore lets Basallo play out the rest of the season and exhaust his rookie eligibility (stupid move) and the Twins put Jenkins on their opening day roster, there'd be a very good chance he's the odds on favorite to win. He'd be the best prospect in the AL with the most opportunity. Give that whatever percent you want. And then you're talking about adding another late first round pick to the minor league system which is a wonderful value add to the Twins chances of building a true contender if they can add another Keaschall with that pick.
  4. The point is that you aren't guaranteed that extra year. The Pirates didn't get an extra year with Skenes. They didn't call him up until well after the service time cutoff date, but he was still awarded a full year of service time for winning rookie of the year. The Pirates could've gained an extra first round draft pick from that extra time with Skenes in the majors. But instead, they gained nothing at all. That's a very bad value proposition, I'd say. So, if you're going to manipulate service time with the elite prospects of the world, you better manipulate it hard. Better hold him out half the season. And if you're going to hold him out for half the season in 2026, why not just hold him out the whole thing and see what happens in 2027 with a potential lockout and maybe you don't have to start his clock until he's 23 or 24 and you get his whole prime without ever having to pay him.
  5. Baltimore has not cut payroll. I don't get why this keeps being said around here. Their payroll is over 160 million this year. They cut payroll after their most recent attempt at winning in the 20-teens when they were rebuilding, but after they were sold their new ownership invested 60 million in the team. Their payroll has jumped significantly each of the last 3 years. They cut spending when they started their rebuild like they should have, but they've been investing and building their payroll back up as they've been getting competitive again. If the Twins spent 165 mil like Baltimore is right now I don't think any of us would be complaining.
  6. The argument is pretty easy. You're just giving team ranks on the leftovers from a team that was so bad it got blown up. If you expand the sample size beyond "awful team with an awful offense" he no longer looks like he's been anywhere near good this year. When you compare him to his entire peer group he's been bad. 24% worse than the average major league hitter is not a good hitter. He hasn't been good. He's just been less bad than the awful hitters left around him, some of which have nearly 400 fewer PAs than him and you're comparing counting stats against.
  7. Every prospect is always "let's hope and see." All of them. All the time. Until they've done it for multiple years in the majors. Their K rate doesn't change that. A lower K rate is preferable to a higher K rate just like a higher BA is preferable to a lower BA and more home runs is preferable to fewer. Being a better hitter in the minors is preferable to being a worse hitter. The point was simply that there are a LOT of the best hitters in baseball who had higher K rates than are suggested are acceptable in the minors and have turned out just fine because judging prospects is far more complex than looking at k rates. If it was that simple no team would ever miss on a prospect. But they all do. Constantly. Developing all around players is preferable to me, as well.
  8. Yeah, that's not at all what I said. Nobody said k rate doesn't matter at all. What we said was that judging a prospect entirely by their k rate is not a good strategy. Thanks, though.
  9. Did the Pirates gain anything by keeping Paul Skenes in the minors until May 11th of 2024? What was the "value proposition" of that decision?
  10. You have to question any "analysis" that only looks at stats, let alone 1 stat. It's good to know that Aaron Judge fella has no chance as a college hitter with a 25.3% k rate in A+ ball. 25% in AA. 28.5 and 23.9% in AAA. Poor guy is doomed. Don't even get me started on Acuna Jr. 31.7% k rate in A+ ball! Just cut him. Only got it down to 24.8 in AAA. Braves don't need him, he'll be awful. There was catcher out of Florida State I was hoping the Twins could get. Silly nickname. Great glove and I thought he may hit a little, but 29.6% k rate in AA and 23.3 in AAA. Cal Raleigh is toast, I'm sure. Obviously, striking out less is better. But the idea that guys have no chance if they're K'ing in the minors is wild. I just named 3 of the best hitters in baseball who all had some pretty significant K rates. There's so much more to evaluating prospects. People get pretty crazy with prospect love around here (including me), and are currently expecting way too much out of the system. That's a pretty constant state of affairs, though. Talk of "log jams" and "redundant prospects" is always wrong. There's no such things because prospects fail too often. But just looking at k rates and saying "these guys are doomed, move on" is crazy talk. Or Aaron Judge is severely over paid.
  11. Have you looked at the 2021 top 5? Henry Davis certainly isn't worthy of the #1 pick, but Jack Leiter, Jackson Jobe, Marcelo Mayer, and Colton Cowser is not a bad top 5. Dylan Crews is not at all looking like the star people thought he was. The Nats would rather have Cowser, I bet. Skenes is obviously a freak. Langford is looking really good. We'll see what Jenkins and Clark can do, but Mayer is looking like a star in that 21 class and Lawlar has debuted as well. 2022 has Jackson Holliday who reached the majors at 20. Kumar Rocker in an MLB rotation already. Cade Horton is going to pitch in the playoffs this year. I believe you're amongst the fans here who are still excited about that Brooks Lee fella who was a top 5 prospect that year but fella to 8. But I'll also point out the randomness of the draft with Bryce Eldridge going 16th and looking more ready than Jenkins already. Kyle Teel going 14th and already being in the bigs. Hurston Waldrep 24th and dominating the bigs already. Aiden Miller 27th and fans around here having wanted him back for Duran. Brice Matthews 28th and being an important part of what Houston is doing trying to make the playoffs. Already discussed Schanuel going 11th. Or Zach Neto from 2022 having gone 13th and having been the better choice than Lee at 8. Or Cole Young at 21. Or dang, imagine the Twins having taken Jackson Merrill instead of Chase Petty in 2021. Could you imagine if we'd traded him away for Sonny Gray? Heads would have exploded. Of course they should develop and take advantage of draft odds. But it is sometimes an either or proposition. Sometimes they work together. Sometimes developing your young players leads to more losses and better draft odds. Sometimes developing your young players leads to more wins and worse draft odds. Sometimes it's essentially a push. All I'm saying is they shouldn't make 26-man and playing time decisions based on who they think gives them the best chance to lose (and I think you're wrong in that being their motivation or strategy). I think they should make them all based on what is best for the development of players who have a chance to be part of their future (I don't think that's their strategy either). I think they're still trying to win games. Or they're still just terrible at evaluating talent and honestly think Clemens and Gasper may be part of the 2026 team. No other reason for them to be playing.
  12. You've already decided it isn't smart to bring him up in April or May? So, he could spend the next 4 weeks putting up a 1.200 OPS, handling every type of pitch they throw him, and showing he's got no real problems with AAA pitching. Then go to spring training next year and face a bunch of MLB pitching and show he can handle that, but it's still not smart to call him up until July? All for an extra year of control that they're more likely to trade him before they can take advantage of anyways? Or are we still on the "you have to do your time in AAA to be ready for the majors" thing? The draft is volatile every year. You're arguing the lottery is less volatile than typical, but the draft is still volatile. Sure, you could end up with that, or you could end up with the #7 pick (like the Marlins just did with a 22.5% chance of getting the #1 pick). Or you could end up with the #3 pick and the draft class turns out to be way less talented than expected. Because the draft is volatile. Every. Year. And I disagree the draft is the best way to find stars. Trading for high minors prospects is the best way to find stars. The Twins should be focused on developing the prospects they have in hand. If that strategy mixes well with improving their draft odds, great (it does, they have very little talent at the MLB level so they're going to lose a bunch of games).
  13. Why would you look at at bats? Legitimate question. Why wouldn't you look at the number of times they stepped to the plate? Who ever said anything was mandated? Are you attempting to prove me wrong by pointing to something the Twins did as proof that it was the right thing to do? An appeal to power by using the Twins as the example of intelligent baseball ops operation and prospect development? What about how they've developed players suggests they have it figured out and what they do is proof that it's clearly the right call? All offense meant by that towards them (not you). The reason they're in this position is because they've completely and utterly failed at developing even a single consistently productive all around position player prospect. Excuse me if their belief that "it was prudent to move him to AAA" isn't impressive to me. They haven't earned the right to have their decisions be unquestioned proof that it's the right decision. I understand how service time works. I also understand that if you call him up after the service time date to try to get that extra year and he wins rookie of the year (like Paul Skenes) you don't get that extra draft pick or the extra year of control. That would be less than ideal, no? See, the Pirates didn't call Skenes up until 5/11/2024 to make his debut. Should've gotten an extra year of control out of that, right? Except he was good. Like really, really good. So, he won rookie of the year. And that meant he got a full year of service time anyways and they didn't get that extra year. And they didn't get the extra pick because he wasn't up in time. And he'll win the Cy Young this year and they still won't get the extra pick. See, not so clear cut when you have a potential star. The 2027 lockout should have an effect on their desire to keep a player down just to manipulate service time. Their development should be their only concern when you may lose an entire year of baseball. Sorry, I was going off just my list, which only had 2 Angels on it. If you're doing total Angels you can add Christian Moore who had fewer than 100 AAA PAs before he debuted. Yes, so they're devoid of major league talent. Which you listed as a reason to call up prospects quickly. And I hope they aren't playing for a better 2026 draft pick. The lottery is far too volatile and the draft is far too much of a crap shoot for that. Developing your prospects you have in hand should be a far bigger concern than trying to lose games for draft pick placement.
  14. To be fair, they did add 1 pitcher last year, but then he left (Burnes). But, yeah, the Basallo extension (I assume that's what's lead to this discussion) would be far more like extending Keaschall than anyone listed here.
  15. Correa didn't crater. He had one of the best years of his career while healthy. Including September when he came back injured. Buxton didn't crater. He had the second highest OPS+ of his career while playing 100 games for only the 2nd time in his career. The offense fell apart without them because it was untalented. Talent has been the problem. Nobody can coach bad hitters to be good hitters. Larnach had the best season of his career, by far. Wallner was one of the best hitters in the game for half the season. Santana had the best season, by far, he's had since 2019. Like you should look at his stats for the last 6 years and see the outlier that last year was. It's unreal. Do the same thing for Larnach. And Buxton and Correa. Like actually go look at the numbers for the players for last year compared to their careers. This lineup has lacked talent for a long time. Popkins got career years out of many of them. Castro was his best in his 2 years with Popkins. They collapsed but putting it on Popkins is scapegoating probably the best thing this team had going for them in terms of coaching from an outside perspective.
  16. Jenkins will be 21 next year. Let's not act like Neto being 22 is some crazy difference. Your argument everywhere else is that it's about "minor league at bats," but now it's age? Neto had fewer than 200 minor league at bats before his debut. But he was 22 and had a whopping 16 plate appearances in AAA. That's your argument? Again, Jenkins will be 21 before next season. So, that's the same as Schanuel who has, to this day, a staggering 97 plate appearances in minor league baseball. Not AAA. Not even AA (only 76 there). But the minor leagues as a whole. 97 PAs. Chourio's first "year" in the minors was when he was 17 and was the Dominican summer league. Let's not pretend that's some wildly competitive minor league significantly higher than the showcase circuit Walker played at the same age. Then he played 3 years of minor league ball in the states. That's half a season more than Walker. If the Twins are playing service time games with the incredibly high likelihood of a 2027 lockout, they're even bigger fools than many already think. Jenkins has been in the Twins system for as long as Merrill was in the Padres before he debuted. Walker Jenkins has 752 plate appearances in the minors. He'll be over 800 by the end of the season. Just like Jackson Merrill. The Angels account for 2 of the cases (and the Twins have a major league system devoid of talent, despite you not wanting to admit it. There's a reason they continue to get their butts kicked by bad teams, they are a bad team lacking talent). The article is about Jenkins on the opening day roster. He'll still well below 100 AAA PAs. Him making the opening day roster would be him essentially skipping AAA. The other poster didn't name 6-7 players, they named 4. And those 4 weren't all called up in the same year. Nor were they called up on opening day. Nor did they all totally skip AAA.
  17. Jackson Merrill (totally skipped AAA before he debuted at age 20), Jackson Chourio (24 AAA PAs before he debuted at age 20), Nolan Schanuel (totally skipped AAA and debuted at age 21 the year he was drafted), Zach Neto (16 AAA PAs before he debuted), Michael Harris (completely skipped AAA before debuting at age 21). Those are just off the top of my head. This isn't a different era. These are all guys who've skipped, or essentially skipped, AAA in the last 3 years. Shoot, Jackson Merrill moved to a position he'd never played in his life in spring training at the age of 20 and debuted in the majors at that position on opening day last year. Swanson and Benintendi are absolutely not the last MLB players to skip AAA. It's happening more and more. Jenkins debuting on opening day would not be weird at all. You have a pretty nice lineup going with the 5 guys I listed above. Better than the Twins lineup. And they didn't need AAA.
  18. But we don't "know nothing." We're not Jon Snow over here. It's been pretty widely reported that they bought somewhere in the 20s percentagewise. Essentially they bought out the debt. We know that Joe Pohlad himself said they were going to use the money to pay off the debt but wouldn't commit to spending any on payroll. And we have decades worth of Pohlad family ownership. Sure, we don't know anything 100% as far as how it'll all turn out, but we can make some pretty educated guesses. You can take that info anyway you want. But I'm going to take the entire history of the Pohlads owning this team and make a pretty educated guess that Joe being willing to openly state they're paying off their debt with the money but not being willing to say they're going to put any of it towards payroll as a Broadway sized, flashing, neon sign that he isn't looking to run a $120 million payroll and that the investors aren't there to get this thing humming in the spending department anytime soon. We know, or have at least had multiple reports on, quite a bit. And I don't see any reason to believe any of the optimistic views on the investor situation.
  19. I'm not sure why we should believe the investors have any power at all. Many MLB (and other pro sport leagues) teams have minority investors/owners. They aren't driving decisions. Just collecting checks. Patrick Mahomes owns part of the Royals. He's not dictating the direction the Royals take as a franchise. Derek freaking Jeter couldn't influence decisions with the Marlins and he was part of that ownership group when they first bought the team. Vince Carter, Tracy McGrady, and Jose Altidore are all part owners of the Bills. The GM didn't ask their input on the James Cook extension, they asked Terry Pegula. Minority owners get to brag about "owning" pro sports teams and attend fancy dinners. There's very little reason to believe a 20-whatever% stake bought them actual input on anything. And even less reason to believe they invested without a path to majority ownership because they care about wins and losses and are going to try to influence baseball decisions.
  20. Does it make you feel any better if Lee was actually 1:8? How about knowing the Pohlads save money by paying Falvey to suck at 2 jobs instead of just 1?
  21. Yes, that was obviously some extreme exaggeration, but Royce Lewis laying down bunts in games is not what's going to solve this team's problems or fix Royce Lewis. And you absolutely can use negative reinforcement to improve athletic performance. There are fines handed down between players in MLB clubhouses right now.
  22. He's only at 95 because of 1 good month. He's not the 10th best position player on a good team. He was on a good team and got cut. Kody Clemens was out of this world in May and it's carried him for the season. Like Joey Gallo having a 100 OPS+ in 2023 because of his 1.000 OPS that April. Since the calendar flipped to June Kody Clemens has a .656 OPS. Is that the 10th best position player on a good team? Is that good enough for a utility player? Kody Clemens has not been good since May.
  23. He isn't "cheap." They're not paying him $4-5 million in arbitration next year to be a no defense, no speed, platoon bat with a .783 OPS against righties. He's not going to be on this team next year. There's no more audition. He's done. If Clemens is still auditioning there's no point in watching this team until maybe 2027. He'll be 30 next year. He had a great month with a couple other hot weeks mixed in. He hasn't "had success." His numbers aren't good. He has a 95 OPS+. What does a below average bat, 30-year-old 1B bring us? Gasper can't catch. He can't. This is nonsense. What are we even talking about? They've watched him catch in AAA. Now every Twins fan who's still tuning in has seen that he darn near has to crow hop to get the ball to second on his throws. If they know what Pereda and Cardenas bring to the table they know even more what Gasper brings. Or should. What are we even talking about here? This is the problem with the Twins. These guys are not good. They're not good enough to be auditioning for anything. Pretending they are is the problem. Pretending Kepler was a top 5 in the lineup bat was the problem. Pretending Larnach was/is a top 5 in the lineup bat was/is the problem. The talent evaluation by the FO is awful. But they're going to get it right on Larnach this time because of the money. This lineup hasn't been good enough for a long time. And it's because they keep thinking/hoping/wishing/something that guys who aren't good enough suddenly will be or actually are good enough. Kepler was a 7-hole hitter on a good team. Larnach is a 7-hole platoon bat on a good team. But the Twins keep going into the year convinced they're set and ready to win because they have these guys in the top 4 or 5 of their lineup. It's why they keep "underperforming." But they aren't bringing Larnach back. They won't pay him 4-5 mil next year. Yes, there's a ton of DFA candidates on the 40-man. But Larnach, Clemens, and Gasper should be right at the top of the list with them.
  24. I'd much rather have Royce figuring out how to hit than bunt. Royce's development swinging is much more important than his development bunting, no? I'd never ask a single player on the Twins to bunt again this season. Why? The Twins season didn't fail because of their bunting skills; it failed because of their swinging skills. The fact that wins and losses mean nothing is all the more reason to go up there and swing the bat and develop the ability to actually hit the freaking ball and reach base. Tell Royce that hits to left don't count for him anymore. He's out unless he hits it to the right of the shortstop. Screw bunting. Bunting didn't ruin their season. If Wallner Ks more than once in a game he gets fined. If Lee chases more than once per plate appearance he's fined. If Julien watches more than 1 pitch over the heart of the plate he's pulled from the game mid at bat. Pick all their biggest weaknesses and whatever punishment you want to come up with and start fixing those weaknesses. Not bunting. Bunting has never ruined a team's season in the history of baseball. Who cares about Royce Lewis bunting? Royce Lewis hitting .225/.288/.358/.646 ruined the season, not him being a bad bunter.
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