Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

chpettit19

Community Moderator
  • Posts

    8,226
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    168

 Content Type 

Profiles

News

Minnesota Twins Videos

2026 Minnesota Twins Top Prospects Ranking

2022 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

Minnesota Twins Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

Guides & Resources

2023 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

The Minnesota Twins Players Project

2024 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks

2025 Minnesota Twins Draft Pick Tracker

2026 Minnesota Twins Draft Pick Tracker

Forums

Blogs

Events

Store

Downloads

Gallery

Everything posted by chpettit19

  1. Kemp can play LF. If they're comfortable with Margot in CF (which they better be since they traded for him for that exact reason) a Martin for Kemp swap wouldn't really be surprising at all.
  2. Thank you. That's all I wanted to add. You seem to have things under control on this one so I'll just sit back and enjoy the show.
  3. Can I add that even if the paper lineup of a Julien/Farmer Platoon, Kirilloff/Santana Platoon, Lewis and Correa lasted past April there is still a DH position for Polanco to play?
  4. Wallner has a massive hole covering the entire inner third of the plate, but especially down and in. He can't hit those pitches. And once you get him focused on trying to hit those inner third pitches you drop something soft down and away and he's finished. Houston did their scouting before the ALDS against the Twins and showed the world how you get him out. This season has just been pitcher after pitcher saying "it's coming inner third, hit it if you can" over and over and he can't hit it. The league adjusted. He's miles away from adjusting back. From the sounds of it he knew this would be a problem and spent the offseason putting in work to try to close that hole. It hasn't worked. AAA is probably the place for him the second Larnach or Lee or anyone is ready.
  5. That is the conundrum the league faces. They keep watching star arms fall, but there's no chance the players or teams change their pitching strategies because they'd turn every lineup into Betts-Ohtani-Freeman on repeat. No idea how they fix it.
  6. It's just so hard for guys that size to succeed at baseball. Such long levers to get under control consistently. Chances are he never even sniffs the majors, but it's a fun story. If he can't make contact with AA pitching he certainly isn't going to do it with major league pitching.
  7. Have they really had anyone under this regime who was worthy of being called up at 21? I think the bigger reason they keep guys in the minors these days is their misguided effort to sustain depth at the cost of taking a shot at more talented players.
  8. If it's mid-May and he hasn't slowed down and they are still struggling with corner outfield offense he should absolutely get the call. Michael Harris debuted for the Braves on May 28th in 2022 with a jump straight from AA where he'd just debuted at the start of that season at age 21. He played 43 AA games before debuting and ripping off a .297/.339/.515/.853 slash line in 114 MLB games in 2022. I'd sign up for that route from Emma in his age 21 season in a heartbeat.
  9. Not sure he really got more over the top. At least not drastically. He sat pretty consistently between 1.5 ft and 2 ft of horizontal release throughout the appearance. Between just under 6' and about 6.5' of vertical release the whole game as well. His release points from the catcher POV from innings 1 through 6 below. Some slight fade towards the middle, but I don't think it was anything crazy. The important thing with his change in arm slot is about getting more velo and he maintained that just fine throughout the start. Last fastball clocked at 93.8 MPH on pitch 77 will play just fine for him.
  10. I really hope this isn't right. Not saying it isn't, just hoping it isn't. If he's as important to their future as it appears people think he is they need to sacrifice some reliever depth to call up a Kiersey or Helman or Prato type if Emma isn't ready. Don't mess with his development because you don't want to DFA Matt Bowman or Daniel Duarte. Shoot, DFA Severino or Larnach if they're not an answer before you mess with Emma's development. His 'readiness' needs to be factor 1, 2, 3, and 4 if he's someone you're expecting to be a franchise cornerstone. I fear you may be correct, but I really hope you aren't. Or that he just proves to be ready when needed and none of this is even a concern. That'd be ideal.
  11. I'd say through May if he doesn't slow down. If he goes through a cold spell then a month after he gets back to crushing.
  12. I expect Varland to get 2 or 3 more starts before they make any rotation moves. SWR looked good for sure, but it's still very early. He has plenty more proving to do of his own. I'd bet they give them each another 2 weeks and 3 starts to see where they're at and then it may be a switch that's made to put Louie in the AAA rotation and give SWR a shot with the big club. Can't imagine they put Varland back in the pen before late August or September, though. Simply can't take another pitcher out of your rotation depth without being forced to. If Louie goes back to the pen at the end of the year (I expect that's how it turns out) he's more than likely there for good. His rotation clock is ticking. The silver lining is that he looked like he could be really, really good out of the pen. It's not the end of the world, but I'm sure he'd be a little bummed. Easier to survive HR problems in the pen. I expect his BB% to come back down as the season moves forward, but suppressing the HRs is going to be a harder development for him.
  13. Isn't the last year of Polanco's contract. He has a team option for next year as well.
  14. I know they weren't 2 of the three or four best hitters on the team, but they got the 3rd and 4th most PAs. The point is that the 26/27th (they both started in the majors so it'd be the 25th/26th, but that's splitting hairs) guys still get a ton of at bats so purposefully filling those spots with short side bats or guys you don't expect to be much above average is a bad strategy. Even without injuries the Twins love to rest guys and get everyone playing time to "stay fresh." There is no position on the Twins 26- or 40-man rosters that should be marked for a guy they don't expect to play often. They actively attempt to play them all often, and they've built around a core of walking injuries. I have no problem with the Arraez trade. The Polanco trade is horrible for the 2024 Twins. Absolutely garbage. Paying Farmer and Santana is a terrible strategy. Kyle Farmer has publicly, on the record, stated that he expected to be non-tendered because of his price tag and was surprised when they offered him that deal. When a player is openly admitting you paid too much for him it's terrible team building. DeSclafani wasn't some throw in on the Polanco deal. They gave him a rotation spot. When you put that in the ever growing list of injured pitchers, and injury prone position players, this team collects in the name of "cheap" talent acquisition and see what it's actually cost it's a highly questionable strategy. When you back up your "cheap" injury filled top line talent with over paid, short side platoon bats, or utterly replaceable league average talent you don't get to then play the "well Solano and Castro weren't supposed to play that much" card. Their team building strategy is based on 2 conflicting ideas. Pay less for higher injury risk players (Correa, Buxton) and actively injured pitchers (Paddack, Mahle, DeSclafani) paired with extreme platooning so they can acquire/pay cheaper players to fill short side platoon positions. When you add in the unfortunate fact that Lewis and Kirilloff also can't seem to stay healthy (which they've known for years now) you get a team filled with short side platoon bats and cheap veterans trying to carry the team with everyday at bats for much of the season. And, so far, it hasn't worked at all. When you actively plan to use all of your guys frequently it is a bad strategy to prioritize lesser players who you hope only have to play lesser roles.
  15. The bolded part is the point. When combined with your previous statement that they prioritize those guys over Steer it is 100% the point. They are prioritizing worse players in the name of depth. Steer provides just as much depth as either Solano or Castro does (1 player's worth) while being better. They prioritize short side of a platoon bats over better players in the name of depth and ideal, on paper lineups. They're sacrificing skill for perceived depth and wishful thinking that their lesser players will play less. That'd be all well and good if Solano and Castro put up 110 and 105 OPS+ as part-time depth pieces, but they weren't part-time depth pieces they were full-time starting pieces. If the guys with the 3rd and 4th most PAs on your team have 110 and 105 OPS+ you can't be shocked when your offense is inconsistent at best. Injuries happen. All the time. Especially when you build around 3 guys with long injury histories (Buxton, Lewis, Kirilloff) and sign a guy who failed 2 physicals (Correa). They end up playing Solano, Castro, and now Santana types every day, and seem to be confused as to why the offense isn't very good most of the time. Prioritizing weak depth over actual talent while pairing it with injury prone stars is exactly how you get league average guys, or short side of a platoon guys, playing everyday while your offense struggles. It shouldn't be surprising that continuing to follow that strategy is continuing to have the same results.
  16. And that's the problem. Donavon Solano was 3rd on the team in PAs last year. That's the role he played. He walked to the plate more times than anyone but Correa and Kepler. Castro was 4th. They're sacrificing ceiling for floor then they're shocked when they can't win playoff games for 20 years. If you think Solano and Castro had good years for the guys taking the 3rd and 4th most trips to the plate for the Twins we'll just have to agree to disagree. They had good years for the roles they were supposed to fill on paper. But, as some of us are trying to point out, paper roles don't mean anything. The roles they actually played were full time players on a team with deep playoff run aspirations. They aren't the guys you want stepping to the plate more than all but 2 guys on your team. Just like Santana shouldn't be, but will be. Margot was acquired as CF depth. I assume you're talking about Emma as the top prospect, but comparing him to Steer who almost immediately made his big league debut after being traded is a bad comparison. Emma hadn't stepped foot on a AA field before this season. Counting on him over a Margot type is very different than counting on Steer over Solano. Whether you want to say depth or logjam, it's the same to me. It's all fake news. They don't have real depth if your major league depth to start the season is made up of easily replaceable pieces you hope are simply league average, or only hit against lefties. It's the same thing for the logjam. There's no logjam if all you're looking at is the 8 starting fielding positions on opening day. Their definition of depth and/or a logjam is why they're never a real threat in the playoffs.
  17. Solano likely never would've even been signed had Steer been here. But, even if he were, prioritizing Solano types over Steer types is the problem. Them not giving a chance to Steer is a flashing neon sign of a problem for this FO. Prioritizing Solano, Gallo, Castro, Farmer, and Santana types over Steer types is how you end up with this fake logjam of guys who's ceilings are "average, utterly replaceable MLB player."
  18. Santana hitting 2 hole against righties and 8 hole against lefties summarizes your stance pretty well. Literally the opposite of how you'd want it. Actually, worse than that because you don't even want him hitting 8 against righties. Just brutal.
  19. Ippei was the only person in the room with the agent, bookkeeper, and financial advisor who spoke Japanese. He told them Ohtani wanted them to track all of his accounts except for that one. On one occasion he's accused of telling the agent and his team that Ohtani was sick and having a meeting with them alone where he told them Ohtani wanted that account to be private. The affidavit suggests that Ippei used the language barrier to his full advantage.
  20. https://theathletic.com/5409393/2024/04/11/shohei-ohtani-interpreter-affidavit-takeaways/ Pretty good breakdown of the affidavit here for anyone with an Athletic account. Sounds like Ohtani really never even accessed that account and Ippei just turned it into his own personal account.
  21. Come on. There's a vast difference between team wins and losses and pitcher wins. They're really not comparable at all. You can like the stat and defend it without comparing it to team wins.
×
×
  • Create New...