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Vanimal46

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Everything posted by Vanimal46

  1. Fans all across the land complain about bullpen management. Did Molitor abuse his pitchers worse than other managers? I would think every manager has 3 go-tos in high leverage situations, and the rest fill in the cracks.
  2. Only 30 GM jobs in the league, and every organization has their quirks. The owner having a close, personal friend as his preference for manager isn't all that bad... You could be reporting into Stuart Sternberg, owner of the Rays!
  3. A total system failure will do that to your overall record. 83 wins in 2015 Total System Failure 85 wins last year ?? this year
  4. That's the beauty of fandom! We all have our own expectations. As far as the playoff failures, I place that burden more on the higher ups... The manager can only play what's on his roster. It's up to ownership and GM to take chances and sacrifice some of the future when the team has a chance to win it all... No hard feelings at all, btw. I enjoy these types of discussions a lot more than talking about why Bobby Wilson is on roster.
  5. I don't know if the players stopped listening to him. That's a judgment call for Pohlad to make. If true, that's a reason for firing him. I assume Molitor is a professional and is providing feedback for his players. Are the fundamental errors more than the average team? How much responsibility falls on the manager vs. the player himself? MLB caliber players as you said know the fundamentals, and they should be able to do it day in, day out, regardless of the manager. As far as coaching, training, and fixing problems, that's also not just on the manager. Especially in this era of baseball. Wasn't it Falvine that drew up the plan to fix Sano earlier this season? They have an analytics team to dig up video and data to help coach, train, and fix problems.
  6. That's your goal to win a World Series. My goal is to be competitive and make the playoffs. We don't know what Mr. Pohlad's goal is.
  7. Your last paragraph is the crux of my argument. What exactly does a manager do? What value do they provide during a game? They're not the ones making stupid baserunning mistakes, and throwing to the wrong base. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink it. If Molitor is sitting in his office streaming Netflix instead of instructing his players on fundamentals, we can raise pitch forks. I'm going to assume Molitor is a professional and does everything he can to win a game. Baseball has been around for 100+ years, and millions of fans have debated this topic. Yet no one has come up with a way to measure and quantify what a manager does. In the past there was more strategic moves made by a manager. Now we're in the three true outcomes era, and their strategic hunches are going away. Now their strategy is, "Hey, try to hit a home run here. Or take a walk."
  8. If people think this team can finish .500 this year they'll be .500 or better in 3 of his 4 seasons. Something that hasn't been accomplished this decade. If you're Falvine asking for a new manager, Jim will ask what that person does differently than Molitor. And why is that worth the rest of Molitor's salary plus the salary of the new manager? How can Falvine quantify that?
  9. I don't hear Molitor yelling to the players "Take 3rd base, right now! I don't care if you screw up!!" Why are the 1st and 3rd base coaches absolved of this criticism? Can you quantify if his bullpen management and lineup selection is atrocious compared to other managers? Or is he just not playing your favorites?
  10. What does any manager do at an average or above average rate? They make the lineups, and make calls to the bullpen. Everything else is intangible stuff we can't see as fans.
  11. It shouldn't be the goal, but it's realistic. Do you honestly think Molitor is getting fired this season if the team finishes around .500? The 'hands-off' owner will most likely view that as a success after years of terrible baseball. Regardless how we personally feel about this team's performance, Molitor could finish with a .500 or better record 3 out of 4 seasons.
  12. As far as Molitor is concerned, he's okay. Beat writers like Lavelle say he's one of the most insightful people he's interviewed. He is utilizing analytics more than he did when he started managing. Something is not translating to the players, though. Is that fully his responsibility? Is that a partial responsibility between him and the other coaches? As far as his bullpen usage, either he feels he doesn't have the talent (I'd argue that's been the case) or he has trust issues with players. On a daily basis, he's not going to satisfy all fans with his lineup card. On a game thread I may poke fun or say 'WTF, Motter in RF?' I'm sure every manager in baseball has strange lineups like that if we studied everyone's card like we do for the Twins. Overall: C and he stays next year.
  13. Concur. I also don't believe it's Falvine's call whether or not Molitor stays. And that seems to be the trend in this organization... Owner dictates who manages the team. Veterans dictate where they hit in the lineup. Mauer can choose whether or not he wants to play baseball on a given day. There seems to be a lot of demands for a mediocre, sometimes very bad team.
  14. I hope he does. I understand people want to be in the best baseball league the world has to offer, but he could be a star in Asia mashing 50+ HRs a season. You never know, he could be like Eric Thames and be more desirable to MLB teams 1-2 years down the road after a stint in Asia.
  15. It's pretty obvious, no? He's either going to be a AAA player (probably not for the Twins), or find a better opportunity in Korea or Japan.
  16. My intention in the first post wasn't to criticize the FO. I'm saying it's too early to call this a win for our Twins. Cave is good and probably has a 2-3 year tenure with the Twins. The player we gave up is young and throws gas. If he figures it out at higher levels of baseball it could come back to haunt us. Or he flames out in the minors. That's all I'm saying. Going forward, the Twins now have several 4th OF candidates who all hit LH. Wade requires 40 man protection this offseason, and Granite may remain on roster too. Was it worth giving up a high upside reliever that can throw 100? Time will tell.
  17. Yeah it's premature to call this trade a win for the Twins. Is Cave bringing something to the table that Wade couldn't do? Or even Granite if he wasn't injured.
  18. Who was the last Twins pitcher that had a positive MLB debut in the rotation? Seems like every rookie debut is a bad outing. Edit: Is it Andrew Albers? Do we have to go that far back in time?
  19. Poppin' tags when they have $20 in their pocket is fine. This off-season they should have more money to shop at Macy's instead of the thrift store.
  20. They were both contenders when they called them up. The Twins are not. You have to be strategic when it comes to players you think have star potential.
  21. It's not courageous. It's wreckless to start his service clock and option years in a lost season.
  22. I like the idea of him being a FB/Slider reliever for 1 inning. I'm not interested in keeping him for the rotation since he tops out at 5 innings more often than not.
  23. I still don't know why another team would give anything of value for LoFo... But at least the ground work is done just in case.
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