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  1. The big All-Star bash in Minneapolis is behind us now and by most accounts, it was somewhere between very successful and close to perfect. I saw the Futures Game/Celebrity Softball Game in person on Sunday and watched the Home Run Derby and ASG on the tube. My conclusion is that, while I wouldn't say it was all perfectly staged and performed, the Twin Cities and those from MLB and the Twins who were involved all did themselves proud. It was the kind of event that could make us feel proud to call ourselves Twins fans (and there haven't been many events like that over the past few years). A list of the things I didn't like would be short. Too much Jeter (but we knew there would be) and too little Gwynn (none at all, really). I also really didn't like the special caps for the ASG. That just seems like an over-the-top money grab by MLB to sell more stuff. I'd rather see the players in some version of their regular uniforms, including the cap. (This article was originally posted at Knuckleballsblog.com) The rain delay at the HR Derby on Monday sucked. But the rainbow over the Plaza almost made the rain delay worthwhile in itself. I'm sure there were a few people moaning about the lack of a roof, but I think most of us stopped listening to those idiots years ago. The new HR Derby format didn't exactly work the way people thought (or hoped) it would. Oh well, try something different next time. I had some family with me this trip and that meant visits to the Mall of America on Friday night and Saturday. I know a lot of people roll their eyes at going to MOA, but I've never been too averse to it. Walking around the Mall brings back some memories of visits there when our kids were young and it was a bit of an adventure. I tire quicker these days, of course, but I've never had trouble finding an open bar stool for a rest and I rested at the Sky Deck Grille and Kokomos for quite a bit of my time at MOA. Sunday, the family got in some pool time at the hotel before we hopped on the light rail to Target Field for the Futures Game. It was my 11-month old grandson's first venture in to a swimming pool and his first time at a Big League ballpark. So that was cool. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Jack1-300x171.jpg grandson Jack in the hotel pool We pretty much took over the first row of Section C in the Legends Club for the Sunday activities. Getting through a full Futures Game, a half hour or more "intermission" and a six-inning softball game with various interviews slowing things down between innings was a bit much for me, so I have no idea how an 11-month old endured it, but he did. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Jack2.jpg My grandson's first trip to Target Field. Kind of gave "Futures Game" a different meaning to me. I enjoyed watching Kennys Vargas and Alex Meyer and I was really excited to see Jose Berrios start for the World team. When the Twins announced their affiliation with the Cedar Rapids Kernels starting in 2013, I started looking forward to being able to see guys I'd been watching in Kernels uniforms play in Target Field. Berrios was the first of the 2013 crop of Kernels I got to see there and it just has me even more anxious to see the arrival of a few of his Kernels teammates with the Twins in coming years. All three of the Twins prospects did just fine in the game. Nobody "starred," but that's OK. Let's not forget, these three guys aren't the organization's top 3 prospects, but they held their own (or better). The future is bright for the Twins, if I can just manage to live long enough to see it. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Berrios-FG-2.jpg Jose Berrios, former CR Kernel, future Minnesota Twin The cramped rail-ride back to Bloomington was probably the worst part of the day, but at least I could collapse at the hotel when it was over. Monday morning, we packed up and headed back to Cedar Rapids, getting there well before the HR Derby's scheduled start. Of course, it turned out the actual start was delayed about an hour by rain anyway. The ovations for Justin Morneau and Brian Dozier were terrific and I thought the crowd did a nice job of showing appreciation for all the participants. I felt a bit bad for Yasiel Puig. I'm not sure if he just was too amped up or what. And did nobody tell him he should enlist his favorite BP pitcher to throw to him? Odd. Anyway, I suspect he'll do better in a future Derby. If I'm being completely honest, I was just really glad it wasn't Morneau or Dozier that got shut out. I watched the first couple innings of the All-Star Game itself at my favorite local bar. They had music playing, so I was spared the need to mute the TV. Of course, that meant I missed what most seem to think was a pretty good National Anthem (though FOX totally blew off the Canadian Anthem, which I thought was tacky on their part). Looked like a great flyover, too. I love those. I guess I have to give my thoughts on the Jeter-fest. I'd like to get a real good case of Jeter-hate up, but I just can't. Yes, I hate the Yankees and that's largely because of Yankee fans, so it's usually pretty easy for me to really dislike individual Yankee players. But I reserve most of my dislike for the mercenaries who grab the Yankee dough after spending their best years elsewhere. Jeter didn't do that. And, at least at the ballpark, from what I can tell, he's conducted himself in a pretty honorable manner through the years. I can appreciate that, even in a Yankee. Is he over-rated? Oh yeah, definitely. But playing for the Yankees isn't always easy, as others have found out, so maybe a guy who plays there and plays very well for 20 years should get a little credit for that. That said, I would agree that his career warranted an ASG send off closer to the one Chipper Jones got. It just wasn't realistic to expect that would happen. So, I thought he, MLB, the Twins and the Target Field crowd did about the best job that could have been expected of balancing proper appreciation with he inevitable ESPN/FOX overkill of the situation. I admit, too, that I was pleasantly surprised that Mike Trout got the ASG MVP award, rather than Jeter. Again, some bias there at seeing another former Kernels player out-do the "face of baseball." By the way, that whole "face of baseball" thing is a crock. First, there IS no face of baseball. This isn't the NBA and we don't need hyped up media megastars to survive. Trout is the best player in the game and he's only 22 years old (for about another month), but the media will never allow him to reach the hype level of Jeter - because he's not a Yankee. It's really that simple. There will be no more "face of baseball" hype until the next time there's a Yankee with the pedigree to allow Yankee fans, MLB and ESPN to bang the drum loud enough to proclaim him as such. Hopefully, that will take a REALLY long time. Like forever. It was good to see Pat Neshek participating. You can't help but feel just how important this unimportant game was to him after all he's been through. Sure, there were more deserving pitchers that could have been selected (but not as many as some people think), but as long as you're going to give the ASG manager some latitude on picks, you're going to get some picks based on his emotions and if that's going to happen, I'd rather see it happen to guys like Neshek than some others. I did think he could have done without the bit of Twins front office-bashing he did to the media over the weekend, but he probably has good reason to feel the way he does. Heck, I really wish I could complain that letting Neshek go was the worst decision the Twins have made the last few years. It's too bad Neshek got saddled with the loss. His 3B (I don't even remember who it was) sure didn't do him any favors with his defense on Trout's double down the left field line. The game was at least interesting. Plenty of stars performed well under the spotlight. Some did not (I'm looking at you Robinson Cano). All in all, as I said, it was an event Twins fans can be proud of. I took a few pictures on Sunday, so I'll share some of them here. - JC http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/ClydesdalesFG.jpg Best thing about Budweiser beer http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Meyer-FG-4.jpg Alex Meyer http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Oliva-FG-3.jpg Tony Oliva with the first pitch before the Futures Game http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/OlivaVargasFG.jpg Tony Oliva threw out the first pitch to Kennys Vargas http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Vargas-FG-6.jpg Kennys Vargas http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/BeerMachines.jpg The self-serve beer machines seemed to really clog up the concourse. Not sure if it was the people using them or the people gawking at them. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Fingers-SB-1.jpg Rollie Fingers http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Fitzgerald-SB-1.jpg Larry Fitzgerald http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/HendersonPiazza-SB.jpg Mike Piazza and Ricky Henderson http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Parsise-SB-1.jpg Zach Parise http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Peterson-SB-1.jpg Adrian Peterson
  2. The big All-Star bash in Minneapolis is behind us now and by most accounts, it was somewhere between very successful and close to perfect. I saw the Futures Game/Celebrity Softball Game in person on Sunday and watched the Home Run Derby and ASG on the tube. My conclusion is that, while I wouldn't say it was all perfectly staged and performed, the Twin Cities and those from MLB and the Twins who were involved all did themselves proud. It was the kind of event that could make us feel proud to call ourselves Twins fans (and there haven't been many events like that over the past few years). A list of the things I didn't like would be short. Too much Jeter (but we knew there would be) and too little Gwynn (none at all, really). I also really didn't like the special caps for the ASG. That just seems like an over-the-top money grab by MLB to sell more stuff. I'd rather see the players in some version of their regular uniforms, including the cap. (This article was originally posted at Knuckleballsblog.com) The rain delay at the HR Derby on Monday sucked. But the rainbow over the Plaza almost made the rain delay worthwhile in itself. I'm sure there were a few people moaning about the lack of a roof, but I think most of us stopped listening to those idiots years ago. The new HR Derby format didn't exactly work the way people thought (or hoped) it would. Oh well, try something different next time. I had some family with me this trip and that meant visits to the Mall of America on Friday night and Saturday. I know a lot of people roll their eyes at going to MOA, but I've never been too averse to it. Walking around the Mall brings back some memories of visits there when our kids were young and it was a bit of an adventure. I tire quicker these days, of course, but I've never had trouble finding an open bar stool for a rest and I rested at the Sky Deck Grille and Kokomos for quite a bit of my time at MOA. Sunday, the family got in some pool time at the hotel before we hopped on the light rail to Target Field for the Futures Game. It was my 11-month old grandson's first venture in to a swimming pool and his first time at a Big League ballpark. So that was cool. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Jack1-300x171.jpg grandson Jack in the hotel pool We pretty much took over the first row of Section C in the Legends Club for the Sunday activities. Getting through a full Futures Game, a half hour or more "intermission" and a six-inning softball game with various interviews slowing things down between innings was a bit much for me, so I have no idea how an 11-month old endured it, but he did. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Jack2.jpg My grandson's first trip to Target Field. Kind of gave "Futures Game" a different meaning to me. I enjoyed watching Kennys Vargas and Alex Meyer and I was really excited to see Jose Berrios start for the World team. When the Twins announced their affiliation with the Cedar Rapids Kernels starting in 2013, I started looking forward to being able to see guys I'd been watching in Kernels uniforms play in Target Field. Berrios was the first of the 2013 crop of Kernels I got to see there and it just has me even more anxious to see the arrival of a few of his Kernels teammates with the Twins in coming years. All three of the Twins prospects did just fine in the game. Nobody "starred," but that's OK. Let's not forget, these three guys aren't the organization's top 3 prospects, but they held their own (or better). The future is bright for the Twins, if I can just manage to live long enough to see it. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Berrios-FG-2.jpg Jose Berrios, former CR Kernel, future Minnesota Twin The cramped rail-ride back to Bloomington was probably the worst part of the day, but at least I could collapse at the hotel when it was over. Monday morning, we packed up and headed back to Cedar Rapids, getting there well before the HR Derby's scheduled start. Of course, it turned out the actual start was delayed about an hour by rain anyway. The ovations for Justin Morneau and Brian Dozier were terrific and I thought the crowd did a nice job of showing appreciation for all the participants. I felt a bit bad for Yasiel Puig. I'm not sure if he just was too amped up or what. And did nobody tell him he should enlist his favorite BP pitcher to throw to him? Odd. Anyway, I suspect he'll do better in a future Derby. If I'm being completely honest, I was just really glad it wasn't Morneau or Dozier that got shutout. I watched the first couple innings of the All-Star Game itself at my favorite local bar. They had music playing, so I was spared the need to mute the TV. Of course, that meant I missed what most seem to think was a pretty good National Anthem (though FOX totally blew off the Canadian Anthem, which I thought was tacky on their part). Looked like a great flyover, too. I love those. I guess I have to give my thoughts on the Jeter-fest. I'd like to get a real good case of Jeter-hate up, but I just can't. Yes, I hate the Yankees and that's largely because of Yankee fans, so it's usually pretty easy for me to really dislike individual Yankee players. But I reserve most of my dislike for the mercenaries who grab the Yankee dough after spending their best years elsewhere. Jeter didn't do that. And, at least at the ballpark, from what I can tell, he's conducted himself in a pretty honorable manner through the years. I can appreciate that, even in a Yankee. Is he over-rated? Oh yeah, definitely. But playing for the Yankees isn't always easy, as others have found out, so maybe a guy who plays there and plays very well for 20 years should get a little credit for that. That said, I would agree that his career warranted an ASG send off closer to the one Chipper Jones got. It just wasn't realistic to expect that would happen. So, I thought he, MLB, the Twins and the Target Field crowd did about the best job that could have been expected of balancing proper appreciation with he inevitable ESPN/FOX overkill of the situation. I admit, too, that I was pleasantly surprised that Mike Trout got the ASG MVP award, rather than Jeter. Again, some bias there at seeing another former Kernels player out-do the "face of baseball." By the way, that whole "face of baseball" thing is a crock. First, there IS no face of baseball. This isn't the NBA and we don't need hyped up media megastars to survive. Trout is the best player in the game and he's only 22 years old (for about another month), but the media will never allow him to reach the hype level of Jeter - because he's not a Yankee. It's really that simple. There will be no more "face of baseball" hype until the next time there's a Yankee with the pedigree to allow Yankee fans, MLB and ESPN to bang the drum loud enough to proclaim him as such. Hopefully, that will take a REALLY long time. Like forever. It was good to see Pat Neshek participating. You can't help but feel just how important this unimportant game was to him after all he's been through. Sure, there were more deserving pitchers that could have been selected (but not as many as some people think), but as long as you're going to give the ASG manager some latitude on picks, you're going to get some picks based on his emotions and if that's going to happen, I'd rather see it happen to guys like Neshek than some others. I did think he could have done without the bit of Twins front office-bashing he did to the media over the weekend, but he probably has good reason to feel the way he does. Heck, I really wish I could complain that letting Neshek go was the worst decision the Twins have made the last few years. It's too bad Neshek got saddled with the loss. His 3B (I don't even remember who it was) sure didn't do him any favors with his defense on Trout's double down the left field line. The game was at least interesting. Plenty of stars performed well under the spotlight. Some did not (I'm looking at you Robinson Cano). All in all, as I said, it was an event Twins fans can be proud of. I took a few pictures on Sunday, so I'll share some of them here. - JC http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/ClydesdalesFG.jpg Best thing about Budweiser beer http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Meyer-FG-4.jpg Alex Meyer http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Oliva-FG-3.jpg Tony Oliva with the first pitch before Futures Game http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/OlivaVargasFG.jpg Tony Oliva threw out the first pitch to Kennys Vargas http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Vargas-FG-6.jpg Kennys Vargas http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/BeerMachines.jpg The self serve beer machines seemed to really clog up the concourse. Not sure if it was the people using them or the people gawking at them. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Fingers-SB-1.jpg Rollie Fingers http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Fitzgerald-SB-1.jpg Larry Fitzgerald http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/HendersonPiazza-SB.jpg Mike Piazza and Ricky Henderson http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Parsise-SB-1.jpg Zach Parise http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Peterson-SB-1.jpg Adrian Peterson
  3. The merry-go-round that is a minor league team's roster continued to spin over the weekend in Cedar Rapids as the Kernels saw two pitchers promoted to high-A Fort Myers, one infielder put on the 7-Day Disabled list and two new pitchers arrive from Elizabethton. The new pitchers, right handed starting pitcher Chih-Wei Hu and righty bullpen arm Jake Reed, were in uniform for Tuesday night's series opener with the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, won by the Kernels, 15-5. The two will replace starter Ethan Mildren and co-closer Todd Van Steensel on the Kernels' pitching staff. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ArteagaMildren.jpg Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga and pitcher Ethan Mildren Mildren has been dominant through his most recent pair of starts, throwing seven shutout innings against Clinton on June 29 and duplicating that feat on Independence Day against Beloit. He allowed just seven hits and three walks over that 14-inning stretch. This article was originally posted at Knuckleballsblog.com Van Steensel had not been charged with allowing a run, earned or otherwise, in his last seven appearances for Cedar Rapids. Overall, he put up a 1.30 ERA covering 34.2 innings of work in 23 appearances in a Kernels uniform.If early impressions mean anything, Reed will be a capable replacement for Van Steensel in the Kernels bullpen. The 21-year old righty, drafted in the 5th round out of the University of Oregon last month, threw nothing but shutout innings for the E-Twins in his first six innings of work this season. He struck out eight batters and held opponents to a .053 batting average.against him. That scoreless streak, however, came to an end in Reed's first appearance in a Cedar Rapids uniform on Tuesday night. Reed gave up one unearned run in an inning of work on Tuesday night when the first batter he faced reached on a two-base error and came around to score on a subsequent single. Reed recorded his first strikeout as a Kernel to finish the eighth inning. The man with the biggest shoes to fill with the Kernels, perhaps, will be Hu. Cedar Rapids has struggled to find consistency from their rotation and Mildren was just beginning to provide much needed leadership in that area. Hu will get Mildren's spot in the rotation and should get his first start for the Kernels on Thursday against the Rattlers, in front of the home crowd. Like Reed, Hu was off to a strong start for Elizabethton. The Taichung, Taiwan, native had time to make just three starts for the E-Twins before being promoted. He was 1-0 with a 1.69 ERA. He threw six shutout innings of two-hit baseball in his last start, striking out nine batters in the process. After watching Hu throw a bullpen session on Tuesday, Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga pronounced the 20-year old Hu, "ready to go." "His fastball moves a lot and his slider's got good rotation," Arteaga added. "He really competes, according to the reports we got." The Kernels played Tuesday a man short on their roster as shortstop Engelb Vielma has been placed on the 7-day DL with concussion symptoms and no corresponding roster move was immediately announced. Manager Jake Mauer indicated to media after the game that infielder Logan Wade would be re-activated from the DL on Wednesday to replace Vielma. Since the Twins beat the Mariners last night, you can get half off your L or XL pizza on Wednesday by ordering online at PapaJohns.com with the promo code 'TWINSWIN'.
  4. The merry-go-round that is a minor league team's roster continued to spin over the weekend in Cedar Rapids as the Kernels saw two pitchers promoted to high-A Fort Myers, one infielder put on the 7-Day Disabled list and two new pitchers arrive from Elizabethton. The new pitchers, right handed starting pitcher Chih-Wei Hu and righty bullpen arm Jake Reed, were in uniform for Tuesday night's series opener with the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, won by the Kernels, 15-5. The two will replace starter Ethan Mildren and co-closer Todd Van Steensel on the Kernels' pitching staff. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ArteagaMildren.jpg Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga and pitcher Ethan Mildren Mildren has been dominant through his most recent pair of starts, throwing seven shutout innings against Clinton on June 29 and duplicating that feat on Independence Day against Beloit. He allowed just seven hits and three walks over that 14-inning stretch. (This article was originally posted at Knuckleballsblog.com) Van Steensel had not been charged with allowing a run, earned or otherwise, in his last seven appearances for Cedar Rapids. Overall, he put up a 1.30 ERA covering 34.2 innings of work in 23 appearances in a Kernels uniform. If early impressions mean anything, Reed will be a capable replacement for Van Steensel in the Kernels bullpen. The 21-year old righty, drafted in the 5th round out of the University of Oregon last month, threw nothing but shutout innings for the E-Twins in his first six innings of work this season. He struck out eight batters and held opponents to a .053 batting average.against him. That scoreless streak, however, came to an end in Reed's first appearance in a Cedar Rapids uniform on Tuesday night. Reed gave up one unearned run in an inning of work on Tuesday night when the first batter he faced reached on a two-base error and came around to score on a subsequent single. Reed recorded his first strikeout as a Kernel to finish the eighth inning. The man with the biggest shoes to fill with the Kernels, perhaps, will be Hu. Cedar Rapids has struggled to find consistency from their rotation and Mildren was just beginning to provide much needed leadership in that area. Hu will get Mildren's spot in the rotation and should get his first start for the Kernels on Thursday against the Rattlers, in front of the home crowd. Like Reed, Hu was off to a strong start for Elizabethton. The Taichung, Taiwan, native had time to make just three starts for the E-Twins before being promoted. He was 1-0 with a 1.69 ERA. He threw six shutout innings of two-hit baseball in his last start, striking out nine batters in the process. After watching Hu throw a bullpen session on Tuesday, Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga pronounced the 20-year old Hu, "ready to go." "His fastball moves a lot and his slider's got good rotation," Arteaga added. "He really competes, according to the reports we got." The Kernels played Tuesday a man short on their roster as shortstop Engelb Vielma has been placed on the 7-day DL with concussion symptoms and no corresponding roster move was immediately announced. Manager Jake Mauer indicated to media after the game that infielder Logan Wade would be re-activated from the DL on Wednesday to replace Vielma.
  5. A little over a year ago, I sat in the Cedar Rapids Kernels dugout before a Sunday game and did an interview with then-Kernels infielder Jorge Polanco - the same Jorge Polanco that just spent the past weekend wearing number 11 for the Minnesota Twins. I’d been told that, of the Kernels’ Latin American players, Polanco was one of those most familiar with the English language. Since the only familiarization I have with a foreign language comes from the two years of high school French class that I nearly flunked out of over 40 years ago, it seemed like a good idea to interview a player who knew my language better than I knew his. (This article orignally was posted at Knuckleballsblog.com) http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Polanco1.jpg Jorge Polanco as a Cedar Rapids Kernel Polanco was very accommodating. I approached him after the team worked out that day and asked if he had some time to talk. He said he did, but asked if we could do it after the brief chapel service players have on Sundays. After chapel, we met and sat in the dugout for the interview. The interview didn’t go particularly well and, unfortunately, I didn’t feel I had enough material to turn it in to something I could post at the time. I had only been covering the Kernels for a couple of months at that time and, frankly, my interviewing skills weren’t very strong. I’m not sure I’d say they’re particularly strong now, either, but I’m better at it than I was that Sunday afternoon with Polanco. I asked him what he felt the biggest difference was between his experience at Elizabethton (TN) with the Twins’ short-season rookie level team the year before and his season in Cedar Rapids. "More fans," Polanco responded. "A lot of fans." Neither of us knew then, of course, that just over a year later, he’d be playing ball in front of a crowd ten times larger than what he was seeing in the Cedar Rapids stands. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Polanco2.jpg Jorge Polanco We talked some about his home town, San Pedro de Macoris in the Dominican Republic. A "good town to live there," according to Polanco, and about his favorite Major League player. "Robinson Cano," Polanco replied immediately. "I like the way he plays. I would like to be like him. He’s a good person." I also found out during the conversation that the then-19 year old spent his time away from the ballpark in much the same way other 19 year olds spend their idle time. "I like to watch TV and play Playstation3 video games," he said. Then he added, "I like to play pool." Asked if he was any good at it, he smiled and simply said, "Yes." Unfortunately, he added that he had not yet found a place to play pool in Cedar Rapids. I imagine that probably didn’t change much during the summer, since it might be difficult for a 19 year old to get in to most public establishments with pool tables around here. Toward the end of our conversation, we talked about the adjustments that he and other Latino players have to make to play ball in a place like Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The food, he said, was probably one of the most difficult adjustments, but we also talked about the language barrier. Polanco clearly was working hard on learning English and wanted to get better. "I like it because all the people here - most all the people - speak English, so I try to do it." That’s when I made one of those off the cuff comments that I may come to regret. I went back to the audio recording of the interview this weekend, with the hope that perhaps my memory of what I said next was not quite accurate. I told Polanco I was starting to try to learn some Spanish. I should have left it at that. But no, I continued with, "When you’re in Target Field with the Twins in a couple of years, I’m going to come to a Twins game and we’ll talk in your language. Is that a deal?" He smiled and said, "Yes, alright." Last week, just about 13 months after my conversation with Polanco, he was called up to the Twins, who found themselves in need of a versatile infielder after a series of injuries to their infield corps. Fortunately, those games were all in Anaheim, California, and Arlington, Texas, and not in Target Field. I’m using that technicality as an excuse to conclude I still have some time before making good on my poorly thought out promise to Polanco. (I’ve learned my lesson, by the way. I’m NOT going to promise any of this year’s crop of Kernels players from "down under" that I’ll learn to speak Australian before they wear a Twins uniform.) It turned out to be just four games in The Show for Polanco, including one start on Sunday against the Rangers, before infielders Eduardo Nunez and Trevor Plouffe came off the Disabled List on Monday and Polanco was sent back to the Fort Myers Miracle. I don’t think anyone would have been surprised if Polanco had shown some jitters during his time with the Twins, but from all accounts, he looked like he belonged there. He had two hits (a double and a triple) in five at-bats, he scored two runs and drove in three more. He turned three double plays and, yes, he had a mental lapse on defense in a rundown situation. He’s not the first Twins player to have a mental lapse in the field this season. He also handled himself well with the media, as is clear from a video clip the St. Paul Pioneer-Press’ Mike Berardino posted over the weekend (click here to view) after Polanco recorded his first Major League hit. Over the first season and a half of the affiliation between the Twins and Kernels, we’ve seen several players that have legitimate Major League potential and Polanco was no doubt one of those guys. Fans in Cedar Rapids couldn’t be happier for Polanco, as the first Kernels player since the new affiliation agreement to reach the Big Leagues. Still, it’s unlikely that anyone thought he’d get even this kind of "cup of coffee" with the Twins this soon. But as one of this year’s Kernels told me recently, "Baseball is a goofy game." Indeed it is. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I think it’s time for my next Spanish lesson. It seems I may need to accelerate my learning curve a bit. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Spanish.jpg Twins beat the Royals on Tuesday so on Wednesday you can get a half price large or extra-large pizza at PapaJohns.com when using the promo code 'TWINSWIN'.
  6. A little over a year ago, I sat in the Cedar Rapids Kernels dugout before a Sunday game and did an interview with then-Kernels infielder Jorge Polanco - the same Jorge Polanco that just spent the past weekend wearing number 11 for the Minnesota Twins. I’d been told that, of the Kernels’ Latin American players, Polanco was one of those most familiar with the English language. Since the only familiarization I have with a foreign language comes from the two years of high school French class that I nearly flunked out of over 40 years ago, it seemed like a good idea to interview a player who knew my language better than I knew his. (This article orignally was posted at Knuckleballsblog.com) http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Polanco1.jpg Jorge Polanco as a Cedar Rapids Kernel Polanco was very accommodating. I approached him after the team worked out that day and asked if he had some time to talk. He said he did, but asked if we could do it after the brief chapel service players have on Sundays. After chapel, we met and sat in the dugout for the interview. The interview didn’t go particularly well and, unfortunately, I didn’t feel I had enough material to turn it in to something I could post at the time. I had only been covering the Kernels for a couple of months at that time and, frankly, my interviewing skills weren’t very strong. I’m not sure I’d say they’re particularly strong now, either, but I’m better at it than I was that Sunday afternoon with Polanco. I asked him what he felt the biggest difference was between his experience at Elizabethton (TN) with the Twins’ short-season rookie level team the year before and his season in Cedar Rapids. "More fans," Polanco responded. "A lot of fans." Neither of us knew then, of course, that just over a year later, he’d be playing ball in front of a crowd ten times larger than what he was seeing in the Cedar Rapids stands. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Polanco2.jpg Jorge Polanco We talked some about his home town, San Pedro de Macoris in the Dominican Republic. A "good town to live there," according to Polanco, and about his favorite Major League player. "Robinson Cano," Polanco replied immediately. "I like the way he plays. I would like to be like him. He’s a good person." I also found out during the conversation that the then-19 year old spent his time away from the ballpark in much the same way other 19 year olds spend their idle time. "I like to watch TV and play Playstation3 video games," he said. Then he added, "I like to play pool." Asked if he was any good at it, he smiled and simply said, "Yes." Unfortunately, he added that he had not yet found a place to play pool in Cedar Rapids. I imagine that probably didn’t change much during the summer, since it might be difficult for a 19 year old to get in to most public establishments with pool tables around here. Toward the end of our conversation, we talked about the adjustments that he and other Latino players have to make to play ball in a place like Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The food, he said, was probably one of the most difficult adjustments, but we also talked about the language barrier. Polanco clearly was working hard on learning English and wanted to get better. "I like it because all the people here - most all the people - speak English, so I try to do it." That’s when I made one of those off the cuff comments that I may come to regret. I went back to the audio recording of the interview this weekend, with the hope that perhaps my memory of what I said next was not quite accurate. I told Polanco I was starting to try to learn some Spanish. I should have left it at that. But no, I continued with, "When you’re in Target Field with the Twins in a couple of years, I’m going to come to a Twins game and we’ll talk in your language. Is that a deal?" He smiled and said, "Yes, alright." Last week, just about 13 months after my conversation with Polanco, he was called up to the Twins, who found themselves in need of a versatile infielder after a series of injuries to their infield corps. Fortunately, those games were all in Anaheim, California, and Arlington, Texas, and not in Target Field. I’m using that technicality as an excuse to conclude I still have some time before making good on my poorly thought out promise to Polanco. (I’ve learned my lesson, by the way. I’m NOT going to promise any of this year’s crop of Kernels players from "down under" that I’ll learn to speak Australian before they wear a Twins uniform.) It turned out to be just four games in The Show for Polanco, including one start on Sunday against the Rangers, before infielders Eduardo Nunez and Trevor Plouffe came off the Disabled List on Monday and Polanco was sent back to the Fort Myers Miracle. I don’t think anyone would have been surprised if Polanco had shown some jitters during his time with the Twins, but from all accounts, he looked like he belonged there. He had two hits (a double and a triple) in five at-bats, he scored two runs and drove in three more. He turned three double plays and, yes, he had a mental lapse on defense in a rundown situation. He’s not the first Twins player to have a mental lapse in the field this season. He also handled himself well with the media, as is clear from a video clip the St. Paul Pioneer-Press’ Mike Berardino posted over the weekend (click here to view) after Polanco recorded his first Major League hit. Over the first season and a half of the affiliation between the Twins and Kernels, we’ve seen several players that have legitimate Major League potential and Polanco was no doubt one of those guys. Fans in Cedar Rapids couldn’t be happier for Polanco, as the first Kernels player since the new affiliation agreement to reach the Big Leagues. Still, it’s unlikely that anyone thought he’d get even this kind of "cup of coffee" with the Twins this soon. But as one of this year’s Kernels told me recently, "Baseball is a goofy game." Indeed it is. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I think it’s time for my next Spanish lesson. It seems I may need to accelerate my learning curve a bit. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Spanish.jpg
  7. I think expectations locally were such that everybody knew it would not be a line up that measured up to last year's, but yes, it's been a letdown to this point. I do think there is more talent in CR than what they've shown. The starting pitching, outside of Stewart, was simply expected to be much better than it has been. I'm not sure there's a lot of help in that area still to be had outside of perhaps Gonsalves. By and large, the guys here now are going to have to simply pitch better. Not sure on Williams. He got off to a hot start his first couple games and then faltered. I'll be surprised if we see Gordon this year. More likely he starts in CR next year, as Buxton did. Then again, he's starting a level higher than Buck did, so who knows? I do know the Twins like Engelb Vielma, the current CR shortstop, and I imagine they want him to get regular ABs.
  8. June has not been kind to the Cedar Rapids Kernels. As a team, they’ve lost a dozen games this month and won just six. The first half of the season mercifully drew to a close a week ago, but the Kernels started off their second half season by dropping three of four road games to the Midwest League’s Western Division champions, the Kane County Cougars. Silver linings are a little difficult to come by for a team that most people expected to be led by their pitching when the season opened, only to find themselves with the 15th ranked team ERA (4.83) in the 16-team Midwest League. This article was originally posted at Knuckleballsblog.com There are a handful of bright spots as the Kernels begin the race for a postseason spot that would come with finishing as one of the top two teams in the MWL Western Division among the six teams that have not already qualified for postseason play. The brightest of those bright spots might be catcher Mitch Garver. So far in June, Garver is batting .364, has an on-base percentage of .500 and an OPS (on-base plus slugging percentage) of 1.045. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Garver2-469x600.jpg Mitch Garver According to TwinsDaily.com's Seth Stohs, heading in to this week’s series in Peoria, Garver is among the Twins minor league organizational leaders in batting average (2nd), on-base percentage (1st), slugging percentage (3rd), OPS (2nd) and home runs (tied for 4th with teammate Bryan Haar). Cedar Rapids native Chad Christensen has also shown he can handle Class A work. He is hitting .323 in June and has a .963 OPS. He’s had eight extra-base hits in the month, including four home runs. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Christensen2-600x449.jpg Chad Christensen Christensen’s .299 batting average ties him for fourth among all Twins minor leaguers. But Garver and Christensen can’t win games by themselves. Most of the rest of the Kernels’ batting order have seen their hitting numbers drop considerably in June. The Kernels could get some offensive help as some of the hitters that have been idled by injuries begin to return. That process has begun already as outfielder J.D. Williams was activated from the disabled list on Tuesday. Zach Larson, Logan Wade and Jeremias Pineda remain on the club’s DL for now. Larson, in particular, could provide an offensive boost if he can get healthy and return to the level of productivity he demonstrated in April when he hit .307 for the Kernels. Unless you’re a fan who worships strikeout numbers for pitchers, there has been nothing to complain about in starting pitcher Kohl Stewart’s performance thus far. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Stewart5-600x449.jpg Kohl Stewart Stewart’s 2.44 ERA on the season would be good enough for fourth best in the league if he had enough innings to qualify (he’s one inning short, which should be more than met in his next scheduled start on Wednesday). Stewart has continued to lead the rotation with a 1.13 ERA in three June starts, with batters putting up just a .236 batting average against him this month. To find anything else resembling “bright” among the Cedar Rapids pitching corps, it’s necessary to turn to the bullpen, which has had its own share of ups and downs through the first half of the season. Todd Van Steensel perhaps represents the best of the “ups” for the bullpen corps recently. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/VanSteensel3-600x449.jpg Todd Van Steensel Van Steensel has put up a 1.67 ERA since joining the Kernels at the end of April. He has struck out 35 batters in 27 innings of work and opponents are hitting just .179 off the right hander. Alex Muren has been among the team’s most consistent bullpen arms, assembling a 3.43 ERA on the year and a similar 3.48 ERA so far in June. This month, hitters are batting just .171 against Muren. He’s thrown 10.1 innings in five June appearances. All four runs surrendered this month came in one forgettable appearance on June 15. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Muren3-600x439.jpg Alex Muren Brandon Bixler had two good months in April and May, but has been less consistent in June. He has a 3.13 ERA on the year and hitters have just a .201 batting average against him. He’s struck out 39 batters in 40.1 innings. Jared Wilson’s year has been similar to Bixler’s. Since joining the Kernels in mid May, Wilson has put up a 2.49 ERA and a .197 BAA (batting average against), while striking out over one batter per inning pitched. He’s been somewhat inconsistent in June, with three outings where he was almost unhittable and three others where he gave up almost an earned run per inning. The Kernels bullpen could be in for a boost, however. On Tuesday, the Twins announced that they had signed Nick Burdi, their second round pick in the 2014 draft, and that Burdi will be joining Cedar Rapids on Friday. Burdi, the closer for a University of Louisville squad that qualified for the College World Series, reportedly throws in the 96-98 mph range and is capable of regularly topping 100 mph with his fastball. Expectations for the Kernels coming in to the season were modest, but a seventh place finish in the MWL Western Division first-half standings was a disappointment. Garver and Christensen will need some of their teammates to step up their games and the Kernels rotation will need to start contributing more than three or four innings of solid pitching on a regular basis if the team expects to contend for a postseason berth in the second half of the year.
  9. June has not been kind to the Cedar Rapids Kernels. As a team, they’ve lost a dozen games this month and won just six. The first half of the season mercifully drew to a close a week ago, but the Kernels started off their second half season by dropping three of four road games to the Midwest League’s Western Division champions, the Kane County Cougars. Silver linings are a little difficult to come by for a team that most people expected to be led by their pitching when the season opened, only to find themselves with the 15th ranked team ERA (4.83) in the 16-team Midwest League. (This article was originally posted at Knuckleballsblog.com) There are a handful of bright spots as the Kernels begin the race for a postseason spot that would come with finishing as one of the top two teams in the MWL Western Division among the six teams that have not already qualified for postseason play. The brightest of those bright spots might be catcher Mitch Garver. So far in June, Garver is batting .364, has an on-base percentage of .500 and an OPS (on-base plus slugging percentage) of 1.045. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Garver2-469x600.jpg Mitch Garver According to TwinsDaily.com's Seth Stohs, heading in to this week’s series in Peoria, Garver is among the Twins minor league organizational leaders in batting average (2nd), on-base percentage (1st), slugging percentage (3rd), OPS (2nd) and home runs (tied for 4th with teammate Bryan Haar). Cedar Rapids native Chad Christensen has also shown he can handle Class A work. He is hitting .323 in June and has a .963 OPS. He’s had eight extra-base hits in the month, including four home runs. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Christensen2-600x449.jpg Chad Christensen Christensen’s .299 batting average ties him for fourth among all Twins minor leaguers. But Garver and Christensen can’t win games by themselves. Most of the rest of the Kernels’ batting order have seen their hitting numbers drop considerably in June. The Kernels could get some offensive help as some of the hitters that have been idled by injuries begin to return. That process has begun already as outfielder J.D. Williams was activated from the Disabled List on Tuesday. Zach Larson, Logan Wade and Jeremias Pineda remain on the club’s DL for now. Larson, in particular, could provide an offensive boost if he can get healthy and return to a level of productivity he demonstrated in April when he hit .307 for the Kernels. Unless you’re a fan who worships strikeout numbers for pitchers, there has been nothing to complain about in starting pitcher Kohl Stewart’s performance thus far. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Stewart5-600x449.jpg Kohl Stewart Stewart’s 2.44 ERA on the season would be good enough for fourth best in the league if he had enough innings to qualify (he’s one inning short, which should be more than met in his next scheduled start on Wednesday). Stewart has continued to lead the rotation with a 1.13 ERA in three June starts, with batters putting up just a .236 batting average against him this month. To find anything else resembling “bright” among the Cedar Rapids pitching corps, it’s necessary to turn to the bullpen, which has had its own share of ups and downs through the first half of the season. Todd Van Steensel perhaps represents the best of the “ups” for the bullpen corps recently. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/VanSteensel3-600x449.jpg Todd Van Steensel Van Steensel has put up a 1.67 ERA since joining the Kernels at the end of April. He has struck out 35 batters in 27 innings of work and opponents are hitting just .179 off the right hander. Alex Muren has been among the team’s most consistent bullpen arms, assembling a 3.43 ERA on the year and a similar 3.48 ERA so far in June. This month, hitters are batting just .171 against Muren. He’s thrown 10.1 innings in five June appearances. All four runs surrendered this month came in one forgettable appearance on June 15. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Muren3-600x439.jpg Alex Muren Brandon Bixler had two good months in April and May, but has been less consistent in June. He has a 3.13 ERA on the year and hitters have just a .201 batting average against him. He’s struck out 39 batters in 40.1 innings. Jared Wilson’s year has been similar to Bixler’s. Since joining the Kernels in mid May, Wilson has put up a 2.49 ERA and a .197 BAA (batting average against), while striking out over one batter per inning pitched. He’s been somewhat inconsistent in June, with three outings where he was almost unhittable and three others where he gave up almost an earned run per inning. The Kernels bullpen could be in for a boost, however. On Tuesday, the Twins announced that they had signed Nick Burdi, their second round pick in the 2014 draft, and that Burdi will be joining Cedar Rapids on Friday. Burdi, the closer for a University of Louisville squad that qualified for the College World Series, reportedly throws in the 96-98 mph range and is capable of regularly topping 100 mph with his fastball. Expectations for the Kernels coming in to the season were modest, but a seventh place finish in the MWL Western Division first-half standings was a disappointment. Garver and Christensen will need some of their teammates to step up their games and the Kernels rotation will need to start contributing more than three or four innings of solid pitching on a regular basis if the team expects to contend for a postseason berth in the second half of the year.
  10. Upgrading the stadium to AAA would require, among other things, seating expanded to 10,000+. I'm not sure the Twins would want their AAA club across the river. In down years at Target Field, a AAA team in St. Paul could potentially canibalize attendance in ways that an indy team doesn't and a Class A team wouldn't. And the Saints couldn't go shopping for a different MLB affiliate the way other minor league teams can because the only way they (or anyone) can put an affiliated team anywhere close to Minneapolis is if the Twins waive their territorial restriction rights. The Twins certainly would not do that for any team they weren't affiliated with.
  11. In September of 2012, the Minnesota Twins announced a four-year affiliation agreement with the Cedar Rapids Kernels, with the Twins’ then-Senior Director of Minor Leagues Jim Rantz telling the media, “We are confident that this relationship will grow into one of the strongest affiliations in minor league baseball.” Less than two years later, the Twins organization appears to be flirting with another minor league ownership group with an eye toward moving their Class A Midwest League affiliation to nearby St. Paul, Minnesota, and potentially leaving the Kernels to shop for another new Major League affiliate when their current Player Development Contract expires following the 2016 season. (This article was originally published at Knuckleballsblog.com.) According to a story Tuesday in the Business Journal, Minnesota Twins President Dave St. Peter and Derek Sharrer, the General Manager the St. Paul Saints, an independent minor league team, expressed mutual interest in a future affiliation agreement between the two teams. Their comments were made at the Business Journal’s Business of Sports Power Breakfast Tuesday morning. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/KernelsTwins.jpg But what about 2017 and beyond? (Image: Kernels.com) “Long-term, there are aspects that make a lot of sense,” St. Peter is quoted as telling the group. “Short-term, it’s more challenging. We have a tremendous partnership with Cedar Rapids and the Kernels. It’s been a home run for the Twins. It’s been strategic for the Twins relative to marketing in the state of Iowa. “I think it’s something that will require some additional discussions and I’m guessing that dialogue will take place.” The Twins President did point out that the potential arrangement comes with challenges. “It’s a bus league, and when you’re in St. Paul and there are teams east of Cleveland, that’s a tough bus trip for your players,” St. Peter said. “Things like that need to be addressed long-term.” The Saints are in the process of building a new 7.000 seat stadium in St. Paul that’s being built to meet or exceed standards required by baseball for Class AA and lower affiliated teams. The stadium is scheduled to open in 2015. The Saints are owned by a group that recently agreed to sell the Twins’ Class high-A affiliate in Fort Myers, Florida. “Our organization has a tremendous amount of respect for Derek and his team,” St. Peter said of the Twins’ relationship with the Saints organization. “We’ve worked very closely with the Saints’ ownership … for 20 years.” As the Twins President alluded to, there are a number of obstacles that the Twins and Saints would need to overcome before placing an affiliate in St. Paul. The most likely arrangement would be for the Twins to place their Class A Midwest League affiliate in St. Paul. There are no high-A or AA leagues located in the Midwest and the new Saints stadium is not being built up to AAA standards. However, putting a Midwest League team in St. Paul would not be a simple matter, either. For the Twins and Saints to make the plan work, they would need to either seek to have the Midwest League expand by two teams (to keep the number of league teams at an even number for scheduling purposes) or acquire an existing MWL team and move it to St. Paul. Every Major League team already has a full season Class A affiliate, which would seem to make expansion unlikely. Acquiring a team and moving it would only be somewhat easier. Under the current Professional Baseball Agreement between the Major and Minor League governing bodies, every current affiliated minor league team is guaranteed an affiliation. Baseball can’t just tell an existing affiliated team that they’re being kicked out of affiliated minor league baseball. The Saints ownership would likely need to acquire an existing Midwest League team and relocate it to St. Paul, rather than looking to acquire a team currently competing in another Class A league. While it would not be totally unheard of for a team to move from one minor league to another, the same scheduling issues that affect expansion would also require any movement between leagues to result in each affected league retaining an even number of teams. With the eastward migration of Midwest League teams over the past two decades, virtually every club in the Eastern Division of the league is playing in relatively new ballparks and before generally larger crowds than is the case among their Western Division brethren. This would make it much more likely that a current Western Division club would be targeted. With relatively new or recently renovated ballparks in Appleton WI, Kane County IL, Peoria IL and Iowa clubs in the Quad Cities and Cedar Rapids, it would be unlikely that the teams in those communities would go on the sale block. That leaves Beloit WI, Clinton IA and Burlington IA, three teams with, perhaps, the most difficult stadium situations left among potential MWL targets. However, all three of those teams are, like the Kernels, long-time MWL members. More importantly, also like the Kernels, all three clubs are community owned. Prying ownership away from those communities would likely be no easy task. Finally, even if an existing ownership group were made an offer they can’t refuse, the team would need approval of the other members of the MWL to relocate. That hurdle might not be so easy to overcome, either. St. Paul is well outside the current MWL footprint. Cedar Rapids is the closest current league city and it’s a good 250 miles from the Twin Cities. Every other MWL community, except Appleton (270 miles) is at least 300 miles from St. Paul. South Bend IN, at 495 miles, would be the only MWL Eastern Division location less than 500 miles away. That’s an important consideration for the league, too, because under the terms of the Professional Baseball Agreement rules, players must be given an off day any time they are bused 500 miles or more. Having a team that far outside the league’s current footprint could present a nightmare for MWL schedule-makers. It also would increase travel costs, not only for the team that relocates, but for every other team in the league that would have to send teams to St. Paul on road trips. Those travel costs are primarily the responsibility of the local team, not their Big League affiliate. St. Peter is certainly correct in cautioning Twin Cities fans that putting an affiliate in St. Paul would be difficult to arrange, but if the Twins were to decide to make such a move a priority, it’s not beyond the realm of possibility that they could throw enough weight around to get what they want. It remains to be seen whether the Twins and Saints are truly interested enough in a marriage to overcome the obstacles. The agreement between the Kernels and Twins will have young Twins prospects calling Cedar Rapids their summer home for two more years after the current season. Nevertheless, it’s no doubt disappointing to Twins fans in Eastern Iowa to learn that at least one Twins executive may no longer be interested in seeing the relationship between the Twins and Kernels, “grow into one of the strongest affiliations in minor league baseball.” Kernels General Manager Doug Nelson, reached Tuesday afternoon while in Comstock Park MI for the Midwest League All-Star game, was asked for his reaction to St. Peter’s statements to the Business Journal. “The Kernels view our affiliation with the Twins as a long term partnership,” stated Nelson via email. It is less clear whether the Twins continue to share that view.
  12. Go ahead and underestimate Cedar Rapids Kernels outfielder Jason Kanzler. He’s used to it. Having to show people they’re wrong about him is nothing new. ”I think I’ve done that my whole life, pretty much,” Kanzler said. “I was never really at the top on anyone’s priority list. I wasn’t recruited out of high school. I tried to walk on at Northeastern University and I was cut after two weeks. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Kanzler2014a.jpg Jason Kanzler "Then I went to Buffalo as kind of a recruited walk-on and I didn’t play. I guess my red-shirt freshman year, I got 10 at-bats.Then I platooned a little in left and right my sophomore year." That's not exactly the kind of start to a college baseball career that you'd expect for a guy with hopes of playing ball professionally. Things turned around for Kanzler his next two seasons at the University of Buffalo, however. "I started in center field my junior and senior year and won two Gold Gloves so I kind of shoved it up in everyone’s faces." If you think it sounds like Kanzler has a little chip on his shoulder over people underestimating him, you would be correct. Kanzler spent spring training with the Class A group, but got word the last week of camp that he would not be heading north to Cedar Rapids with the others. Asked how he felt about being one of the final cuts to the Kernels' roster as spring training drew to a close in March, he quickly answered the questioner and didn't hesitate to say exactly how he felt about it. ”I was the last guy,” he said. And he said it without a trace of a smile. “I was angry, I was really angry,” he admitted. “The coaches down in extended (spring training) told me to cool it and I’ll get my chance eventually.” You get the sense from Kanzler that "cooling it" isn't something that comes very naturally to him on a baseball field. In fact, in the game the evening after giving the interview, Kanzler was ejected for arguing a called third strike late in the game. In any event, he didn't have to cool it for very long this spring before he was given a plane ticket for Cedar Rapids. Four games into the season, Kernels center fielder Zack Granite was injured and Kanzler got the call. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Kanzler2014c.jpg Jason Kanzler Granite rejoined the Kernels last week, but it wasn't Kanzler's roster spot he took. Instead, Ivory Thomas was given his unconditional release by the Twins to make room for Granite and Kanzler in the same outfield. At the Midwest League's All-Star break, the halfway point of the Kernels' season, Kanzler is hitting .293 with an .813 OPS. He has five doubles, five triples and one night after his ejection he hit his seventh home run of the year. He has also stolen 10 bases. Kanzler was utilized as a top-of-the order hitter when he first arrived in Cedar Rapids, but the power he’s demonstrated has resulted in a move toward the middle of the lineup. How could power go unnoticed? "I’m not a 'guy' really. Just an ‘extended guy’," Kanzler explained. "I was hurt for 14 days during spring training with a hamstring, so I really only got to play like ten spring training games." The pop in his bat may have surprised others, but not Kanzler. “I knew I had it. I think it makes me even more mad that no one else really knew,” he said. Kanzler has let his play convince others he’s more than just a defensive specialist and slap hitter. “I guess I could show it off in BP a little bit,” he said, “but they kind of figured I was just a speed guy with good defense and once you get pigeon-holed, it’s hard to kind of climb your way out.” Kernels hitting coach Tommy Watkins knows Kanzler has a bit of a chip on his shoulder and that the player uses it to his advantage. “I think that’s one thing that motivated him, being the last guy left off the team,” Watkins said. “From talking to him since he’s been here and in spring training, I think he’s been a guy that people have always told him he couldn’t do it, so he set himself out to prove everybody wrong. “If you tell him he can’t do it, he’s going to work 10 times harder to prove you wrong.” Asked about his goals for this season before the year started and whether they have changed at all with his performance in Cedar Rapids, Kanzler was thoughtful with his responses. "I think my goals are just to play my game," he responded initially. "I think if I play my game, everything will kind of work itself out. I guess my main goal is to play excellent defense and kind of be a spark plug. I kind of like to do a little bit of everything. So whether it’s hit a home run or steal a base or make a diving catch, I just like to play the game hard." Watkins thinks Kanzler's on the right track with that goal. "I think for him just to work on his overall game," Watkins said. "He’s a guy that has tremendous tools, all of them. He can hit, hit with power, he can run, he can throw. He’s got all the tools, it’s just fine-tuning all of them and have them show in the game." Of course, Kanzler has longer term goals, too. "My goal is to get to the big leagues, but that’s more like a dream than a goal right now. Still a few too many steps away to be a goal yet." A native of upstate New York, Kanzler added another potential goal before he reaches the Big Leagues, "Fill up the Red Wings' stadium." "Maybe my (short term) goal would be to make a post-season all-star team and help the Kernels win the second half and get in the playoffs and win the playoffs. "I like that. I like to win." http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Kanzlerslide2014.jpg Jason Kanzler goes in hard to break up a double play Kanzler and his teammates aren't accustomed to looking at the standings and seeing their team near the bottom. They don't like it much. "Yeah, I think especially because we have, I think, a lot more talent than a lot of the teams that are above us. We have so many games where we can’t put everything together. One or two things go right instead of all three." As intense as Kanzler can be on the field, he's capable of relaxing and enjoying his time away from the ballpark. Recently, that included a trip to a local music store with teammate and Cedar Rapids native Chad Christensen. "He (Christensen) bought a guitar and I bought a ukulele," Kanzler related. "So I’ve been practicing my ukulele a little bit. Ryan Walker has a banjo and it’s amazing. It’s an instrument I’d like to learn." How's that ukulele coming and does it sound good with Christensen's guitar? "No we haven’t tried that. The guitar is too loud and they don’t collaborate well I don’t think. "Chad’s been learning mostly country songs and I’ve been learning video game songs, like Mario and Zelda. That’s my kind of thing. Just fun little stuff." You get the feeling that all it would take for Kanzler to become the best ukulele player ever would be for someone to tell him he can't do it.
  13. Go ahead and underestimate Cedar Rapids Kernels outfielder Jason Kanzler. He’s used to it. Having to show people they’re wrong about him is nothing new. ”I think I’ve done that my whole life, pretty much,” Kanzler said. “I was never really at the top on anyone’s priority list. I wasn’t recruited out of high school. I tried to walk on at Northeastern University and I was cut after two weeks. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Kanzler2014a.jpg Jason Kanzler "Then I went to Buffalo as kind of a recruited walk-on and I didn’t play. I guess my red-shirt freshman year, I got 10 at-bats.Then I platooned a little in left and right my sophomore year." That's not exactly the kind of start to a college baseball career that you'd expect for a guy with hopes of playing ball professionally. Things turned around for Kanzler his next two seasons at the University of Buffalo, however. "I started in center field my junior and senior year and won two gold gloves so I kind of shoved it up in everyone’s faces." If you think it sounds like Kanzler has a little chip on his shoulder over people underestimating him, you would be correct. Kanzler spent spring training with the Class A group, but got the word the last week of camp that he would not be heading north to Cedar Rapids with the others. Asked how he felt about being one of the final cuts to the Kernels' roster as spring training drew to a close in March, he quickly corrected the questioner and didn't hesitate to say exactly how he felt about it. ”I was the last guy,” he said. And he said it without a trace of a smile. “I was angry, I was really angry,” he admitted. “The coaches down in extended (spring training) told me to cool it and I’ll get my chance eventually.” You get the sense from Kanzler that "cooling it" isn't something that comes very natural to him on a baseball field. In fact, in the game the evening after giving the interview, Kanzler was ejected for arguing a called third strike late in the game. In any event, he didn't have to cool it for very long this spring before he was given a plane ticket for Cedar Rapids. Four games in to the season, Kernels center fielder Zack Granite was injured and Kanzler got the call. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Kanzler2014c.jpg Jason Kanzler Granite rejoined the Kernels last week, but it wasn't Kanzler's roster spot he took. Instead, Ivory Thomas was given his unconditional release by the Twins to make room for Granite and Kanzler in the same outfield. At the Midwest League's All-Star break, the halfway point of the Kernels' season, Kanzler is hitting .293 with an .813 OPS. He has five doubles, five triples and one night after his ejection he hit his seventh home run of the year. He has also stolen 10 bases. Kanzler was utilized as a top-of-the order hitter when he first arrived in Cedar Rapids, but the power he’s demonstrated has resulted in a move toward the middle of the lineup. How could power go unnoticed? "I’m not a 'guy' really. Just an ‘extended guy’," Kanzler explained. "I was hurt for 14 days during spring training with a hamstring, so I really only got to play like ten spring training games." The pop in his bat may have surprised others, but not Kanzler. “I knew I had it. I think it makes me even more mad that no one else really knew,” he said. Kanzler has let his play convince others he’s more than just a defensive specialist and slap hitter. “I guess I could show it off in BP a little bit,” he said, “but they kind of figured I was just a speed guy with good defense and once you get pigeon-holed, it’s hard to kind of climb your way out.” Kernels hitting coach Tommy Watkins knows Kanzler has a bit of a chip on his shoulder and that the player uses it to his advantage. “I think that’s one thing that motivated him, being the last guy left off the team,” Watkins said. “From talking to him since he’s been here and in spring training, I think he’s been a guy that people have always told him he couldn’t do it, so he set himself out to prove everybody wrong. “If you tell him he can’t do it, he’s going to work 10 times harder to prove you wrong.” Asked about his goals for this season before the year started and whether they have changed at all with his performance in Cedar Rapids, Kanzler was thoughtful with his responses. "I think my goals are just to play my game," he responded initially. "I think if I play my game, everything will kind of work itself out. I guess my main goal is to play excellent defense and kind of be a spark plug. I kind of like to do a little bit of everything. So whether it’s hit a home run or steal a base or make a diving catch, I just like to play the game hard." Watkins thinks Kanzler's on the right track with that goal. "I think for him just to work on his overall game," Watkins said. "He’s a guy that has tremendous tools, all of them. He can hit, hit with power, he can run, he can throw. He’s got all the tools, it’s just fine-tuning all of them and have them show in the game." Of course, Kanzler has longer term goals, too. "My goal is to get to the Big Leagues, but that’s more like a dream than a goal right now. Still a few too many steps away to be a goal yet." A native of upstate New York, Kanzler added another potential goal before he reaches the Big Leagues, "Fill up the Red Wings' stadium." "Maybe my (short term) goal would be to make a post-season all-star team and help the Kernels win the second half and get in the playoffs and win the playoffs. "I like that. I like to win." http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Kanzlerslide2014.jpg Jason Kanzler goes in hard to break up a double play Kanzler and his team mates aren't accustomed to looking at the standings and seeing their team near the bottom. They don't like it much. "Yeah, I think especially because we have, I think, a lot more talent than a lot of the teams that are above us. We have so many games where we can’t put everything together. One or two things go right instead of all three." As intense as Kanzler can be on the field, he's capable of relaxing and enjoying his time away from the ballpark. Recently, that included a trip to a local music store with team mate and Cedar Rapids native Chad Christensen. "He (Christensen) bought a guitar and I bought a ukulele," Kanzler related. "So I’ve been practicing my ukulele a little bit. Ryan Walker has a banjo and it’s amazing, It’s an instrument I’d like to learn." How's that ukulele coming and does it sound good with Christensen's guitar? "No we haven’t tried that. The guitar is too loud and they don’t collaborate well I don’t think. "Chad’s been learning mostly country songs and I’ve been learning video game songs, like Mario and Zelda. That’s my kind of thing. Just fun little stuff." You get the feeling that all it would take for Kanzler to become the best ukulele player ever would be for someone to tell him he can't do it.
  14. On Saturday, the Twins' 2013 first round draft pick, Kohl Stewart, had his last start of the first half of the season for the Cedar Rapids Kernels. He was originally scheduled to pitch on Sunday, but had his start moved up a day so that he'd have two days of rest before Tuesday's Midwest League All-Star game. Stewart completed four shutout innings, throwing 69 pitches at Burlington hitters before calling it a night. The innings weren't perfectly clean, however. Stewart worked out of a bit of trouble in both the third and fourth innings. Kohl Stewart After the game, Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga explained Stewart's abbreviated start went as planned. “That was the plan,” Arteaga said. “If he was going to pitch on regular rest, his regular outing, was at 75-80 pitches. That was the plan for today, to keep him down so he could be able to throw in the All-Star Game.” With the Kernels eliminated from contention for postseason qualification in the first half of the Midwest League season, Arteaga said it was important that Stewart be used in a way that he'd get an opportunity to pitch in Tuesday's MWL All-Star Game. “He’s been on a pitch count all year, so we believed that in order for him to represent the Kernels and represent the Minnesota Twins and enjoy his time in the All-Star Game, he needed to be ready to pitch,” explained Arteaga. “We didn’t feel comfortable having him pitch on one day’s rest.” Those plans were nearly waylayed in the fourth inning when a line drive deflected off of Stewart's hip in to right field. But Stewart remained in the game and got the final two outs of the inning before calling it a night. Arteaga indicated he was happy with Stewart's night, as he has been with his season thus far. “He got hit a little bit and the ball deflected off of him on the right hip. But he should be fine. He went four innings. He managed to put zeros up there. He's been doing that. “We're very happy with his performance and the way he's handled himself. He had a heck of a first half and we hope he can continue doing that.” Stewart talked to reporters after the game and answered questions on a number of topics, including his performance on Saturday, his All-Star break plans and just how important strikeouts are (or aren't) to him at this point. On the line drive that caught him on the hip: “I think I got it just right where I was turning. Tried to avoid it. Just grazed me.” On moving his start up a day: “Yeah they bumped me up. They wanted me to throw in the All-Star Game. “I was switched from the day before (the All-Star break), so I figured I wouldn't (be able to pitch in the All-Star Game), but they made it a priority for me pitch in that game. "That was the plan, to treat that (Tuesday) as my bullpen day. Hopefully, I can bounce back after two days (rest). I've never done that before. I don't think it's a problem.” On going home after the All-Star Game before re-joining the Kernels: "They want me to go see a diabetes doctor and this is the only time I can really do it. So I'll probably fly out of West Michigan to home, go see my doctor, then meet them in Kane County. "I don't think I'll make a start there. I think I'll maybe start in Peoria, the next road trip. We have another off day between those two trips so that gives me enough time to catch back up. So I'm going to be gone for about six days I guess.” Stewart was asked if the doctor visit is indicative of problems with his diabetes: “No, no, no. It's just you're supposed to see a doctor every three months now and I haven't seen one since spring training. So the whole time, we were looking at the All-Star break as the time when I would go do that. "I'm just going to go home and see my original doctor. It's just something you've got to do every three months. That's just kind of the easiest time to do it.” Stewart's fastball consistently registered 93-94 on the Kernels' scoreboard on Saturday. The board is generally considered to register about 2 mph below actual pitch speed. He was asked if he felt he has added a bit of velocity recently. “The hardest thing for me right now is, I think I can reach back and get that when I want it, but it's not the (priority). I want to get ahead, get 0-1, get 0-2. I think the velo is pretty normal. That gun out there (on the Cedar Rapids scoreboard) is pretty inconsistent. “That's the thing I'm kind of trying to handle right now is when to go get it and when to not. When to get ahead of guys and when to put them away with that fastball, because I should be able to. "Honestly, I knew I was on kind of a super low pitch count today so I was trying to get guys out. "When guys got on base, I was paying way too much attention to runners. Me and Ivan talked about it. I was trying to look guys back and trying to pitch all in the same motion and I wasn't even really picking up my target and making the pitch. “But it was good to get out of those two innings. It's going to happen every now and then. That was a big double play that Vielma and Walker turned in that fourth inning. "Then to get out of that third inning, too, without any runs and keep us in the game was big. I wish I hadn't thrown as many pitches in that short of time.” Finally, there has been some concern among a segment of the fan base with regard to Stewart's modest strikeout rate this summer. He was asked how important strikeouts are to him. “I don't know how important they are but it's a number that everybody's going to look at. That's the thing that me and Ivan are working on right now actually, because I've had a lot of guys where I want them. It's just about making that one pitch. “I think I have those pitches that I need that get guys to strike out with. It's about throwing the slider in the right spot. It's not just about throwing the slider as hard as I can and getting guys out with it. “People are going to want to see more of it, but as a pitcher trying to keep my feet in the game, it's not something I should be paying attention to. I think that the more I work with him, the more those types of things will come, but I can't really worry about it on the mound. That's not really what I'm trying to do. “I'm a guy that's kind of is going to pound the zone and ask you to put the ball in play before I start worrying about trying to pitch around guys. But as long as I keep getting guys out, people pushing the ball in to the ground, it's just as good in my opinion. That's one thing I've learned, is how to be efficient and put guys away. “It's funny, whenever me and Garver (Kernels catcher Mitch Garver) want to put a guy away, we can. Then we do. But then guys come up and it's all about pounding the zone and getting ahead and if they want to get themselves out, let them get themselves out. “That's a number people are going to look at and want me to strike more guys out. I understand that. But I think the more that me and (Ivan) work at it, the more it will come.”
  15. As the Cedar Rapids Kernels wrap up the final stretch of the first half of their 2014 Midwest League season, the parent Minnesota Twins sent them some needed starting pitching help in the form of two teenage pitching prospects. Australian 18-year old lefty Lewis Thorpe and right-hander Fernando Romero, a 19-year old out of the Dominican Republic joined the Kernels from extended spring training last week and both were immediately inserted in to the starting rotation by manager Jake Mauer and pitching coach Ivan Arteaga. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Thorpe4.jpg Lewis Thorpe Thorpe was the 6th ranked prospect in the Twins organization by MLB.com during the offseason and #7 on Baseball America’s list of Twins top prospects. Romero was also among the organization’s top 15 prospects by both organizations coming in to the year. Romero was the first of the pair to debut, getting a start on Thursday on the road in Appleton WI against the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers. The righty went five full innings, giving up a pair of earned runs on seven hits and one walk. He struck out six Rattler batters. The Kernels lost the game 7-4 but Romero got a no-decision, leaving the game with the score tied at 2-2. Thorpe had less luck in his first start with the Kernels, picking up a loss in Kane County on Saturday as the Kernels fell to the Cougars, 5-2. All five runs were charged to Thorpe and all were earned. He gave up six hits, walked three and struck out just one batter in 4.2 innings. It makes for an ugly stat line for Thorpe, but that’s more than a little misleading. One very close pitch at the knees being called ball four instead of strike three was the difference between escaping the fifth inning relatively unscathed and getting the hook. He left the game with two runs across and bases loaded in the home half of the fifth inning, but all three baserunners came around to score after he departed. Afterward, Arteaga agreed that Thorpe looked much better than his stat line would indicate. “He got through two outs in the fifth inning, but just ran out of gas, unfortunately,” said Arteaga. “I think he deserved better. His line doesn’t say what he actually looked like. One thing is his line, but another thing is what he actually did and how he looked. “He had poise. Obviously he needs a little work with the breaking ball but his fastball (command) isn’t going to be a problem. He throws the ball well. Being the first time and all, I think that I’m very pleased with what I saw.” Arteaga was also happy with his first look at Romero since spring training in March. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Romero5.jpg Fernando Romero “He’s got one of those arms that make you go, ‘wow,’ Arteaga said, adding that Romero throws, “94 to 99 (mph). He was able to throw a hard slider and a couple of them were sharp, especially against right-handed hitters. Coming over for the first time, I thought he looked really good.” Arteaga, whose rotation has struggled at times through much of the season, was heartened by his first look at the new additions. “It’s very encouraging, to have those two guys join the rotation - very encouraging for everybody because they showed that they will compete. They will throw it over and they’re going to be just fine, as advertised. “I saw Romero and Thorpe during spring training. It was just basically a matter of time before they were going to join us and the time has come. They’re here and they’re doing really well.” http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ArteagaMildren.jpg Pitching coach Ivan Arteaga and pitcher Ethan Mildren Thorpe and Romero will form one-third of the Kernels' six-man rotation going forward, joining four pitchers selected by the Twins in the 2013 First Year Player Draft: Kohl Stewart (1st round), Ryan Eades (2nd round), Aaron Slegers (5th round) and Ethan Mildren (12th round). The Kernels, who sat in seventh place in the eight-team Western Division of the MWL coming out of the weekend, will get a chance to start over with a clean slate as the league divides their season in to two halves with the second half starting on Thursday, June 19, after next week’s MWL All-Star Game.
  16. As the Cedar Rapids Kernels wrap up the final stretch of the first half of their 2014 Midwest League season, the parent Minnesota Twins sent them some needed starting pitching help in the form of two teenage pitching prospects. Australian 18-year old lefty Lewis Thorpe and right-hander Fernando Romero, a 19-year old out of the Dominican Republic joined the Kernels from extended spring training last week and both were immediately inserted in to the starting rotation by manager Jake Mauer and pitching coach Ivan Arteaga. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Thorpe4.jpg Lewis Thorpe Thorpe was the 6th ranked prospect in the Twins organization by MLB.com during the offseason and #7 on Baseball America’s list of Twins top prospects. Romero was also among the organization’s top 15 prospects by both organizations coming in to the year. Romero was the first of the pair to debut, getting a start on Thursday on the road in Appleton WI against the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers. The righty went five full innings, giving up a pair of earned runs on seven hits and one walk. He struck out six Rattler batters. The Kernels lost the game 7-4 but Romero got a no-decision, leaving the game with the score tied at 2-2. Thorpe had less luck in his first start with the Kernels, picking up a loss in Kane County on Saturday as the Kernels fell to the Cougars, 5-2. All five runs were charged to Thorpe and all were earned. He gave up six hits, walked three and struck out just one batter in 4.2 innings. It makes for an ugly stat line for Thorpe, but that’s more than a little misleading. One very close pitch at the knees being called ball four instead of strike three was the difference between escaping the fifth inning relatively unscathed and getting the hook. He left the game with two runs across and bases loaded in the home half of the fifth inning, but all three baserunners came around to score after he departed. Afterward, Arteaga agreed that Thorpe looked much better than his stat line would indicate. “He got through two outs in the fifth inning, but just ran out of gas, unfortunately,” said Arteaga. “I think he deserved better. His line doesn’t say what he actually looked like. One thing is his line, but another thing is what he actually did and how he looked. “He had poise. Obviously he needs a little work with the breaking ball but his fastball (command) isn’t going to be a problem. He throws the ball well. Being the first time and all, I think that I’m very pleased with what I saw.” Arteaga was also happy with his first look at Romero since spring training in March. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Romero5.jpg Fernando Romero “He’s got one of those arms that make you go, ‘wow,’ Arteaga said, adding that Romero throws, “94 to 99 (mph). He was able to throw a hard slider and a couple of them were sharp, especially against right-handed hitters. Coming over for the first time, I thought he looked really good.” Arteaga, whose rotation has struggled at times through much of the season, was heartened by his first look at the new additions. “It’s very encouraging, to have those two guys join the rotation - very encouraging for everybody because they showed that they will compete. They will throw it over and they’re going to be just fine, as advertised. “I saw Romero and Thorpe during spring training. It was just basically a matter of time before they were going to join us and the time has come. They’re here and they’re doing really well.” http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ArteagaMildren.jpg Pitching coach Ivan Arteaga and pitcher Ethan Mildren Thorpe and Romero will form one-third of the Kernels' six-man rotation going forward, joining four pitchers selected by the Twins in the 2013 First Year Player Draft: Kohl Stewart (1st round), Ryan Eades (2nd round), Aaron Slegers (5th round) and Ethan Mildren (12th round). The Kernels, who sat in seventh place in the eight-team Western Division of the MWL coming out of the weekend, will get a chance to start over with a clean slate as the league divides their season in two halves with the second half starting on Thursday, June 19, after next week’s MWL All-Star Game.
  17. Minnesota Twins General Manager Terry Ryan had surgery for squamous cell carcinoma in February and has undergone radiation treatment as well. In the meantime, Assistant General Manager Rob Antony has filled in as the interim GM for the Twins, though Ryan has been in regular contact with Antony and others in the Twins front office. During the past Cedar Rapids Kernels homestand, Ryan was in town observing the Twins’ young Class A prospects and sat down Sunday for an interview that covered a range of topics. In Part 1, we covered his return to work, his view of the current state of the Twins at the big league level and his thoughts concerning the upcoming MLB First Year Player Draft. Today, Ryan shares some thoughts and observations concerning the Cedar Rapids Kernels, the Twins’ Class A affiliate in the Midwest League. Originally published at KnucleballsBlog.com Like their parent club, the Kernels have hovered near the .500 mark most of the season. That’s been no small achievement given the number of injuries that manager Jake Mauer’s club has sustained. They currently have seven players on the disabled list and have others who have been on the DL and come back already.http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/TRyan2014e-600x449.jpg Terry Ryan Ryan acknowledged that it’s a very different club than local fans saw a year ago when top prospects like Byron Buxton, Jorge Polanco, Adam Brett Walker and Travis Harrison were wearing Kernels colors. “We had a very talented club here last yea. You’d like to think we could supply this affiliate with that kind of talent every year, but it’s not going to happen. We’ve got a different looking club this year. “We’ve got some pitching here. Don’t have the thump. Don’t have the type of line- up we had last year, which was a very dangerous line-up. We don’t have that type of size. We had monstrous guys here, so yeah, it’s different. “But every year is going to be different no matter what you try to do or accomplish at a minor league affiliate. You’re looking for players. You’re trying to develop players. This is a little different lot. “So you adjust. Jake and Tommy (Watkins, the hitting coach) and Ivan (Arteaga, the pitching coach) are going about their business. It’s a little bigger challenge this year because you don’t have a Buxton here, you don’t have a Walker. You don’t have a Polanco. “But that comes with the territory. When you’re running a Class A club, you’re going to have different personnel every year. You’ll have a few repeats, but for the most part it’s a different club and a different atmosphere and different results.” Asked for his observations on specific players, Ryan was reluctant to go in to much detail, given that he had seen just four Kernels games at the time of the interview. “It’s a little dangerous when you start naming names. “I haven’t seen Stewart (Kohl Stewart, the Twins first round draft pick a year ago), of course. He’s pitching today. But he’s the most recognizable name on this roster for a lot of reasons. He’s talented and he’s a big draft. I’ll be interested to see how he does today. “He had a tough outing his last go, I understand, I didn’t see it. He went two or three innings and they had to go get him. I doubt very much that he’s experienced that in his life but this is the ideal spot (to experience that). Alright, let’s see how he handles this. We’ll see if he bounces back today and gets back to his normal self. If he doesn’t then I would be a little concerned. But if he does, which I would expect, it’s just a matter of growth." For the record, Stewart did indeed bounce back under the watchful eyes of the GM. Stewart threw six innings Sunday, giving up just one earned run, in the Kernels’ win over Burlington. “He’s an athlete, he’s confident,” continued Ryan. “He’s got the skills that you’re looking for. There’s a reason the guy was picked fourth in the (draft). He was picked up there because he’s got strength, he’s got a body, he’s got mechanics, he’s got stuff, he’s got competitiveness. “He’s got the kind of mechanics and arm action that would be conducive to pounding strikes, which is good.” Kernels fans are getting the opportunity to see a native Cedar Rapidian in action with the Kernels this season. Chad Christensen, the Twins’ 25th round pick a year ago out of the University of Nebraska, played high school ball at Cedar Rapids Washington. He came north with the club out of spring training and is hitting .290 while playing all over the field for the injury-plagued Kernels. “One of the things that I think we were impressed with when he came out of Nebraska was his ability to have some versatility for a club,” Ryan said of Christensen. “He’s got strength and he’s got speed. He’s got strength in his bat. He can play a number of spots, including centerfield, which is pretty good. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/TRyanKernelsGroundCrew-600x364.jpg Twins GM Terry Ryan chats with members of the Cedar Rapids grounds crew “When he showed up last year after signing, he made a good impression and then in spring training. He’s got the type of make-up that you want to have him on your club. I’m sure Jake was pleased when he did come here and I think he’s even more pleased with what he sees in the results. “He’s just been a good player on this team, home town or not. That’s a little bit more pressure for a kid to come in here and play in front of your home town. He’s handled it quite well. In fact, he might be the most consistent guy we’ve had on this club. Not that I’ve been around much, but I read those things, the reports and that stuff.” Ryan is aware that the Kernels have had more than their fair share of injuries, but doesn’t feel they should be keeping the team from performing well on the field. “It’s no excuse. We’ve got other players. “(Jason) Kanzler came in because of an injury to Zack Granite. So here comes Kanzler and he’s been quite good here. There are other people that we can go get and hopefully fill in for an injury. “Now, we’re starting to get healthy. A bunch of these guys are going to get healthy here soon. “Getting back on the diamond is important for a 21-year-old, because they can’t afford to spend a lot of time on the disabled list. You just can’t do anything with them. There’s no development time - they’re getting bypassed - stuff like that. They’ll get healthy and we’ll get them back here. “We’ve got some kids with ability but so far it’s been a slow go for them. I’m not so sure the weather was too conducive to what they were trying to do. The thing is, you’re going to have to learn to do that. We play in Cedar Rapids, we play in New Britain (CT), we play in Rochester (NY) and we play in Minnesota. Minnesota is not too much different than Cedar Rapids.” About a year ago, Twins top prospect Byron Buxton and others were promoted from the Kernels up to Class high-A Fort Myers shortly after the mid-June Midwest League All-Star break. Ryan’s visit shouldn’t be interpreted as a precursor to similar promotions, however. “When I come in here, I don’t worry about that stuff. That’s Brad Steil (Twins minor league director) and that would be Jake and the minor league coordinators. “If someone is dominating, as you know, we’ll move them. I don’t know if we’ve got any of that going on here. I don’t think we’re in that position quite yet. “Although if somebody starts dominating this league in the next month or so and they put up numbers and you say, ‘what more do they have to do?’ That’s about the time you start saying ‘let’s move him up.’” Ryan was asked for an update on the condition Buxton, who has missed almost the whole season so far with a wrist injury. “We had him see a specialist with that wrist about two weeks ago and there was no alarm. He re-aggravated that thing and we’re taking our time. It’s getting better. I read that yesterday in a medical report. He’s still not ready to take the field. “He’s not going to lose a whole year. Unfortunately, April and May are shot, but he certainly played pretty good in March (during spring training). With him going through major league camp, it was a good experience. He handled himself pretty well. He handled himself with some class. He understood. He listened - was very coachable. “We’ll get him back up there. We’ll salvage the year, I don’t think there’s any question that we’ll be able to do some things to get him at-bats.”
  18. Minnesota Twins General Manager Terry Ryan had surgery for squamous cell carcinoma in February and has undergone radiation treatment as well. In the meantime, Assistant General Manager Rob Antony has filled in as the interim GM for the Twins, though Ryan has been in regular contact with Antony and others in the Twins front office. During the past Cedar Rapids Kernels homestand, Ryan was in town observing the Twins’ young Class A prospects and sat down Sunday for an interview that covered a range of topics. In Part 1, we covered his return to work, his view of the current state of the Twins at the big league level and his thoughts concerning the upcoming MLB First Year Player Draft. Today, Ryan shares some thoughts and observations concerning the Cedar Rapids Kernels, the Twins’ Class A affiliate in the Midwest League. Like their parent club, the Kernels have hovered near the .500 mark most of the season. That’s been no small achievement given the number of injuries that manager Jake Mauer’s club has sustained. They currently have seven players on the Disabled List and have others who have been on the DL and come back already. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/TRyan2014e-600x449.jpg Terry Ryan Ryan acknowledged that it’s a very different club than local fans saw a year ago when top prospects like Byron Buxton, Jorge Polanco, Adam Brett Walker and Travis Harrison were wearing Kernels colors. “We had a very talented club here last year, you’d like to think we could supply this affiliate with that kind of talent every year, but it’s not going to happen. We’ve got a different looking club this year. “We’ve got some pitching here. Don’t have the thump. Don’t have the type of line up we had last year, which was a very dangerous line up. We don’t have that type of size. We had monstrous guys here so yeah it’s different. “But every year is going to be different no matter what you try to do or accomplish at a minor league affiliate. You’re looking for players, you’re trying to develop players. This is a little different lot. “So you adjust. Jake and Tommy (Watkins, the hitting coach) and Ivan (Arteaga, the pitching coach) are going about their business. It’s a little bigger challenge this year because you don’t have a Buxton here, you don’t have a Walker. You don’t have a Polanco. “But that comes with the territory. When you’re running a Class A club, you’re going to have different personnel every year. You’ll have a few repeats, but for the most part it’s a different club and a different atmosphere and different results.” Asked for his observations on specific players, Ryan was reluctant to go in to much detail, given that he had seen just four Kernels games at the time of the interview. “It’s a little dangerous when you start naming names. “I haven’t seen Stewart (Kohl Stewart, the Twins first round draft pick a year ago), of course. He’s pitching today. But he’s the most recognizable name on this roster for a lot of reasons. He’s talented and he’s a big draft. I’ll be interested to see how he does today. “He had a tough outing his last go, I understand, I didn’t see it. He went two or three innings and they had to go get him. I doubt very much that he’s experienced that in his life but this is the ideal spot (to experience that). Alright, let’s see how he handles this. We’ll see if he bounces back today and gets back to his normal self. If he doesn’t then I would be a little concerned. But if he does, which I would expect, it’s just a matter of growth." For the record, Stewart did indeed bounce back under the watchful eyes of the GM. Stewart threw six innings Sunday, giving up just one earned run, in the Kernels’ win over Burlington. “He’s an athlete, he’s confident,” continued Ryan. “He’s got the skills that you’re looking for. There’s a reason the guy was picked fourth in the (draft). He was picked up there because he’s got strength, he’s got a body, he’s got mechanics, he’s got stuff, he’s got competitiveness. “He’s got the kind of mechanics and arm action that would be conducive to pounding strikes, which is good.” Kernels fans are getting the opportunity to see a native Cedar Rapidian in action with the Kernels this season. Chad Christensen, the Twins’ 25th round pick a year ago out of the University of Nebraska, played high school ball at Cedar Rapids Washington. He came north with the club out of spring training and is hitting .290 while playing all over the field for the injury-plagued Kernels. “One of the things that I think we were impressed with when he came out of Nebraska was his ability to have some versatility for a club,” Ryan said of Christensen. “He’s got strength and he’s got speed. He’s got strength in his bat. He can play a number of spots, including centerfield, which is pretty good. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/TRyanKernelsGroundCrew-600x364.jpg Twins GM Terry Ryan chats with members of the Cedar Rapids grounds crew “When he showed up last year after signing, he made a good impression and then in spring training. He’s got the type of make-up that you want to have him on your club. I’m sure Jake was pleased when he did come here and I think he’s even more pleased with what he sees in the results. “He’s just been a good player on this team, home town or not. That’s a little bit more pressure for a kid to come in here and play in front of your home town. He’s handled it quite well. In fact, he might be the most consistent guy we’ve had on this club. Not that I’ve been around much, but I read those things, the reports and that stuff.” Ryan is aware that the Kernels have had more than their fair share of injuries, but doesn’t feel they should be keeping the team from performing well on the field. “It’s no excuse. We’ve got other players. “(Jason) Kanzler came in because of an injury to Zack Granite. So here comes Kanzler and he’s been quite good here. There are other people that we can go get and hopefully fill in for an injury. “Now, we’re starting to get healthy. A bunch of these guys are going to get healthy here soon. “Getting back on the diamond is important for a 21 year old, because they can’t afford to spend a lot of time on the Disabled List. You just can’t do anything with them. There’s no development time, they’re getting bypassed, stuff like that. They’ll get healthy and we’ll get them back here. “We’ve got some kids with ability but so far it’s been a slow go for them. I’m not so sure the weather was too conducive to what they were trying to do. The thing is, you’re going to have to learn to do that. We play in Cedar Rapids, we play in New Britain (CT), we play in Rochester (NY) and we play in Minnesota. Minnesota is not too much different than Cedar Rapids.” About a year ago, Twins top prospect Byron Buxton and others were promoted from the Kernels up to Class high-A Fort Myers shortly after the mid-June Midwest League All-Star break. Ryan’s visit shouldn’t be interpreted as a precursor to similar promotions, however. “When I come in here, I don’t worry about that stuff. That’s Brad Steil (Twins minor league director) and that would be Jake and the minor league coordinators. “If someone is dominating, as you know, we’ll move them. I don’t know if we’ve got any of that going on here. I don’t think we’re in that position quite yet. “Although if somebody starts dominating this league in the next month or so and they put up numbers and you say, ‘what more do they have to do?’ That’s about the time you start saying ‘let’s move him up.’” Ryan was asked for an update on the condition Buxton, who has missed almost the whole season so far with a wrist injury. “We had him see a specialist with that wrist about two weeks ago and there was no alarm. He re-aggravated that thing and we’re taking our time. It’s getting better. I read that yesterday in a medical report. He’s still not ready to take the field. “He’s not going to lose a whole year. Unfortunately, April and May are shot, but he certainly played pretty good in March (during spring training). With him going through Major League camp, it was a good experience. He handled himself pretty well. He handled himself with some class. He understood, he listened, was very coachable. “We’ll get him back up there. We’ll salvage the year, I don’t think there’s any question that we’ll be able to do some things to get him at-bats.”
  19. During a routine physical exam early this year, Minnesota Twins General Manager Terry Ryan asked his doctor to take a look at a lump on his neck. Testing found Ryan to have squamous cell carcinoma. Ryan had surgery in February and has undergone radiation treatment. In the meantime, Assistant General Manager Rob Antony has filled in as the interim GM for the Twins, though Ryan has been in regular contact with Antony and others in the Twins front office. During the past Cedar Rapids Kernels homestand, Ryan was in town observing the Twins’ young Class A prospects and sat down Sunday morning for an interview that covered a range of topics. In Part 1, we’ll cover his return to work, his view of the current state of the Twins at the big league level and his thoughts concerning the upcoming MLB First Year Player Draft that kicks off Thursday, June 5. Originally published at KnucleballsBlog.com Usually a regular presence at spring training and all around the Twins minor league affiliates during most seasons, Ryan has understandably not been making those trips to this point this year. So the first question anyone would likely ask is, how is he feeling?“I’m feeling OK. This is my first trip. I wanted to come here (to Cedar Rapids) so just in case I couldn’t handle it, I could just get in my vehicle and come back, but I can handle it. “I’ve got a lot of physical therapy and a lot of rehab to go still. I’m doing that. But I’m OK, I’m fine, I’m fortunate actually.” Ryan indicated, however, that there still is no specific timetable for his return to full time General Manager duties. “I’m going back for the draft after this game today (Sunday). That’s a huge piece to our year. It’s one of the most important days to our entire year – maybe the most important. So I’ll be going back for the draft. That’ll be a huge step for me, because I’ve got to get acclimated to the players. “On an everyday basis, I’ve certainly been participating. I haven’t taken any road trips but that’s about all. And when we’re home, I’m usually at a game up there. So it’s not like I haven’t been involved. “(Rob Antony) has done a nice job. He certainly knows what he’s doing, he’s been around it. He’s been around Gardy a lot and he’s been around the team a lot. We’re in good hands. “Ultimately when the time is right, I’ll take a road trip and we’ll kind of make a seamless transition again. I’m not sure when that’s going to be, but it shouldn’t be down in the future too far.” Asked if that meant we should expect to see him back in the GM chair before the end of the current season, Ryan responded, “Yeah, no question.” As Ryan indicated, he was headed back up to Minneapolis after Sunday’s Kernels game to participate in the organizational preparations for the First Year Player Draft. The GM wouldn’t tip his hand concerning who the team is targeting with the fifth overall pick in the first round, but Ryan shared what he’d like to see accomplished in the draft. “Where we’re picking, everybody’s always trying to get the best guy. Nobody cares if they take a pitcher or position player. “It’s like when took (Byron) Buxton. Everybody thought we were going to take a pitcher. We didn’t. And I caught hell up there. It was ‘pitching, pitching’. Well, the guy is named minor league player of the year. We’ll take the best guy there. “This has got a little more pitching flavor to this draft. There’s not a clear cut number 1. There are a handful of guys that could go 1. But at 5, we’re sitting in a good spot. We’re going to get a good player or pitcher, it doesn’t matter which way we go. We’re going to take probably the best guy.” Ryan was asked whether this year’s high number of “Tommy John” injuries among pitchers across baseball makes him feel any greater inclination to draft heavy on pitching. “I’m guessing we will. We did last year. We did the year before. We’ll draft a lot of pitching just because of the attrition. We need to make sure we have numbers and competition. “Actually the depth and some of the talent in our organization is starting to lean toward pitching. We’ve got some pitching in AAA. We’ve got some arms that can run it up there with some velocity now, which is good to see. “But we won’t have enough, so we’ll take a bunch more. “I’d like to see us take more left-handed pitching. That would be my preference. It doesn’t necessarily have to be the first guy, but that wouldn’t bother me either. “For me, left-handed pitching is a commodity that’s very difficult to come by. You’ve got to take it and hopefully develop a few of them and get lucky with a few of them. If we took a lot of left-handed pitching, I would be very pleased.” While his trip to Cedar Rapids was his first road trip of the season, Ryan has seen a lot of the parent club’s home games in Minneapolis. The Twins have hovered near the .500 mark through most of the season and just completed a rare series win over the Yankees in New York over the weekend. Ryan was asked for his impressions of the Twins’ performance so far. “We’re better. It didn’t help us when (Josh) Willingham and (Oswaldo) Arcia both went down at the same time. Although at that time, we were scoring runs. (Chris) Colabello carried us for a month, maybe more. We’ve had trouble offensively again this past month. “Our pitching is improved, our hitting went the other way. It was directly opposite in April. We’re a better club. We’ve got more depth. “We’ve had a couple of pleasant surprises, particularly (Eduardo) Escobar. He’s kind of emerged and looks like he might want to take that shortstop job. I think (Trevor) Plouffe has improved. (Kurt) Suzuki has been a good addition. (Phil) Hughes has been a good addition. Unfortunately, we lost (Mike) Pelfrey, again. But we’re better. “We’re competitive. We have not embarrassed ourselves, maybe a game here or there, but not too much. Unlike last year when we were out of games in the fifth (inning) a lot. “We do have some chemistry and character on this club that seems to mesh pretty well . When you go to the park, you feel pretty good. At least we’re going to be a competitive team in this game. That’s a big difference. “The one constant, our bullpen has been pretty good over the last number of years. (Glen) Perkins in the back side of that thing has solidified that. “We’ve got a handful of guys up there that people didn’t see last year, which is kind of neat. Between (Josmil) Pinto and Escobar and (Danny) Santana and (Caleb) Theilbar and Arcia, all those guys are 20-25 or so. “We’re getting there. We’ve got a ways to go. What we’ve done the last three years has not been good at all, but we are getting there. It’s going to take a little bit more.” Tomorrow, in Part 2, Ryan shares some of his observations concerning the Cedar Rapids Kernels and the challenges they’ve faced this season. Twins beat the Yankees on Sunday, so you win today. Get 50% of a Large or XL pizza at PapaJohns.com when using the promo code 'TWINSWIN'.
  20. During a routine physical exam early this year, Minnesota Twins General Manager Terry Ryan asked his doctor to take a look at a lump on his neck. Testing found Ryan to have squamous cell carcinoma. Ryan had surgery in February and has undergone radiation treatment as well. In the meantime, Assistant General Manager Rob Antony has filled in as the interim GM for the Twins, though Ryan has been in regular contact with Antony and others in the Twins front office. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/TRyan2014c.jpg GM Terry Ryan observes Cedar Rapids Kernels batting practice on Sunday During the past Cedar Rapids Kernels homestand, Ryan was in town observing the Twins’ young Class A prospects and sat down Sunday morning for an interview that covered a range of topics. In Part 1, we’ll cover his return to work, his view of the current state of the Twins at the big league level and his thoughts concerning the upcoming MLB First Year Player Draft that kicks off Thursday, June 5. Usually a regular presence at spring training and all around the Twins minor league affiliates during most seasons, Ryan has understandably not been making those trips to this point this year. So the first question anyone would likely ask is, how is he feeling? “I’m feeling OK. This is my first trip. I wanted to come here (to Cedar Rapids) so just in case I couldn’t handle it, I could just get in my vehicle and come back, but I can handle it. “I’ve got a lot of physical therapy and a lot of rehab to go still. I’m doing that. But I’m OK, I’m fine, I’m fortunate actually.” Ryan indicated, however, that there still is no specific timetable for his return to full time General Manager duties. “I’m going back for the draft after this game today (Sunday). That’s a huge piece to our year. It’s one of the most important days to our entire year – maybe the most important. So I’ll be going back for the draft. That’ll be a huge step for me, because I’ve got to get acclimated to the players. “On an everyday basis, I’ve certainly been participating. I haven’t taken any road trips but that’s about all. And when we’re home, I’m usually at a game up there. So it’s not like I haven’t been involved. “(Rob Antony) has done a nice job. He certainly knows what he’s doing, he’s been around it. He’s been around Gardy a lot and he’s been around the team a lot. We’re in good hands. “Ultimately when the time is right, I’ll take a road trip and we’ll kind of make a seamless transition again. I’m not sure when that’s going to be, but it shouldn’t be down in the future too far.” Asked if that meant we should expect to see him back in the GM chair before the end of the current season, Ryan responded, “Yeah, no question.” As Ryan indicated, he was headed back up to Minneapolis after Sunday’s Kernels game to participate in the organizational preparations for the First Year Player Draft. The GM wouldn’t tip his hand concerning who the team is targeting with the fifth overall pick in the first round, but Ryan shared what he’d like to see accomplished in the draft. “Where we’re picking, everybody’s always trying to get the best guy. Nobody cares if they take a pitcher or position player. “It’s like when took (Byron) Buxton. Everybody thought we were going to take a pitcher. We didn’t. And I caught hell up there. It was ‘pitching, pitching’. Well, the guy is named minor league player of the year. We’ll take the best guy there. “This has got a little more pitching flavor to this draft. There’s not a clear cut number 1. There are a handful of guys that could go 1. But at 5, we’re sitting in a good spot. We’re going to get a good player or pitcher, it doesn’t matter which way we go. We’re going to take probably the best guy.” Ryan was asked whether this year’s high number of “Tommy John” injuries among pitchers across baseball makes him feel any greater inclination to draft heavy on pitching. “I’m guessing we will. We did last year. We did the year before. We’ll draft a lot of pitching just because of the attrition. We need to make sure we have numbers and competition. “Actually the depth and some of the talent in our organization is starting to lean toward pitching. We’ve got some pitching in AAA. We’ve got some arms that can run it up there with some velocity now, which is good to see. “But we won’t have enough, so we’ll take a bunch more. “I’d like to see us take more left handed pitching. That would be my preference. It doesn’t necessarily have to be the first guy, but that wouldn’t bother me either. “For me, left handed pitching is a commodity that’s very difficult to come by. You’ve got to take it and hopefully develop a few of them and get lucky with a few of them. If we took a lot of left handed pitching, I would be very pleased.” While his trip to Cedar Rapids was his first road trip of the season, Ryan has seen a lot of the parent club’s home games in Minneapolis. The Twins have hovered near the .500 mark through most of the season and just completed a rare series win over the Yankees in New York over the weekend. Ryan was asked for his impressions of the Twins’ performance so far. “We’re better. It didn’t help us when (Josh) Willingham and (Oswaldo) Arcia both went down at the same time. Although at that time, we were scoring runs. (Chris) Colabello carried us for a month, maybe more. We’ve had trouble offensively again this past month. “Our pitching is improved, our hitting went the other way. It was directly opposite in April. We’re a better club. We’ve got more depth. “We’ve had a couple of pleasant surprises, particularly (Eduardo) Escobar. He’s kind of emerged and looks like he might want to take that shortstop job. I think (Trevor) Plouffe has improved. (Kurt) Suzuki has been a good addition. (Phil) Hughes has been a good addition. Unfortunately, we lost (Mike) Pelfrey, again. But we’re better. “We’re competitive. We have not embarrassed ourselves, maybe a game here or there, but not too much. Unlike last year when we were out of games in the fifth (inning) a lot. “We do have some chemistry and character on this club that seems to mesh pretty well . When you go to the park, you feel pretty good. At least we’re going to be a competitive team in this game. That’s a big difference. “The one constant, our bullpen has been pretty good over the last number of years. (Glen) Perkins in the back side of that thing has solidified that. “We’ve got a handful of guys up there that people didn’t see last year, which is kind of neat. Between (Josmil) Pinto and Escobar and (Danny) Santana and (Caleb) Theilbar and Arcia, all those guys are 20-25 or so. “We’re getting there. We’ve got a ways to go. What we’ve done the last three years has not been good at all, but we are getting there. It’s going to take a little bit more.” Tomorrow, in Part 2, Ryan shares some of his observations concerning the Cedar Rapids Kernels and the challenges they’ve faced this season.
  21. The 2014 MLB First Year Amateur Player Draft is right around the corner and hundreds of high school and college ballplayers are counting the hours before the Houston Astros go on the clock with the first pick of the draft on Thursday, June 5. One year ago, Kohl Stewart was an 18 year-old pitcher anxiously awaiting the draft. Today, Stewart, who was selected by the Minnesota Twins with the fourth overall pick of the first round, is a couple of months in to his first full year of professional baseball. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Stewart2014.jpg Kohl Stewart Stewart sat recently and reflected on the draft a year ago and his progress as a starting pitcher this season with the Cedar Rapids Kernels, the Twins' Class A affiliate in the Midwest League. “I think that this time last year, we had just lost in the state finals in baseball,” recalled Stewart. “Then I was graduating from school and the draft was coming up. I was spending hours with my agent talking about what I wanted to do. There were a million different scenarios playing over in my head. I remember thinking, ‘if this happens, if this guy goes here and if this guy goes here.’” Those “scenarios” Stewart speaks of went beyond those of most of his peers. While all of the high school ballplayers likely to be selected near the top of the draft have the option of postponing their professional careers in favor of playing college baseball, Stewart had an additional option. He had a scholarship offer from Texas A&M football coach Kevin Sumlin to play quarterback for the Aggies. Stewart and his agent certainly knew he'd be selected early on draft night. But that doesn't mean he had made up his mind weeks before the draft that he'd be signing with whatever team chose him. As draft day neared, however, things seemed to come more in to focus. “I expected to go to A&M,” acknowledged Stewart. “A couple of days before the draft, I think, my agent I guess had kind of talked to some people and he kind of had an idea of what was going to happen and I even talked to Coach Sumlin a couple of days before it happened and he gave me his blessing. He wanted me to do what was best for me and that was another dynamic that I had to deal with, too. I kind of felt like I was letting him down. Having guys like that… he’s a really good coach for a reason. He had gone through that before. He definitely made the situation easier on me.” Even having pretty much come to grips with the likelihood that he'd be signing a professional baseball contract rather than pursuing a major college football career didn't make waiting any less stressful for Stewart. “You kind of have that situation made up in your mind, but everything’s still got to happen. You’ve still got to sit there and the decision’s still got to be made,” said Stewart. The anxiety of the wait didn't mean Stewart and those closest to him didn't enjoy the moment, however. “I definitely enjoyed it. It was definitely a fun time for my family,” recalled Stewart. “I have a lot of friends that are really good baseball players that are playing in college right now. I got to experience what a lot of guys that I grew up playing ball with will probably be going through the same thing in a couple of years and to kind of share it with them was really special. “But it was definitely really stressful. I would go to bed knowing I was going to have to make a really big choice and that was kind of hard. Every day it got closer to the draft, it was very apparent that I was going to have a very good opportunity with the Twins and I didn’t want to pass it up.” Players do a lot of different things to relax on draft day. Some go hunting or fishing. Some play golf to take their minds off the draft and hope it passes the time more quickly. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Stewart4.jpg Kohl Stewart Stewart enjoys hunting and fishing in the offseason and also really enjoys golfing. But on draft day, he chose to pass the hours leading up to the draft with friends and family. “I remember waking up. I slept in late,” Stewart recollected, smiling a bit. “I told myself I don’t want to get up and have to worry about it all day long. I wanted to sleep in as long as I could. I think that lasted until about 6:30 that morning." After breakfast, Stewart spent time with one of his Select Team coaches (“He was blowing it up, having a good time with it, kind of looking forward to the night”) and with an older brother. “We went to a place called Mel’s Diner. It’s a small little burger place. I went there, had a good meal with him. I remember he went and bought a bunch of champagne and put it in a cooler. Then we went back to my house and a bunch of people showed up and we turned on the TV. “It was good. It was definitely a day I’ll never forget.” Now, a year later, coming out of Memorial Day Weekend, Stewart has a 1-2 record and a 2.93 ERA as a member of the Kernels rotation. Stewart struggled in a loss to Beloit on Monday, but had given up just three earned runs in his previous five starts combined. Nearly two months in to his first full season of pro ball, Stewart talked about what he has found to be the toughest things to adjust to in professional baseball life. One, the adjustment to going to the ballpark every day either to play or work out between starts, is commonly mentioned by first-year pro ballplayers. “I think that’s kind of a cliché that everybody says, ‘you’re not used to playing every day,’ and you hear that so much, but it’s true,” said Stewart. “I think that most of us guys that haven’t played a full year are still kind of getting used to this kind of animal of 140 games in a season. “I think definitely that’s been the hardest thing for me. And then being away from my home. There’s some days I’ve just wanted to pick up my stuff and go home. I think every kid goes through that. “I mean, I haven’t had a freshman year of college yet, so I didn’t get to experience that kind of homesick feeling first. But I’m learning. I’m learning how to be a professional, to come every day and figure out that I’ve got a job to do.” The other challenging adjustment is probably a bit more unique to a pitcher in Stewart's rather unique situation as a multi-sport star in high school. “Going in to the season, I hadn’t thrown a lot of innings,” explained Stewart. “I threw in high school seasons but football kind of kept me from (throwing after the season). “I think I underestimated the amount of throwing that I’m going to be doing. But I think that everybody probably goes through that, even coming out of college. I think the two bullpens between every start (a byproduct of the Kernels' six-man rotation). I've never been used to that. Or throwing a bullpen the second day after you pitch, that was a new animal for me. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Stewart3-430x600.jpg Kohl Stewart “I think that going in to a couple of starts, I felt like my arm was dead. I think that my arm was learning how to adjust to that feeling and I think that now my arm is starting to build on it. I think that now my arm is getting stronger and I’m kind of building back up to that strength that I was at. “I think that those two things were probably the toughest for me, but I think that as time goes on, I’m getting more used to it every day, so I think I’m doing alright.” As a result of Stewart's limited work in high school, he and the Twins clearly had a plan for Stewart to follow heading in to the season. Not only pitch count limits and innings limits, which are commonplace for teenage pitching prospects, but also plans that focus on learning his craft. Stewart explained the plan and assessed his progress so far. “I’ve definitely had some good starts and I’ve had some bad starts. I think going in to the season, they hammered some things into my head that they want me to get done, such as fastball command. They want me to pound the zone. They want me to be efficient. They want me to pitch. They don’t want me throwing a lot of pitches. There’s a pitch count on me for a reason. They want me to be able to go as deep as I can in to games without running my pitch count up. “One thing that they really want me to do is fastball command. They don’t want me to get behind in counts and then have to work from behind. So, I think that focusing on that stuff with Ivan (Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga) and our catchers, I think that’s really helped me a lot. “So I think that getting these innings in and learning to get the change-up over. I hadn’t thrown very many change-ups and my change-up now is something that I go to a lot against lefties. And really, just getting ground balls and keeping the ball out of the air. I think I lived up in the zone in high school because I could. I used to just throw the ball as hard as I could and that’s not really pitching. I’ve had to learn to command the zone and not feel like I have to overpower everybody. "Going in to the season, I’m trying to build on every start, but I think that the approach that I have right now that Ivan and Jake (manager Jake Mauer) and I have gone over, I think that the plan we have going in to every start is pretty good. I think that I like where things are headed, but I think that I have a lot of work to do.” College football season doesn't start for a couple of months, but Texas A&M and every other major program recently wrapped up their spring practices. Did that give Stewart an itch to get on the practice field and throw the football around? “I didn’t have time for it,” replied the pitcher. “I was so busy figuring out what I was doing and stuff, just trying to get better.” Not that football is forever banished from his mind, of course. “Whenever I watch them on TV, I always get that itch,” admitted Stewart, “but I think everybody kind of enjoys watching those things on TV. I think when I go to the games, I feel like I’m there kind of part of the team. There’s always going to be a part of me that’s there. There’s always going to be that closeness that I have with those guys that are in that class. “But they know that I’m doing what I love and I wouldn’t rather be anywhere else.” ********** The Kernels return home to Cedar Rapids after Tuesday's matinee series finale in Beloit. They'll be home for six games (three vs Wisconsin and three vs Burlington). Friday night, May 30, is another special jersey promotion. It's "Star Wars" night with white/black "storm trooper" themed jerseys that will be auctioned off via silent auction with proceeds going to a charity. The first 1,000 fans through the gates Friday also get a free Star Wars t-shirt. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Star_Wars_Jersey_Promo-150x126.jpgKernels Star Wars Jersey http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Star_Wars_T_Shirt_Promo-150x126.jpgStar Wars t-shirt giveaway (All photos: SD Buhr/Knuckleballsblog.com; jersey/t-shirt images: Kernels.com)
  22. The 2014 MLB First Year Amateur Player Draft is right around the corner and hundreds of high school and college ballplayers are counting the hours before the Houston Astros go on the clock with the first pick of the draft on Thursday, June 5. One year ago, Kohl Stewart was an 18 year-old pitcher anxiously awaiting the draft. Today, Stewart, who was selected by the Minnesota Twins with the fourth overall pick of the first round, is a couple of months in to his first full year of professional baseball. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Stewart2014.jpg Kohl Stewart Stewart sat recently and reflected on the draft a year ago and his progress as a starting pitcher this season with the Cedar Rapids Kernels, the Twins' Class A affiliate in the Midwest League. “I think that this time last year, we had just lost in the state finals in baseball,” recalled Stewart. “Then I was graduating from school and the draft was coming up. I was spending hours with my agent talking about what I wanted to do. There were a million different scenarios playing over in my head. I remember thinking, ‘if this happens, if this guy goes here and if this guy goes here.’” Those “scenarios” Stewart speaks of went beyond those of most of his peers. While all of the high school ballplayers likely to be selected near the top of the draft have the option of postponing their professional careers in favor of playing college baseball, Stewart had an additional option. He had a scholarship offer from Texas A&M football coach Kevin Sumlin to play quarterback for the Aggies. Stewart and his agent certainly knew he'd be selected early on draft night. But that doesn't mean he had made up his mind weeks before the draft that he'd be signing with whatever team chose him. As draft day neared, however, things seemed to come more in to focus. “I expected to go to A&M,” acknowledged Stewart. “A couple of days before the draft, I think, my agent I guess had kind of talked to some people and he kind of had an idea of what was going to happen and I even talked to Coach Sumlin a couple of days before it happened and he gave me his blessing. He wanted me to do what was best for me and that was another dynamic that I had to deal with, too. I kind of felt like I was letting him down. Having guys like that… he’s a really good coach for a reason. He had gone through that before. He definitely made the situation easier on me.” Even having pretty much come to grips with the likelihood that he'd be signing a professional baseball contract rather than pursuing a major college football career didn't make waiting any less stressful for Stewart. “You kind of have that situation made up in your mind, but everything’s still got to happen. You’ve still got to sit there and the decision’s still got to be made,” said Stewart. The anxiety of the wait didn't mean Stewart and those closest to him didn't enjoy the moment, however. “I definitely enjoyed it. It was definitely a fun time for my family,” recalled Stewart. “I have a lot of friends that are really good baseball players that are playing in college right now. I got to experience what a lot of guys that I grew up playing ball with will probably be going through the same thing in a couple of years and to kind of share it with them was really special. “But it was definitely really stressful. I would go to bed knowing I was going to have to make a really big choice and that was kind of hard. Every day it got closer to the draft, it was very apparent that I was going to have a very good opportunity with the Twins and I didn’t want to pass it up.” Players do a lot of different things to relax on draft day. Some go hunting or fishing. Some play golf to take their minds off the draft and hope it passes the time more quickly. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Stewart4.jpg Kohl Stewart Stewart enjoys hunting and fishing in the offseason and also really enjoys golfing. But on draft day, he chose to pass the hours leading up to the draft with friends and family. “I remember waking up. I slept in late,” Stewart recollected, smiling a bit. “I told myself I don’t want to get up and have to worry about it all day long. I wanted to sleep in as long as I could. I think that lasted until about 6:30 that morning." After breakfast, Stewart spent time with one of his Select Team coaches (“He was blowing it up, having a good time with it, kind of looking forward to the night”) and with an older brother. “We went to a place called Mel’s Diner. It’s a small little burger place. I went there, had a good meal with him. I remember he went and bought a bunch of champagne and put it in a cooler. Then we went back to my house and a bunch of people showed up and we turned on the TV. “It was good. It was definitely a day I’ll never forget.” Now, a year later, coming out of Memorial Day Weekend, Stewart has a 1-2 record and a 2.93 ERA as a member of the Kernels rotation. Stewart struggled in a loss to Beloit on Monday, but had given up just three earned runs in his previous five starts combined. Nearly two months in to his first full season of pro ball, Stewart talked about what he has found to be the toughest things to adjust to in professional baseball life. One, the adjustment to going to the ballpark every day either to play or work out between starts, is commonly mentioned by first-year pro ballplayers. “I think that’s kind of a cliché that everybody says, ‘you’re not used to playing every day,’ and you hear that so much, but it’s true,” said Stewart. “I think that most of us guys that haven’t played a full year are still kind of getting used to this kind of animal of 140 games in a season. “I think definitely that’s been the hardest thing for me. And then being away from my home. There’s some days I’ve just wanted to pick up my stuff and go home. I think every kid goes through that. “I mean, I haven’t had a freshman year of college yet, so I didn’t get to experience that kind of homesick feeling first. But I’m learning. I’m learning how to be a professional, to come every day and figure out that I’ve got a job to do.” The other challenging adjustment is probably a bit more unique to a pitcher in Stewart's rather unique situation as a multi-sport star in high school. “Going in to the season, I hadn’t thrown a lot of innings,” explained Stewart. “I threw in high school seasons but football kind of kept me from (throwing after the season). “I think I underestimated the amount of throwing that I’m going to be doing. But I think that everybody probably goes through that, even coming out of college. I think the two bullpens between every start (a byproduct of the Kernels' six-man rotation). Ive never been used to that. Or throwing a bullpen the second day after you pitch, that was a new animal for me. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Stewart3-430x600.jpg Kohl Stewart “I think that going in to a couple of starts, I felt like my arm was dead. I think that my arm was learning how to adjust to that feeling and I think that now my arm is starting to build on it. I think that now my arm is getting stronger and I’m kind of building back up to that strength that I was at. “I think that those two things were probably the toughest for me, but I think that as time goes on, I’m getting more used to it every day, so I think I’m doing alright.” As a result of Stewart's limited work in high school, he and the Twins clearly had a plan for Stewart to follow heading in to the season. Not only pitch count limits and innings limits, which are commonplace for teenage pitching prospects, but also plans that focus on learning his craft. Stewart explained the plan and assessed his progress so far. “I’ve definitely had some good starts and I’ve had some bad starts. I think going in to the season, they hammered some things in to my head that they want me to get done, such as fast-ball command. They want me to pound the zone. They want me to be efficient. They want me to pitch. They don’t want me throwing a lot of pitches. There’s a pitch count on me for a reason. They want me to be able to go as deep as I can in to games without running my pitch count up. “One thing that they really want me to do is fast ball command. They don’t want me to get behind in counts and then have to work from behind. So, I think that focusing on that stuff with Ivan (Kernels pitching coach Ivan Arteaga) and our catchers, I think that’s really helped me a lot. “So I think that getting these innings in and learning to get the change-up over. I hadn’t thrown very many change-ups and my change-up now is something that I go to a lot against lefties. And really, just getting ground balls and keeping the ball out of the air. I think I lived up in the zone in high school because I could. I used to just throw the ball as hard as I could and that’s not really pitching. I’ve had to learn to command the zone and not feel like I have to overpower everybody. "Going in to the season, I’m trying to build on every start, but I think that the approach that I have right now that Ivan and Jake (manager Jake Mauer) and I have gone over, I think that the plan we have going in to every start is pretty good. I think that I like where things are headed, but I think that I have a lot of work to do.” College football season doesn't start for a couple of months, but Texas A&M and every other major program recently wrapped up their spring practices. Did that give Stewart an itch to get on the practice field and throw the football around? “I didn’t have time for it,” replied the pitcher. “I was so busy figuring out what I was doing and stuff, just trying to get better.” Not that football is forever banished from his mind, of course. “Whenever I watch them on TV, I always get that itch,” admitted Stewart, “but I think everybody kind of enjoys watching those things on TV. I think when I go to the games, I feel like I’m there kind of part of the team. There’s always going to be a part of me that’s there. There’s always going to be that closeness that I have with those guys that are in that class. “But they know that I’m doing what I love and I wouldn’t rather be anywhere else.” ********** The Kernels return home to Cedar Rapids after Tuesday's matinee series finale in Beloit. They'll be home for six games (three vs Wisconsin and three vs Burlington). Friday night, May 30, is another special jersey promotion. It's "Star Wars" night with white/black "storm trooper" themed jerseys that will be auctioned off via silent auction with proceeds going to a charity. The first 1,000 fans through the gates Friday also get a free Star Wars t-shirt. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Star_Wars_Jersey_Promo-150x126.jpgKernels Star Wars Jersey http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Star_Wars_T_Shirt_Promo-150x126.jpgStar Wars t-shirt giveaway (All photos: SD Buhr/Knuckleballsblog.com; jersey/t-shirt images: Kernels.com)
  23. I'm traveling for work the first half of this week, so I won't really have an opportunity to write a regular weekly update on the Cedar Rapids Kernels. Perhaps it's just as well, though, because the Twins' Midwest League affiliate did not have a real good week. The Kernels dropped from the second spot in the MWL Western Division standings all the way to the cellar, as they endured an eight-game losing streak. That losing streak ended Sunday in Burlington, however. Cedar Rapids topped the Bees 7-6. As a bonus, the win lifted the Kernels out of the MWL West basement. Since I don't have anything exciting to write about this week, I thought the least I could do is provide a few pictures of the game on Sunday. I had hoped to take more, but it turns out there are very few spots where you can take pictures at the Burlington ballpark that aren't behind netting. Some of the photos are a bit blurry. I hoped they just looked blurry on Sunday because I was having a few beers at the game, but no, they're still a little blurry. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/HaarMildren2014.jpg 3B Bryan Haar and SP Ethan Mildren http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/JakeMauer2014a.jpg Manager Jake Mauer coaching 3B in the first inning. That's something he would not be doing by the end of the game, however. Mauer was ejected in the 7th inning following a heated discussion with the umpires over a balk call. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Williams2014a.jpg Leadoff hitter JD Williams http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Vavra2014b1-443x600.jpg Tanner Vavra pulling in to 2B with a double http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/VavraMauer2014.jpg Tanner Vavra chats with manager Jake Mauer. Vavra would ultimately be stranded at 3B. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Christensen2014b.jpg Chad Christensen http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Thomas2014a.jpg Ivory Thomas http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Garver2014b.jpg Mitch Garver http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Licon2014b.jpg Joel Licon http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Haar2014a.jpg Bryan Haar http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Altobelli2014d.jpg Bo Altobelli http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Quesada2014d.jpg Michael Quesada http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Mildren2014a.jpg Ethan Mildren http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Watkins2014a.jpg Tommy Watkins took over 3B coaching duties following Mauer's ejection. Two runs scored in the 9th inning with Watkins and his bubble gum in charge. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/WatkinsChristensen.jpg Tommy Watkins gets a close-up look as Chad Christensen tags up and scores on a sac fly
  24. Everyone who has ever played the game knows you simply do not anger the baseball gods. The baseball gods are a vengeful lot. Any kind of slight, whether real or perceived, can cause them to rain down bad karma on players, coaches, teams and even, apparently, entire organizations. Someone in the Minnesota Twins organization must have really ticked off those baseball gods back during spring training, because the Twins have had one calamity after another since March. That’s when arguably the top power-hitting prospect in the game, Miguel Sano, was lost for the season with a torn ulnar collateral ligament (UCL), requiring Tommy John surgery. A couple of weeks later, the consensus top minor league prospect in baseball, Byron Buxton, injured his wrist in the outfield on one of the back fields of the Twins’ training complex in Fort Myers FL. In fact, the baseball gods must really have it in for Buxton because just days after he was activated by Fort Myers, they zapped his wrist again, sending him back to the DL. The Twins have had so many injuries at the major league level that they’ve routinely been sending out career infielders like Eduardo Escobar to play in the outfield over the past week. The Twins currently have four players on a disabled list of one kind or another. Others, including $23 million a year man Joe Mauer, have missed stretches of games with injuries despite avoiding a trip to the DL. However, the wrath of the baseball gods has perhaps been visited hardest upon the Twins’ Class A Midwest League affiliate, the Cedar Rapids Kernels. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Rosario2014a.jpg Randy Rosario - on the DL Cedar Rapids’ uniforms don’t have players names sewn on the back of their jerseys above the number. That’s probably a good thing this season, because the club may have needed to retain a seamstress full time just to keep up with the roster changes already during 2014. Roster turnover is not unusual in the minor leagues, of course. Players are promoted, demoted and even released at various points during the season, making it not at all unusual to see close to 50 different players take the field in a Kernels uniform at some point during the summer. A year ago, 49 different players (including Twins pitcher Mike Pelfrey on an injury rehabilitation assignment) put in time with the Kernels. But this year’s Cedar Rapids club is getting an unwelcome jump on the roster musical chairs game. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Pineda1-600x420.jpg Jeremias Pineda - on the DL On Tuesday, less than six weeks in to the new season, pitcher Jared Wilson became the 34th player to wear a Kernels uniform this year. Before the end of the first game of the Kernels' doubleheader Tuesday night, shortstop Engelb Vielma had been pulled from the game after coming up lame as he left the batter's box in the second inning and center fielder Jason Kanzler had been injured on a collision in the outfield. (UPDATE: After the 2nd game, Kernels manager Jake Mauer confirmed Vielma injured his hamstring and Kanzler likely has a concussion. Mauer said he expects both players to be placed on the disabled list and hopes to have replacements up from extended spring training in time for Wednesday night's doubleheader.) Of the 25 players who arrived in Cedar Rapids from spring training to start the current campaign, pitcher Brandon Peterson has earned a promotion to High-A Fort Myers, pitcher Miguel Sulbaran has been traded, pitcher Christian Powell has been released and seven original 2014 Kernels have spent some time on the club’s disabled list. If Vielma's name is added to that list, he would be the eighth. Centerfielder Zack Granite was hitting .313 for the Kernels just four games into the season when the baseball gods struck him down with a rotator cuff strain. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Larson4-450x600.jpg Zack Larson - on the DL About ten days later, catcher Michael Quesada fell to a right wrist contusion. Less than a week after Quesada was felled, outfielder Jeremias Pineda broke his wrist and pitcher Randy Rosario hit the DL with a left flexor mass strain. The game’s mystic guardians finally looked in other directions for almost two weeks before returning their attention to the Kernels with a vengeance and sidelining infielders Tanner Vavra (right ankle sprain) and Logan Wade (dislocated left shoulder), as well as outfielder Zack Larson (right hamstring strain), all during the first ten days of May. That’s an average of better than one player a week that manager Jake Mauer and his coaching staff have had to replace due to injury. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Wade2014a-600x449.jpg Logan Wade - on the DL So far, the nine players added to the Kernels’ roster as replacements from extended spring training have managed to avoid the DL, though Kanzler would break that string if he lands on the DL following his injury Tuesday. One replacement, Jonatan Hinojosa, was with the team only long enough to play in one game before finding himself suspended by Major League Baseball for having tested positive for a PED. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/P3260165-3-475x600.jpg Michael Quesada - back from the DL Twins farm director Brad Steil must cringe every time his phone rings and he sees Jake Mauer’s name on the caller ID. Perhaps remarkably, Mauer has patched together line-ups that have managed to win more games than they’ve lost. In fact, with five weeks left in the Midwest League’s first-half race, the Kernels are right in the thick of the race for second place in the league’s Western Division and the automatic postseason spot that would come with it. The Kernels struggled through a tough six-game road trip during which they won just two of six games and they play just seven of their next 17 games at home, but both Quesada and Vavra have returned from their injuries. Even Quesada’s return, however, poses a peculiar challenge for his manager. The Kernels’ current active roster includes 13 pitchers and 12 position players, four of them catchers. Of course, at this level, it’s not unusual for catchers to play some first base. Which is good, because the Kernels’ regular first baseman of late, Chad Christensen, is likely going to be needed in the outfield. The arrival of JD Williams from extended spring training, where he’d been recovering from his own spring training injury (a broken thumb) has certainly provided a spark at the top of the Cedar Rapids batting order. http://knuckleballsblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Vavra2014b-600x428.jpg Tanner Vavra - back from the DL After Monday night's doubleheader against Peoria was washed out, the Kernels were scheduled to play back-to-back doubleheaders against the Chiefs Tuesday and Wednesday. Going in to Tuesday night's games, Peoria sat in second place in the MWL West, just a half game ahead of Cedar Rapids. There were four more teams, however, bunched tightly together behind the Kernels and all of them have their eyes on the second Western Division postseason spot. (All photos: SD Buhr/Knuckleballsblog.com) Because the Twins won yesterday, you can get a half price large or extra-large pizza today (Friday) from PapaJohns.com when you use the promo code TWINSWIN.
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