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nicksaviking

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Everything posted by nicksaviking

  1. I would have liked the idea a year or so ago, but I think strikeouts are already becoming a problem for the current Twins team, I think he'd add to the problem.
  2. Cousins' contract would have looked like a bargain prior to the draft, but now teams are mostly set at QB, so that bridge is likely burned unless a contender loses their QB in training camp. I think the Vikings will be largely average, but could/should still win the division. Detroit should be good, but I mean, it's Detroit so odds are they'll shoot themselves in the foot as is tradition.
  3. Which means the stratification of those results should not be infinite, it should be a fixed scale, something like 1-10. Not -30 through+60 which will wildly swing the overall fWAR. Plus, I can almost certainly explain the large changes in Cuddyer's numbers and it's less to do with chances. Cuddyer played 539 innings in RF in 2010 and 639 in 2011, yet he was an exponentially better right fielder in 2011. Why? In 2010, the Twins thought balls bouncing off of their new RF wall would shoot back to the infield, so Cuddyer played shallow, but it turned out the balls didn't bounce that way. In 2011, Cuddyer played deeper as right field is such a small area to cover. According to Fangraphs, Jason Kubel also saw a 100% defensive improvement playing RF from 2010 to 2011. It's also certainly why Torii Hunter improved upon leaving the giant Comerica Park, and why right fielders in general have not been an issue at Target Field (apologies Miguel Sano). Yet the equation doesn't seem to be able to factor in managerial or some ball park inclinations. Which should go without saying, has no bearing on the quality of the defender.
  4. Yeah, I agree. Sorry but fWAR is unreliable and inconsistent. Just using Twins outfielders as examples; how is it possible Michael Cuddyer could have a -25.8 defensive adjustment in 2010 then only a -8.3 in 2011, then go to Colorado and have a -3.7 adjustment? How did 39-year-old Torii Hunter go from having a -14.5 adjustment and being considered amongst the worst fielders in the league in Detroit come to Minnesota and have a -3.3 adjustment, while also still being considered amongst the worst fielders in the league?
  5. Yeah, taking a step back to build a real contender was my hope all along. But they’re putting themselves in purgatory because they’re only taking a half step back. If they were going to do this approach, they should have traded Cousins and Smith. They likely aren’t getting a franchise QB drafting 14th next year.
  6. I think we need to kick the vets to the curb. At least the ones within reason. The young guys are always hungrier and usually more talented. Give them the jobs. Depth would be an issue, but calling players up from AA for depth doesn't seem like it could be much worse than watching the vets play anyway. If depth is needed later, I'd rather watch Lee or Keirsey or Isola or Severino struggle at the MLB level than what I've seen from most of the vet bats this year, Every good run this organization has had, has been when the top young guys all gel together over a year or so.
  7. I'll bet a whole bunch of Julien's will be headed to Toronto. Should be a fun time for the family. I mean assuming there isn't an indoor hockey game they feel is more important
  8. Makes me think you didn't read the article. Ash quoted the author verbatim.
  9. Yeah, I never liked the experience > unproven talent angle. I was thrilled with the Correa signing (still am, it was always partially about the principle of making a serious commitment anyway), but rolled my eyes at the other free agents. To be fair, the offensive free agents available this year were atrocious, but I didn't like the sign-guys-just-to-sign guys or fill the roster with defensive first players approach. If the bats they signed after Correa were the best they could do, they should have stood pat other than a nice filler piece or two. (Farmer and a Taylor OR a Gallo for the bench) Every sustained competitive team this organization has ever built, was built almost exclusively of home-grown players. They should have thrown the tykes in the deep end at the beginning of the season to see which ones would swim. And then at midseason, it would have been easier to see where the holes actually are. We haven't a clue at this point because we've been wasting time with a bunch of guys who'll still be free agents when spring training opens next year.
  10. Yeah, they're offensively frustrating, but winning as much or more than most of us expected. The starters' effectiveness has been a welcome change. I'm always open to trades, but I'm at the point that it should come at the expense of the players I don't want to watch swing a bat anymore. Though admittedly, I'm bidding my time until natural selection comes and rips San Diego's throat out. That's going to be a bonkers fire sale which ever year they finally waive the white flag.
  11. I'd rather not wait until July, which is probably how long it would take to make even the most minimal of trade. I'd DFA him, which could start a trade dialogue with another team anyway. But if nothing comes of it, than he's free to make his own way. And really isn't that what all of this hemming and hawing is all about? It's about respecting a long time player, isn't it? Otherwise he'd be riding the pine watching the young guys play right now. Letting him choose his next team would be a better concession to him than taking away his agency or letting him stew about his backup role on the bench.
  12. I agree that last year's deal to get Mahle and Lopez were the right moves because they could be controlled this year too. And those two should have been good. But I don't know about buying a hitter this year at the deadline. Do they need hitters? Yes, clearly. But every time they bring in a shiny new vet, they block the young hitters who repeatedly show they were the better option all along. I think the ONLY shot this team has, and I don't think they have a real shot this year at all, is to say screw it, and let the young guys take Kepler, Vazquez, Gallo, Solano, Castro and maybe even Polanco's jobs. They need more than Kirilloff, Lewis and Jeffers to step up, they're going to need a solid five or so young guys to take charge and embarrass the vets, and obviously that's a long shot. But I don't see bringing in more vets as the answer. And I'm with MLR. I don't think winning a weak division makes you more likely to win the World Series. I think you need to be an actual good team. I think an iffy WC team from a tough division is way more likely to win it all.
  13. To be fair, Narvaez and his more modest deal would have meant the Twins likely turned to Jeffers sooner. Even without a Narvaez injury.
  14. Admittedly I haven't really checked out the corner OF situation leaguewide, I just figured from what we've seen the last three years there's probably not a team that's trying to compete that would want him as anything other than a AAAA taxi-squad stash. Consensus sounds like I'm wrong, and obviously I'd prefer some kind of return over nothing at all.
  15. I know it was jokey, but I was happy for Rosario, and I'd be happy for Kepler too. I'm not sure if a change of scenery will turn Kepler's career around, but we've seen one good season in Minnesota vs seven under-achieving seasons. I think we have a large enough sample size to make the proper call on this one.
  16. The Twins seemed to have painted themselves into a corner with the CF spot. I want someone with a bat there, but strange forces seem to be blocking that at every turn. Something concrete needs to occur next offseason. But agree with everyone else, time for the young guys to take Kepler's spot. Seems like an uncomfortable fit putting him on the bench, and I'd think he'd have no trade value, so I'd probably just rip the band aid off and wish him well.
  17. ****Moderator Note****** No, many of our fanbase will latch on to any crumb to complain about because they're miserable, irrational people who think the internet is only here for them to air their grievances to try to make others as miserable as they are. We're complaining about a 29-year-old reliever? The Twins have found more flash in the pan bullpen arms than Baltimore recently. Way more. Boo hoo, the Twins haven't figured out the Rays secret sauce, just like the other 28 teams in the league. Enough. If all you're going to do is bellyache about the Twins, find another site to do it on. This is not the site for you. Everyone has been warned enough about the tone of this site. Stop the incessant complaining, or stop posting.
  18. Seems to me Pressly flipped the switch with the Twins, which is why they got two well-regarded prospects for a reliever with only a year and a half of control left. If anything, I think one could call into question the evaluation of the prospects (Alcala and Celestino).
  19. Lightning-in-a-bottle relievers happen all the time. I don't think there is anything deficient with the Twins here, most teams find at least one a year and lose one or two as well. Except for the Rays, they find about five a year.
  20. Encouraging stuff, the young guys are the only hope of saving this team from offensive malaise. I do love Will Holland's photo and bio in the link above too! Must have went to one of those old timey photo booths you see in re-created pioneer villages.
  21. Hopefully Jeffers does to Vazquez what Mitch Garver did to Jason Castro. I was never against the signing, but I still can’t understand why fans always clamor for glove-first players. We’ve seen this play out dozens of times; pitchforks come out when the bats don’t produce. Plus defenders only look good on paper. If they don’t hit, their leash gets short.
  22. Which all but ended his career. If he’d retired the next day he’d be in the HOF, 1st ballot. But he labored on and fizzled out with a bum shoulder.
  23. Seems to me infielders get hurt on defense way more often than outfielders.
  24. I don't like the idea that CF is too dangerous of a position for the team's best offensive players. I don't want this organization to just put Michael Taylor types out there because they're offensively expendable. Building a formidable lineup includes having a centerfielder who can hit. Will we ever be able to have a top bat play CF? Or is it just Buxton and Lewis?
  25. Just like everyone else, I can't make sense of the Pagan stuff. However, since the front office took over, they went from a slap-hitting club, to setting records for HR, to focusing on higher OBP players and seemingly back to whatever this un-labelable circus is that we see now. The rotation went from deadball-era pitch-to-contact arms to extreme flyball pitchers, to extremely ineffective short starts then to strikeout arms among the league leaders in innings pitched. Defensively, they went from a fairly solid defensive team for two decades, then said, 'screw the errors, give me HRs' and now to, 'screw the offense, give me flexible players with + gloves'. So, are they not admitting a mistake on Pagan? Yeah, maybe. But basically everything else they're doing? Clearly not, they change their whole philosophy pretty much every season.
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