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Everything posted by nicksaviking
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This was a waiver claim, not a free agent signing. These happen all the time and with his pay, lack of position and noted redundancy, I’d say he’s got an uphill battle to make the team. I’m really struggling to understand why there is so much frustration with this. Like the rest of the league, the Twins will probably make two or three other moves like this before spring, these guys are just lotto tickets. I don’t recall this much anger over claiming Michael Reed.
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Article: Twins Claim 1B CJ Cron
nicksaviking replied to Seth Stohs's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I have little interest in Cron, heck little interest in filling 1B. But I don’t understand all the animosity. This is simply a waiver claim, the Twins make a dozen of these a year, Cron is just a bigger name than your typical waiver claim. -
I guess you can, the Red Sox had scouts testing Betts in HS during his lunch period I guess: https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/how-mlb-teams-are-using-neuroscience-to-try-to-gain-a-competitive-advantage/amp/ Different than the NFL for sure. Hope it’s not different than the Twins.
- 113 replies
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- nick gordon
- lamonte wade
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I'd prefer to judge the process of talent evaluation instead of the actual talent produced, of course teams aren't going to disclose that willingly. In the case of Mookie Betts though, we do have anecdotal evidence that the Red Sox were doing some kind of video-game type of test to gauge reaction time and/or eye-hand coordination and Betts was off the charts which is why the Red Sox drafted such a small kid in the 5th round instead of letting him get picked after the 10th round which is typical for HS players with perceived low ceilings. I'd like to know if the Twins were doing something similar, the perception of the club would indicate that their evaluation would consist of scouts in the stands, a chat with a coach and perhaps a firm handshake, but that's only an assumption, maybe there was more. Are the Twins now doing the things other clubs do to find elite talent? Are they now doing things other clubs have not thought about to evaluate elite talent? That's really what I want to know. I think if they put in the effort to distance themselves from their competitors, it will pay off in star players in the long run.
- 113 replies
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- nick gordon
- lamonte wade
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A team like Houston could really use him though and he'd be a significant upgrade at 1B for Boston, New York, Tampa, Cleveland, LA Angels, Colorado and St. Louis. Normally I'd agree that the position devalues him but this is kind of an odd situation where pretty much every team that views itself as a contender is actually deficient at 1B. And the contenders are the teams AZ can milk for maximum return.
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A) is hard though, because one year of Goldschmidt might not be worth terribly much to the Twins as they now stand, but if the Twins were in Houston or Cleveland's position, he probably would be worth a Kirilloff. So it's not like the Twins can gauge his cost based on what he's worth to them, AZ is going to want what he's worth to a team thinking he's the missing piece to a World Series.
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Sale, Verlander, Stanton, and Andrew Miller were all acquired when those clubs were front runners, not when those clubs were wallowing in disappointment as we currently find the Twins.
- 58 replies
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- byron buxton
- miguel sano
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How can anyone look at most of the league's elite teams like Houston, Boston, Cleveland , the Yankees or the Dodgers and think that relying on the farm system hasn't worked out?
- 58 replies
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- byron buxton
- miguel sano
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Article: Welcome to the New School
nicksaviking replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
To me the key is to find out if the path the Red Sox young players took was entirely due to the players, or if it was guided by the team. Also perhaps more importantly, was the path the Twins young players took entirely their own doing, or was there some guidance that the team failed to provide. -
It was a huge improvement! It used to be they didn't roster 4th over all picks! Edit: Ninja'd. Old joke I guess.
- 113 replies
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- nick gordon
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Baldelli and company are going to need to find a way to get more out his players than what Molitor did from the sound of it. Reinforcements do not appear imminent. I am a believer that managerial changes can have significant positive yet intangible impacts, so I don't think better baseball is out of the question by any means.
- 58 replies
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- byron buxton
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I thought Arraez would be rostered, but after reading this thread, I agree, he's unlikely to be taken due to his lack of positional flexibility and power. Good gamble. What's his ceiling, Bip Roberts without the speed? I don't know that it would be much of a loss.
- 113 replies
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- nick gordon
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I’m all about the discovery; I’ll accept the associated trial and error laboratory fires that come with it. This franchise has for too long relied on letting other clubs do all the experiments while the Twins suffered the consequences of looking over the front runners shoulder for the answer without knowing the process of getting there. Also, perhaps I’m wrong, but I thought Hubbard was light on the science and heavy on the fiction?
- 56 replies
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- rocco baldelli
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I’m just fine with all the various degrees of lack of experience from the coaches. It’s not like these guys are new to the sport, just new to the old boys club. I think a, “Hey, we’re going to try some different things, this is kind of unprecedented, want to get in on the ground floor?” approach is going to appeal to young players. Might it not work? Yes. Has what they’ve been doing for a decade not worked? Yes. It might turn off stodgy, set-in-their-ways vets. The types I already have no interest in. I’ll trust math and science over tradition, gut-instincts and conventional wisdom. That’s not a new school philosophy, Copernicus, Galileo and Di Vinci had these same arguments during The Renaissance.
- 56 replies
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- rocco baldelli
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I too am still on the Thorpe bandwagon. Seems to me his velocity was higher prior to his TJ surgery, perhaps that starts creeping back up. I'd be interested in Carlos Santana; the Twins always like these "veteran leadership" types, it would be nice to have one that is actually an offensive asset. I could be talked into Robinson Cano probably too, but Seattle would need to eat considerable money there. With Mauer, Escobar and quite possibly Grossman gone, the Twins really need to work on getting multiple high OBP guys. Getting base runners was an issue last year even with those players.
- 56 replies
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- joe mauer
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I like the Phil Miller contribution, though not the implication that Guardado and Kintzler are how the Twins should model their closer search. Can a closer get away with low velocity, low strikeouts and lots of base runners? Sure, but why seek outliers who need significant help from the defenses when you don’t need to? Don’t get cute, get a guy who’s going to miss a lot of bats. Get three of them in fact. There are so many good relievers this off season, they might not get a better chance to fix the pen, spend the millions.
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Article: Believe in Byron Buxton
nicksaviking replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I'm still hopeful for both, but isn't Buxton's floor considerably lower than solid regular? Wouldn't his floor be what we've seen most of the past four seasons? I wouldn't say that's a solid regular. -
Article: Believe in Byron Buxton
nicksaviking replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I think Buxton can succeed, I just don't want the team to rely on his success for their success. But that's not Buxton exclusive. I don't want them to rely on Sano, or Berrios, or Rosario, or Gibson or Royce Lewis either. If a season falls apart because of a player or two not living up to expectations, then you didn't put together a good enough team. -
Article: Twins Tales Up the Middle
nicksaviking replied to Ted Schwerzler 's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I’d take any of those guys on a short term deal, but none of them are long term answers. SS and 2B are no longer league-wide offensive black holes. If the Twins don’t have the long term answer in house (fingers crossed that they do) then they need to pry one away from another team. Outside of Machado, these free agents are either way too poor with the bat or way too poor with the glove to commit a leash or money for them to start beyond 2019.- 25 replies
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- minnesota twins
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Article: Expansion Could Alter MLB's Landscape
nicksaviking replied to Cody Christie's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I mean, choosing an affordable housing project over a publicly funded baseball stadium? Yeah, Portland isn't ready for the soulless endeavor of being a MLB/NFL market. Aren't they aware that affordable housing is supposed to be razed to build a fancy new ballpark? Kudos Portland.

