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Developing Yordano Ventura

The Twins have been notoriously slow at moving pitchers through the system while they wait for consistency. I thought it might be interesting to see how some of other young pitchers moved through their systems. How about Yordano Ventura? Yordano Ventura and Alex Meyer both pitched in the Carolina League in 2012. Meyer started in low-A and arrived about the time Ventura was leaving. What was the Royals plan for Ventura? Did they wait for consistency?   2010- He started the year in the Dominican s

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Jordan Schafer: Breakout or Bust

Jordan Schafer is at his 4th stop having moved from Atlanta to Houston to Atlanta prior to being claimed by Minnesota. He enters next season as a 28 year old with a significant 1398 plate appearances. Is there a chance that the once highly rated prospect can turn it around at age 28? Has it happened before?   I used Baseball Reference's play index seeking an answer. I wanted a group of outfielders that had a similar number of plate appearances and performance through age 27. A group where Schafe

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Framing By Battery

Baseball Prospectus has pitch framing data organized by battery.   Framing data by battery   The data looks at pitches where the umpire needs to make the call and compares actual strikes with predicted strikes. While looking at splits creates small sample sizes, I wondered if it would be clear that Josmil Pinto's framing skills are significantly worse than Kurt Suzuki.   The natural place to start is Glenn Perkins.   Chances Predicted Actual +/- Josmil Pint

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Twins and Catcher Framing

Glen Perkins talked about Josmil Pinto and his ability to frame pitches. He didn't mention Kurt Suzuki. I guess he wasn't asked. Nor was he asked about Ryan Doumit in previous years.   Since 2011 it has been debated about the Twins decision making on catcher and defense. At best, they are waiting to see if the data that has been available for many season has validity. At worst, they are ignorant and that ignorance shows in their roster decisions as well as their development of catchers in the mi

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Maybe there was some risk...

With the signings of Kubel, Bartlett and Guerrier, comments overwhelmingly went like these below.                 No risk? No impact on the 40 man roster?   Alex Presley Brooks Raley Darin Mastroianni   Signing decline phase players (even to minor league contracts) does have a risk.   It kept the Twins from seeking other younger solutions.   It invests playing time into players with no upside.   It costs a few younger players on the 40 man roster who have a better long term shot at being a role

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Some Samples No Longer Small: Pitchers

Sample sizes for a few ratios are becoming large enough to consider. For pitchers, strike out rate stabilizes at 70 batters faced and ground ball and fly ball rate stabilizes at 70 balls in play. By stabilizing, that doesn’t necessarily mean it is the new expected rate. It does mean that any significant changes from previous year cannot be written off to small sample size. For minor leaguers a drop or change likely coincides with a step up in classification and the necessary adjustment. It is al

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

White Sox and Twins: Rebuilding

The contrast in rebuild between the a White a Sox and Twins is shown in the acquisition of 27 and under players since last opening day.     White Sox     Adam Eaton Adrian Nieto Avisail Garcia Jose Abreau Leary Garcia Maikel Clato Conor Gilaspie almost makes the list. He was acquired last spring training.     Twins     Phil Hughes (actually it is his age 28 season and he is older than any of the White Sox 7)     There has been an argument that the Twins can't go young because they don't gave any

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Waiting to Rebuild

I thought and hoped this would be the year where the Twins would go with youth. I should have known better. The direction for the winter roster construction was made clear when they retained Josh Willingham last August.   Earl Battey was the catcher when I first became a young Twin fan. I recall his western oil 8x10 card hanging my wall among other Twin heroes. Those years were great. I didn't know how lucky I was to follow a team that was competitive or at least entertaining every year. There h

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

The Grapefruit Kings

There are two teams with winning records the last three seasons in the Grapefruit League. The Twins and Tigers. In fact, the Twins have the longest string of winning records and haven't had a losing season since 2007 thanks to the performance of players like Aaron Hicks, Luke Hughes, Cole DeVries and Matt Maloney.     ... and it means nothing.     Spring training records and individual stat lines have no meaning. They shouldn't be used to argue that one player or another should make the roster.

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Kurt Suzuki - Signed to be the starter?

Mike Berardino reported yesterday that Terry Ryan expected Kurt Suzuki to start at catcher. At the time of the signing, it appeared that Suzuki was signed to gibe the Twins a veteran backup. On this site, there were certainly questions about his defense and concern about the workload he carried early in his career. At the time, the best available options other than Suzuki were John Buck or retaining Doumit. While Suzuki has shown to be a poor pitch framer, Doumit and Buck are at the bottom.   P

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

FIP. Fielding Independent. Really?

Fielding Independent Pitching (FIP) measures what a player’s ERA should have looked like over a given time period, assuming that performance on balls in play and timing were league average. Fangraphs relies on FIP to calculate WAR for pitchers.   Is FIP independent of the catcher?   The following table shows pitching performance by catcher over the last two seasons.   [TABLE=width: 500] Catcher Inn K/BB FIP Joe Mauer 1286 2.32 4.32 Ryan Doumit 865 1.65 4.78 Drew Butera 307 2.53 3.80 C

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Platoon Advantage

Two topics that appeared in the forums led me to wonder which teams are getting the platoon advantage.   How did the Indians do it? I look at their numbers and see a combined 6.1 WAR from Jan Gomes and Ryan Raburn. Those cheap additions will be the difference between contending for the wild card and being on the fringe. Francona has found a role for them to put up fantastic numbers.   We also debated about how platooning might help the Twins.   I wondered how often teams are getting the platoon

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Revisiting Catching and Defense

My last blog topic on catcher defense was last November. The trade of Butera has prompted a revisit.   Through July 26 while Ryan Doumit was catching, 46 out of zone balls were called strikes and 205 in zone strikes were called balls. They convert it to a ratio which for Doumit would be 0.22 extra strikes/lost strikes. That ratio is the worst in baseball and the next for a current catcher is twice the ratio at 0.44. The data is from Baseball Prospectus.   How much difference does that make in te

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Trade Talk: Glen Perkins

I have a little different format for this one as much has been written about Perkins. Dave Schoenfield's article recommending the Twins trade Glen Perkins in "Another Reason Closers are Overated".   As I read his article is whether he was asking the right questions. The question should really be what happens to closers the following year. It should be how many teams have the same closer. How effective can we expect Perkins to remain in the next 2-3 years?   As the Twins consider trading Glenn P

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Trade Talk: Correia and Pelfrey

The Twins signed to veteran back of the rotation starters last winter. Is it possible they might flip them in a midseason trade?   Kevin Correia whose best skill might be his reliable health has performed at an ERA+ of 99 (essentially league average) this year. Mike Pelfrey is coming off injury and started poorly. He needs to put up a string of good starts in order to show that he is healthy. Neither player has a contract that is going to scare off a team.   Earlier I look at previous LOOGY trad

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Trade Talk: Brian Duensing

One of the players this board has discussed trading is Brian Duensing. The thought is other teams might look to him as a left handed LOOGY.   His line 5.06 ERA, 41g, 32in, 29k, 14bb (over his career left handed hitters have a .580 OPS)   Why trade him? Brian is 30. He will be eligible for arbitration next year. He would likely be non-tendered. Caleb Thielbar appears to be the better option with Pedro Hernandez providing depth.   Why keep him? He certainly isn’t at peak value now and has never b

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Should Diamond be sent to AAA?

Another post suggested the Twins flip Diamond for Hendriks if he doesn't turn it around by the end of the month.   It has been on my mind as I listened to the Gardenhire show yesterday morning and the post game conference following the game.   If Diamond is to get a handful more starts before flipping him for Hendriks, can he at least have a different catcher.   Doumit doesn't catch often but he has caught 11 of 16 Diamond starts. Gardy quoted ERA as a reason. Hopefully someone in the organizat

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Dozier - What Difference Does It Make?

I tried to study the impact of the batting order change using ZIPS projections. I was a little disappointed in the results.   I used the average plate appearances by batting order position in the AL last year. The second spot had 103 more plate appearances on average than the 8th spot. That made sense as it is close to 6x18.   I then compared a Dozier with 735 plate appearances to a Dozier with 632 plate appearances. (Yes... I know he is not going to play 162 games and neither are any of the oth

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

A Tale of Three Cities

It will be interesting to watch three teams as they try to pull themselves out of the basement. The Twins, Cubs and and Astros all have set out different path towards success. They also represent the three very different markets and revenue streams.     The Cubs have purged salaries in trades and then are putting money back in for next year. They will probably not match last year's payroll, but they will spend the most of the three. They also have the most revenue. Will the additions be enough o

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Time to Drop the Numbers and Focus on WAR

In the current era of baseball it doesn't make sense to quantify pitchers as #X starter. It used to be that #1 or #2 starters would get more starts because they would skip over guys at the back end of the rotation. I think Verlander and the Tigers are the only team that did that with any consistency.   Virtually all teams roll their starters so that all slots get about the same number of starts. Even when the opportunity at the all star break comes to skip some starts at the back end, those oppo

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Doumit, Molina and Pitch f/x

"I don’t say this about many decisions, but starting Doumit at catcher might be a fireable offense. In 60 games at catcher for Pittsburgh in 2011, his framing cost the Pirates 20 runs. In 59 games for Minnesota in 2012, his framing cost the Twins 21 runs. All told, his framing has subtracted 98 runs over the past five seasons, on top of the damage from the other things he does poorly behind the plate, which wipes out his offensive value."   Ben Lindbergh, Baseball Prospectus   Read the article a

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Projecting the Twins: Early 2013 ZIPS

The early ZIPS projections were reported midweek and the AL Central has sobering information for the Twins.   http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/hotstove12/story/_/id/8599684/projecting-american-league-central-players-teams-2013-mlb   Note: Unfortunately, you will need an insider account to access the link above.   The Twins in their construction are projected for 66 wins and 5th place in the AL Central. Entering the 2012 season they had a projected 70 win team from ZIPS so in the ZIPS lens the Twi

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

The Market for Pitchers

A common thought among baseball fans like...   "Since there are a larger number of starting pitchers on the free agent market, it is good for my team because we need pitching"   I would like to challenge that argument. I do believe a larger market can be an advantage for some teams. I don't believe that a larger market can be good for every team that needs pitching. Many teams need pitching. If the market is an advantage for some, doesn't it need to be a disadvantage for others?   In a large mar

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

Burton: What's is the Future for a 31 Year Old Set Up Man?

I was surprised at the suggestion earlier that the Twins should consider extending Burton. They have him locked up next year. In two years he will be 33. On the other hand, he has been very valuable this year.   My first thought was it was a horrible idea. Take his season next year at the bargain level. Don't buy his 33 year old season now! That was clearly the minority opinion.   I went to Baseball Reference for clarity. I searched for every season pitched by a 31 year old set up man from 2000-

jorgenswest

jorgenswest

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