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Deadline Deals Do Wonders for Twins


Ted Schwerzler

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The Minnesota Twins came into the 2018 Major League Baseball season with postseason aspirations. Coming off of a Wild Card berth a year ago, it was fair to expect this club to challenge the Indians for the American League Central Division title. For a multitude of reasons, things didn't pan out as expected, and that left the club as sellers when it came to the trade deadline. As has often been the case, the front office positioned and executed the endeavor near flawlessly.

 

Having lots of money to spend this offseason, Derek Falvey and Thad Levine bolstered the organization with talent. At the time, all of the acquisitions made a ton of sense, and looked nothing short of great on paper. We know that across the board plenty of players fell flat for Minnesota, and that allowed more shrewd decision making to come into play. Thanks to the short term commitment, and multiple one-year deals handed out, the Twins found themselves with assets able to be moved when their direction took a turn.

 

It's always tough to see a player like Eduardo Escobar leave the organization he broke out in, but the reality is that the Twins maximized his value. Zach Duke and Lance Lynn were set to depart at season's end for nothing, and getting a return helps to stretch their effectiveness for the club into the future. Now a handful of trades in, there's reason to like every one of them.

 

Eduardo Escobar to Arizona for SP Jhoan Duran, OF Gabriel Maciel, and OF Ernie De La Trinidad

 

It's Duran that highlights this package for the Twins. All three prospects are current in Single-A, and given the depth in the Diamondbacks system (or lack thereof), these are three relative lottery tickets. That said, Maciel was highly touted as an International signee and stockpiling some talent that Minnesota may have missed out on when each was available as an amateur is hardly a bad get. Escobar was set to be a free agent at season's end, and now he gets to go be a part of a pennant race. Minnesota could bring him back this offseason (and if they can do so at the right dollar figure, it'd be very appealing), but getting some tangible return for him while they could is a very good move.

 

Ryan Pressly to Houston for SP Jorge Alcala and OF Gilberto Celestino

 

Flipping Pressly stings a bit, as I've been vocal about how good of a pitcher he is for quite some time. In 2018, he truly emerged as one of the best relievers in all of baseball. With another year of team control, it's unfortunate he won't be around to help what should be a competitive Twins team in 2019. That said, the reality is that he's a reliever. With pen arms being fickle, it made sense to flip him for a healthy return at a time when Minnesota had plenty of suitors. Getting a prospect with triple digit velocity in return is a nice piece, and it opens the door for Minnesota to explore some internal options in hops of backfilling Ryan's role.

 

Zach Duke to Seattle for SP Chase De Jong and IF Ryan Costello

 

Here is the first move in which the Twins front office continues to make a one-year deal work for them. Duke was signed for just $2.15 million this offseason and was handed a one-year deal. Having just two months left on his contract and not in a position to provide Minnesota value, the two prospects continue to do so. Although neither piece is a blue chip talent, there's little reason to scoff at the ability to develop and potentially drive major league talent out of players that will be around long after Duke would have left the organization. The Mariners get a lefty killer in return, and Duke's time with the Twins was an effective one.

 

Lance Lynn to New York for 1B Tyler Austin and SP Luis Rijo

 

If you'd ask who among the Twins free agent acquisitions underperformed the most this season, it'd have to be a tossup between Lynn and Logan Morrison. Being able to send the former Cardinals hurler out for a respectable return only highlights the importance of a track record. After missing virtually all of spring training, Lynn has been better since being awful his first month or so. He was striking out batters (and walking them) at career high rates, but there's too much leash there to believe he's cooked. In going to the Yankees, Lynn represents another one-year deal that plays future dividends for the Twins. Austin is out of options, so it would make sense that Minnesota give him ample opportunity to stick down the stretch. Rijo is a lottery ticket that you'd never be wise to turn down.

 

For more from Off The Baggy, click here. Follow @tlschwerz

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I'd bet all these guys are filler, at best, except for maybe the guy in the Pressly trade.

This seems to be stated as a negative thing. Even if that ends up being true, it's still significantly more beneficial than the two months remaining for these big leaguers.

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This seems to be stated as a negative thing. Even if that ends up being true, it's still significantly more beneficial than the two months remaining for these big leaguers.
It's the opinion of you and others that the Twins were out of the race, despite evidence they were not, and despite the fact teams make up 7 games more often than you would think.

 

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It's the opinion of you and others that the Twins were out of the race, despite evidence they were not, and despite the fact teams make up 7 games more often than you would think.

 

Actually...I believe the stat is no team has made up 6+ G after July 31. The Twins also are chasing a better team, that has the worst schedule in baseball ahead of them. Denying the inevitable leads you in the middle ground.

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Actually...I believe the stat is no team has made up 6+ G after July 31. The Twins also are chasing a better team, that has the worst schedule in baseball ahead of them. Denying the inevitable leads you in the middle ground.
I think you want to check that fact or clarify what you mean by it
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Remember the Indians get about 10 more games against a sub .500 team than the Twins do. And that team is our own MN Twins! The question isn't really whether any team has ever came back from 6 down on such and such a date. The question is what are the odds it will happen. I find it strange that in this age of analytical research which approximates virtually every move made on a ball field, the simplest and one of the most impactful ones for an orginisations future would be ignored, or diminished.

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On the contrary, sports is inherently unpredictable, and games ahead or games behind in the standings is maybe the only number that matters.

 

They were 7 games back when they traded Escobar. Unlikely, but doable!

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