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The Dangers in Waiting for Minnesota


Ted Schwerzler

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We’re quickly approaching the close of the 2018 calendar year. While there’s still multiple months before Spring Training commences in sunny Fort Myers, the Minnesota Twins talent acquisition has come in the form of two moves. Both players found themselves on the free agent market by way of non-tender decisions from their previous ballclubs. We saw a patient strategy in 2017 but employing it again could be to the team’s detriment.

 

Despite how the Lance Lynn and Logan Morrison signings worked out for Falvey and Co. last offseason, there’s no denying that both moves made a ton of sense. Morrison represented a power bat the lineup could certainly use, and Lynn allowed the starting rotation an ability to be bolstered by one of the premiere names on the market. Both players were inked to team-friendly dollars, and there’s no such thing as a bad one-year deal.

 

It appears that the Twins are content employing a similar level of patience this time around. The problem, however, is that the circumstances had them in a position ripe to jump the market. We’ve heard that a $100 million payroll could be the bar to clear, and much has been made about the uncertainty of both Miguel Sano and Byron Buxton’s development. The former is a number that should represent an embarrassing effort towards competitiveness, while the latter strikes this blogger as a backwards way of thinking.

 

Right now, we’ve yet to see Sano and Buxton put it all together over a consistent period. Minnesota obviously has reservations about whether it will happen for the two former top prospects but planning for anything other than full speed ahead comes with quite a few issues.

 

First, Sano and Buxton will never be cheaper than they are right now. Whether they explode or not, arbitration raises will continue to increase their rate of pay. Should things go according to plan, the dollars will mount considerably in the next few seasons. Waiting for the next wave of prospects would signify something like a ten year rebuild and comes with the same caveats as to whether the prospect status matures at the highest level. Pairing the current duo with external talent is also just a drop in the bucket in terms of dollars at this point, and nothing hamstrings an organization with zero dollars committed to 2020 and beyond.

 

You can certainly look at the free agent landscape as it stands today and wonder where those extra dollars would be spent. Craig Kimbrel isn’t the most appealing reliever at his ask, and Bryce Harper probably wants little to do with Minnesota. However, we’ve heard about plenty of relievers that the Twins were in on to this point and they simply didn’t want to extend a second year. These are the avenues that strike me as poor planning. Outpacing the competition by showing a willingness for an extra season, or a few extra millions, is something this team is in the perfect position to do. The Twins shed a ton of salary prior to 2019 and have literally nothing on the books for the season after. By being aggressive on some second-tier names, there’s no denying the impact could have been felt in the wins column. At this juncture, there’s a dwindling list of those types left, and the suitors remain a vast and competitive field.

 

As referenced from the get-go, there’s still time left to sort this all out. If Nelson Cruz, Cody Allen, and Zach Britton all end up in Twins Territory the panic button can be put away. When C.J. Cron and Jonathan Schoop are joined by the like of a Zach Duke or Matt Belisle type however, we’ll be vindicated in wondering what was taking place at 1 Twins Way.

 

Regardless of any team’s payroll flexibility, it’s always fair to view deals through a sensible market value meter. That said, there’s nothing wrong with being the aggressor in acquiring talent when you have resources on your side. For years the Twins have been in a situation that extra spending didn’t make sense because a level of competitiveness wasn’t going to be impacted by anything but a total overhaul. Now is not that time, and each additional acquisition can play a key part in a result greater than expected.

 

Waiting for something to fall into your lap has its purpose, but dictating your future often bears greater fruits.

 

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

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Plenty of time. Remember, they got Cave for a 19-year old pitcher in rookie ball. They got Odorizzi for our 4th best SS prospect. They traded the 74th pick in the 2018 draft for 7.25M. At the trade deadline, they picked up 11-12 prospects for essentially 2 month rentals. The new regime has got it going on. The Impatient Brigade is just going to have to learn to wait.

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Plenty of time. Remember, they got Cave for a 19-year old pitcher in rookie ball. They got Odorizzi for our 4th best SS prospect. They traded the 74th pick in the 2018 draft for 7.25M. At the trade deadline, they picked up 11-12 prospects for essentially 2 month rentals. The new regime has got it going on. The Impatient Brigade is just going to have to learn to wait.

Yes, as I mentioned, there's certainly time left. There are dwindling assets on the open market however, and deciding to not utilize open cash to differentiate is not a blueprint I'm a huge fan of.

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Nice essay and very accurate - I am amazed by those who say wait.  How long have we been waiting?  Our world series appearances - 1965, 1987, 1991.  We came into existence in 1961 when I ushered at the old met and we had some really fun players and a good team.  After 31 years we had averaged one world series appearance every 10 years.  Now we are 26 years since that wonderful experience.  Since 2010's very good team we have had 7 losing seasons.  570 - 726 .439.    Yes we got Cave and we got Odorizzi and we got Reed still on our team and a lot of minor leaguers to fill the rosters.  How many of them are moving us to a championship or even more import to a sequence of winning years?  

 

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I believe there is absolutely value in waiting, except for those guys that you clearly target as someone you want/need or see as value. Schoop is a prime example. There were a ton of 2B on the market, and there still are some. Whether or not he is a reasonable option for a re-sign or not the FO clearly targeted him quickly as a young option coming off a 2 good and one great season run and believe he will be at least a comparable mix of those 3 season's in regard to production.

 

They jumped on Cron because he was available, was familiar to Rocco, and coming off his best season after some adjustments, and his first season with more than 409 AB. We can debate the merits of his signing, but there was need and opportunity. And some of the other 1B that became available just weren't at the time he was.

 

I don't have a complete list in front of me who is available RP wise at this point. But I know there are quality arms available, like Cody Allen, including some bounce back guys who could make for good second signings. And unless I've just lost track of agreements made there are still a number of "utility" types with solid bats and positional flexibility looking for homes to complete the bench.

 

To my observation, there are two "big sticks" available. (Not talking Machodo or Harper). Cruz is still there, he's been linked to the Twins, Falvey himself recently spoke about the advantages of adding a veteran bat to impact the lineup and other players though it could cost a young player's spot, and he's affordable. Lowrie doesn't have the same thunder, but is as good or a hitter, has decent power, and offers a 2 for 1 with lineup flexibility.

 

But waiting too long can be an issue. There are enough good players available that they need to make a move or two as soon as the year flips over. Sign Cody Allen! He makes way too much sense for this team to not go at least 2yrs, if not 3. Then you can see about a 1 or 1+yr deal on a second option. Sign one kf the versatile infielders that are out there to build the roster. Go ahead and sign Cruz, or pass and sign Lowrie and get the 2 for 1 I mentioned.

 

There is plenty of time over the next 30 days to set the roster. You've waited and let things play out. But you can also wait too long. Make the two best signings you can right away...then see how things play out the next couple of weeks for a couple smart additions.

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There are signings that can be done at this time.  Would like to see them sign Herrera, think more like 1 year for 7 - 8 million and an option.  Or a lower base with more incentitives and a option.  Worse case a couple of Twins farmhands make it at the highest level and Twins not making the playoffs, you flip him for a good haul.  Best case is he solves the closer role and becomes part of solution, and you may have to QO him for the third year.  He is still young enough. 

Allen has a little too much mileage on his arm for me.  Too high a risk unless he can get down to the 5 - 6 million range.

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Not sure why they don't extend a couple of years on some of the better RP's on the market. If we fall out of contention and they are pitching good they will have great trade value at the trade deadline.

 

All we need is to hope we can use the bullpen a little better this year and not run arms into the ground like they did with Reed last season.

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My biggest problem with Molly was I thought he always burnt his bullpen out. Pressly in 2017 and Reed last year. Don't get me wrong, we need to spend big on a bullpen arm with some closing experience, but I wouldn't doubt the coaching change has an impact also. 

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My biggest problem with Molly was I thought he always burnt his bullpen out. Pressly in 2017 and Reed last year. Don't get me wrong, we need to spend big on a bullpen arm with some closing experience, but I wouldn't doubt the coaching change has an impact also.

and Hildenberger.

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Thank you Mr. Schwerzler

 

here are the parts I agree with:

 

"Despite how the Lance Lynn and Logan Morrison signings worked out for Falvey and Co. last offseason, there’s no denying that both moves made a ton of sense....Both players were inked to team-friendly dollars, and there’s no such thing as a bad one-year deal."

 

and

 

"You can certainly look at the free agent landscape as it stands today and wonder where those extra dollars would be spent"

 

But I disagree with your assessment that:

 

"However, we’ve heard about plenty of relievers that the Twins were in on to this point and they simply didn’t want to extend a second year."

 

Might you provide an example?

 

and

 

"At this juncture, there’s a dwindling list of those types left, and the suitors remain a vast and competitive field."

 

I should admit that I am not a fan of signing a fifth starter on the FA market, so I believe the only remaining hole is RP.

 

It is my humble opinion that there are still a large number of bullpen upgrades still out there.

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I do believe they were noted as in on Familia, Miller, and Soria. I have flip flopped a bit though after digging a bit deeper. There’s still plenty of teams looking for relief help, but I tweeted out a bunch of realistic possibilities earlier today.

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