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What If Jake Odorizzi Is Minnesota’s Impact Arm?


Ted Schwerzler

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Despite an opportunity to hit the open market after the 2019 season, Jake Odorizzi returned to the Twins on a $17.8 million qualifying offer. It ended up being below market value and could be even more of a coup if Odorizzi continues trending towards the impact arm this rotation covets.

 

One of the best moves the new regime has made since taking over was flipping middle infield prospect Jermaine Palacios to the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for Odo. Palacios is 23 years old, still at Double-A, and hasn’t posted an OPS north of .600 since 2017. Jake meanwhile had a career year in 2019, has wholeheartedly embraced data, and could be on the verge of a next step the pushes him into the upper echelon.

 

Coming off his first All-Star appearance in 2019, Odorizzi posted a 3.51 ERA bolstered by a 3.36 FIP. His 10.1 K/9 was nearly two notches above his career norms, and his 1.208 WHIP was the lowest it’s been since 2016. Despite the Bugs Bunny baseball, the fly ball specialist posted a career low 0.9 HR/9. His 45% career fly ball rate translated into a career low 3.5% HR/FB ratio despite a career high 42% hard hit rate.

 

How did all that come together? Well, Jake made some key strides in other areas obviously. His 93-mph average velocity was nearly two ticks up from 2018. At 29-years-old, he was adding oomph, and he’s been an early adopter of new technology. With that heavier fastball he was able to post a 12.7% whiff rate (career best) and batters made contact just 74% of the time against him.

 

Assuming consistent gains is an inexact science. While peak performance falls along different places on a bell curve, Odorizzi’s age 30 season should drop within the realm of peak performance. Looking for competitive advantages as he has been vocal about doing, alongside an infrastructure designed to push the envelope, there should be a perfect storm for Odorizzi and Wes Johnson to marry.

 

ZiPS projects Odorizzi to be right in line with Jose Berrios at the top of Minnesota’s rotation. His 109 ERA+ would lead the team among players on the Opening Day roster, and a 9.5 K/9 suggests a belief in 2019 performance. A 4.09 ERA would be a step backwards, but the 4.02 FIP holds a level of consistency across the board.

 

Ultimately Jake has put together back-to-back seasons with a 3.00 ERA just once in his career, and the later was a step off the former. At this point though, I think it’s safe to say we’re dealing with a redesigned set of inputs. Add in the fact that Odorizzi is once again pitching for a contract working on just a one-year deal and squeezing more out of that next opportunity is a very clear goal.

 

I think you can make a very easy argument that the Twins have a great level of starting pitching depth overall. The focus has always been on acquiring or developing the top tier arm. It’s assumed that Jose Berrios would embody that reality, and that’s a good bet, but Jake Odorizzi being right there with him seems equally as promising.

 

Zack Wheeler was the guy everyone understandably looked the part of a projectable arm entering this winter. Minnesota brought back the guy that outpitched him and has plenty of momentum in his corner as well.

 

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

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I’ll take slightly less pretty numbers...in exchange for about 40 more innings pitched. Occasionally get past the 5th inning (more than once a blue moon) and match Berrios with 190-200 innings pitched this season. Makes the bullpen that much more effective. Now THAT would be impact.

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I’ll take slightly less pretty numbers...in exchange for about 40 more innings pitched. Occasionally get past the 5th inning

 

Far too much emphasis is put on this. In 2019 the average starter went 5.4 innings per outing. Jake Odorizzi averaged 5.3 innings per outing. Suggesting you'd want to see diminished performance in exchange for length is ultimately suggesting a desire for less positive outcomes.

 

Shutdown bullpens are a thing because specialization in high leverage matters, and hitters are good enough to hurt you seeing your stuff three times in a night.

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Far too much emphasis is put on this. In 2019 the average starter went 5.4 innings per outing. Jake Odorizzi averaged 5.3 innings per outing. Suggesting you'd want to see diminished performance in exchange for length is ultimately suggesting a desire for less positive outcomes.

 

Shutdown bullpens are a thing because specialization in high leverage matters, and hitters are good enough to hurt you seeing your stuff three times in a night.

So, he didn’t last as long as the average starter...and this isn’t an issue for an ‘impact’ guy? Secondly, I said SLIGHTLY less pretty numbers. The extra innings are hugely valuable...especially when you are a number one or two. It gives the manager much greater flexibility to work match-ups when the bullpen is more rested...again, especially when the team is expected to start 2-3 ‘lesser’ starters every time through the rotation. If you can never get through a lineup more times than the 3, 4, and 5 guy...you limit the effectiveness of the entire staff in the long run. The Twins are a better team in 2020 if Odorizzi duplicates Berrios’s 2019 than if he duplicates his own 2019. Don’t get me wrong, I’ll take Odorizzi’s 2019 performance. It was good...better than expected. And if he could maintain effectiveness by throwing more strikes early in games...and pitch a bit longer into games, he’d be more impactful.

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Obviously it'd be ideal for Odo to be both lights out and go 7 innings a game. I think what I'm getting as impact being felt in different ways. Every team in baseball wants an ace, but only 8-10 of them exist. If he's lights out 30 times and turns it over to the pen a bit early, I'm all for him taking another step forward.

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Ace is among the most overused terms in baseball. I think we should go back to using wins again. Because of lack of supply, it's become fasionable to pretend experienced starting pitchers now have further ceiling to unleash.

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