Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

Twins prospects that I was wrong on


Jack Griffin

4,551 views

 Share

Twins Video

Since roughly 2009 the Twins have had some well... rough seasons. When a team is bad, they become sellers at the deadline, and at least me personally, stop caring as much about the active games, and switch to focusing on prospects and the future.

During those bad years I become pretty fixated on prospects, so lets go over some that I really thought were gonna be good.

1. RHP Dakota Chalmers

Woof. I was so high on this guy when we acquired him from Oakland for Fernando Rodney in 2018. I blame Garvin Alston, the Twins pitching coach at the time, for talking up Dakota from his time coaching in the A's minor league system. I can't quite remember what he said but I'm almost certain he called him a "potential system changing arm" and I was hooked. Chalmers had a myriad of injuries as well as off the field mental health stuff that lead to him not pitching a whole lot before coming to the Twins, but once he did he had success. In 2019 he even pitched in the AA playoffs, and everyone seemed to be talking about his stuff, I was so intrigued. He was added to the 40 man roster in 2021 and I envisioned all his success, and it was followed by struggles and a pretty quick DFA. I was devastated. Since then he has been on a few different teams with little success, and is currently in the Dodgers system.

2. RHP Fernando Romero

Most Twins fans will probably remember this one, and probably at some point felt the same I did. A top arm in the Twins system for years, what wasn't to like about him. A fastball that reached 100 mph (This was pre Graterol and Duran so the Twins just frankly never saw that) and a wipeout slider to boot. We all remember his electric 2018 rookie season, where he had immediate success. He did drop off slightly as the year went on but still, the sky was the limit. That was followed by a ton of control issues in 2019 and after the season, he was out of the MLB completely (Although he potentially had a chance to re establish himself in 2020, but it was stopped completely by Visa issues. Because well... there were some things going on in the world that made it tough to travel) He is currently pitching in Japan.

3. OF Adam Brett Walker

This one was more me just being young and naïve more than anything. ABW was a 3 true outcome guy before it was cool. High power, high strikeout, and not a whole lot else. I really had no reason to be high on him besides the fact he had some really exciting homeruns. Wow could he hit the ball when he connected. He really was never much of a true prospect and never even got added to the 40 man in a Twins uniform. His last year with the Twins was in 2016, he bounced around the league until 2018. He then moved to indy ball, and actually some some success as recent as 2021, but it never materialized into a second MLB chance. He's currently playing in Japan.

4. OF Oswaldo Arcia

Much like Romero, I feel like most fans will remember this name. Arcia was an international FA signed in 2008, who quickly worked his way up through the levels and had a TON of success at each level. He reached the majors in 2013 and had some initial success, but really couldn't put together any consistency year-to-year. from 2013-2016 he was basically on the Twins taxi squad going up and down multiple times a year. The Twins eventually gave up on waiting and traded him to the Rays, but that didn't last very long. Altogether he was on 4 total teams (TBR, SDP, MIA, MIN) in 2016 but really had no success with any of them. In 2017 he had somewhat of a renaissance in the DBacks system, but I don't think anything could've happened to get him up with the team. Arcia was pretty much the definition of a AAAA player. He is currently playing in an Independent league.

5. RHP Alex Wimmers

I don't really have an explanation on this one. He was a first round pick I suppose so that always makes you hope they work out. Wimmers had a 22 game cup of coffee from 2016-2017 and had very mediocre results. in 2018 he struggled at AAA and was released. He had a short stint that year with Miami but registered no official playing time. He is currently not playing baseball anywhere.

Some of these are more defensible than others, but I just wanted to talk about them.

Thanks.

 Share

39 Comments


Recommended Comments



Hahaha, I'm wrong on prospects all the time. Sometimes I think they'll be great, sometimes I think they'll flop.

The truth is, you never really know if their game plays until they start playing at the MLB level. My biggest mistake recently is I didn't have high hopes for Jhoan Duran. I felt like if MiLB hitters could lay off his stuff and take walks, MLB hitters would for sure have him figured out. Seems like Duran's struggles with walks last year might just have been the UCL or maybe he's just gotten better with control considering he's never been this good at controlling the free pass at any level.

In any case, he's walking almost nobody this year and still striking everybody out.

Link to comment

I feel like there is more to the story for Fernando Romero than just visa issues. This isn't based off of anything. Seems weird to me to give up on a career in MLB from that. It's not like there aren't hundreds and hundreds of international players playing in the minors/majors.

Link to comment
45 minutes ago, Tibs said:

I feel like there is more to the story for Fernando Romero than just visa issues. This isn't based off of anything. Seems weird to me to give up on a career in MLB from that. It's not like there aren't hundreds and hundreds of international players playing in the minors/majors.

Romero is playing in Yokohama, Japan for the past couple years where he's had mediocre results after appearing in MLB across 2 years where he struggled. Romero also looked pretty rough at AAA in 2019 where he was too hittable and walked too many guys. He just doesn't have much of a track record of success.

Sometimes players are just overhyped.

Speaking of the hype machine, Brusdar Graterol is having a solid season with the Dodgers' out of their bullpen. He hasn't turned into the starter fans were hoping he could be, or the elite closer for that matter, but he is having an above average season and adding solid value. That said, chances Graterol turns lives up to the massive hype is pretty limited.

Link to comment
1 hour ago, Tibs said:

I feel like there is more to the story for Fernando Romero than just visa issues. This isn't based off of anything. Seems weird to me to give up on a career in MLB from that. It's not like there aren't hundreds and hundreds of international players playing in the minors/majors.

It was the Visa, combined with poor results due to bad control. Made it an easy cut

Link to comment

I was fooled by Romero too. Thought for sure he was going to be a power arm out of the twins bullpen for years. Whoops! I was convinced that he just needed a little time to settle in and things would be great, that he'd shown enough as a starter that he could make the transition. Nope, nope, and nope.

The others on the list i don't think I was ever that attached to. They kinda fell into the "hey, maybe this guy can turn out to be somebody!" bucket where I was rooting for them, but not necessarily all that convinced.

Chris Parmelee, on the other hand...I jumped all over that hype train, thought he was going to take over for Cuddyer and we wouldn't miss a beat. but I'm grateful to Mr. Parmelee, who taught me to be skeptical of September call-ups and Small Sample Size.

Link to comment

I was big on Arcia.  In part it goes back to when he was in AA I went to a game he was playing and the ball just sounded different off his bat.  He came on the scene and looked like he could be a hitter for years.  He just never adjusted to how MLB pitchers would pitch to him.  His attitude reflected that as well when he would make comments about he was there to hit HR. 

I was really big on Stephen Gonsalves.  His early low minor numbers were great, but he just never fully developed.  

Link to comment
33 minutes ago, annismark said:

No, but Ed Bane I remember well

 

Yes McBane was a nickname for him. It had something to do with McDonalds but I really don't remember the whole story.

Link to comment
17 hours ago, tony&rodney said:

The post and comments are why the Twins should consider trading a few prospects for relief help or make/ put together a sweet package for Luis Castillo.

I agree. I believe most prospects are extremely overrated when it comes to actual value

Link to comment
49 minutes ago, Jack Griffin said:

I agree. I believe most prospects are extremely overrated when it comes to actual value

I think the pitchers are harder than the batters. No Arcia didn't make it, but the Twins had a bunch of hitting prospects at that time with Arcia, Rosario, Sano, Vargas, Santana, Kepler and Polanco all debuting 2013-15. Overall, that was a pretty solid group. 

The pitchers seem to be more flakey, though they seem to be a bit more predictable with the current front office. I think towards the end, Terry Ryan understood his biggest flaw with his pitchers was that he historically struggled to get guys with velocity and strikeout ability. He tried to correct that with the Romero, Gonsalves and Graterol types, but he hadn't figured out how to balance the command issues that come with those types of players. He got a good one in Berrios though.

Link to comment

I was intrigued about Chalmers and thought he might turn in to a really nice bullpen option.

Was there anyone who didn't hold out great hopes for Romero? I mean, he was the real thing, right? (sigh)

Jay was a big one for me. I wasn't sure about the conversion to being a starter, but I thought at worst he was going to be a top, back of the bullpen arm. Just a huge disappointment.

Rich Becker is one of the biggest disappointments, "I was so wrong", player prospects for me.

And if I want to date myself, and drag my memories across hot asphalt covered in broken glass, there are about 10 pitching prospects around the mid-80's that were all seemingly can't miss starters or at worst, quality bullpen pieces. 

Link to comment

I was certain Arcia was going to be awesome!

Oswaldo Arcia regularly hit > .300 in MiLB. For some reason he thought that when he came to MLB his job was to hit 500 foot home runs. He swung so hard he hurt himself. More than once.

I truly believe that someone else with the same talent could have made a MLB career for themselves. That was just sad.

Link to comment
On 7/13/2022 at 8:16 PM, Brazilian Twins Fan said:

I remember once upon a time there was a Fernando Romero & Stephen Gonsalves duo as next wave of Twins SP of the future.

Prospects are really hard to predict.

(Although Byung-ho Park was not a prospect, I remember there was a lot of hype going on with the Korean slugger too)

Don't forget included in that group were Berrios, Meyer, Thorpe, Jay, Jorge, Stewart, Mejia

Link to comment

When I say the title I immediately thought of Romero and Arcia.  The amount of threads and pages dedicated to discussing Arcia on here/BYTO had to be in the 100s.  So many varying viewpoints on him.  If only he could have gotten regular ABs!! Lol.

I would like to hear some prospects you thought that went the other way.  For me it was Jorge Polanco.  I never thought he would be a productive player and that calling him up as a 20 year old in 2014 was a huge mistake.  I also think they left him at SS for way too long and should have been moved to 2B years before he actually was.  

Link to comment
5 hours ago, TwinsDr2021 said:

Don't forget included in that group were Berrios, Meyer, Thorpe, Jay, Jorge, Stewart, Mejia

I don't even wanna think about the name Kohl Stewart after his time with the big league ball club. lol

Link to comment
2 hours ago, SwainZag said:

I would like to hear some prospects you thought that went the other way.  For me it was Jorge Polanco.  I never thought he would be a productive player and that calling him up as a 20 year old in 2014 was a huge mistake.  I also think they left him at SS for way too long and should have been moved to 2B years before he actually was.  

ooo that's a good idea. I know Griffin Jax is the first one that comes to mind. I was pretty low on Kepler after his first month or so too, but that's definitely something I'm gonna like in to.

Link to comment
4 hours ago, tarheeltwinsfan said:

I agree. Why is that?

It is called Hope, simple as that, hope of the future is always brighter and more alluring than the present.

Imagine if at some point during the 21 season, somebody said dream if you will the Twins are 3.5 games up on second going into the all star break (With all stars Arraez and Buxton and the Twins went out and signed Carlos frickin Correa to a one year contract and traded for Sonny Gray) , should they go for it and trade some of their top prospects, I would guess most would say heck yea because the hopes and dreams of next year are bright, but when it actually happens some of those same people are like no we shouldn't make those type of trades because our futures is the future. and why? because it diminishes their hopes and dreams of a brighter future.

Humans are funny animals

 

Link to comment

Guest
Add a comment...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...