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Correa or no Correa, 5 things that must happen for the Twins to contend in 2023


Hans Birkeland

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The team is in a tricky spot following the winter meetings. They allegedly remain in play for Carlos Correa, but their backup options are getting swallowed up and their 50M remains unspent. Even with Correa, this team will have some challenges going into 2023. Winning the Central can’t be the goal, especially with the state of the competition being as sorry as it is. To be a real force in the AL, the Twins need a few things to happen, Correa or not:

  1. The Astros take a step back.

The Astros are a juggernaut. It might seem like the Yankees are too, but ask any Yankees fan and they will admit they had no chance in the ALCS against Houston; they were totally outclassed. Since divisional play, the torch in the AL has passed from Cleveland to the Yankees to the Red Sox to the Astros (you could make the argument for the Royals in 2014-2015 if you’re generous). The Astros have built some more runway, as well, with 2023 looking incredibly bright. Alex Bregman still isn’t thirty, and all of Yordan Álvarez, Jeremy Peña and Kyle Tucker will play next year at 26 or younger. Cristian Javier, Framber Valdez, José Urquidy and Luis Garcia are all 28 or younger. They play crisp and confident, and free agents know their numbers will improve in Houston; whether by altering a pitchers mix to perfection or getting to hit in front of Yordan. The only way the Astros aren’t favorites come October is if the aforementioned Yordan is hurt, they lose one of their starters and Ryan Pressley loses a tick of his stuff. Anything short of that is going to be near impossible to beat, regardless if the next four items on my list were to happen.

  1. The starting pitching takes a step forward

They can get Carlos Rodón and do that, or hope to get lucky by rolling out Sonny Gray, Tyler Mahle, Kenta Maeda off Tommy John, and Bailey Ober. Consecutively. If Joe Ryan had excellent command he could be a playoff caliber starter, but he doesn’t have excellent command. Yet? As much as I like Louie Varland, SWR and the prospect of Jordan Balazovic bouncing back, not even the most optimistic prospect evals have them starting game one or even two in a playoff series. I really hope Marco Raya has a nice year.

  1. Get big RBI totals from two of Miranda, Kirilloff and Larnach

This isn’t about RBIs being valuable as much as a high number of them would indicate a lot of involvement from this crop of young hitters. José Miranda has proven more durable than the two outfielders, but they wouldn’t surprise anyone if one of them hit .280 with twenty-two home runs next year. Depending on all three is folly, but getting two middle of the order hitters from the group lengthens the lineup and puts less pressure on Buxton, Polanco and Arraez.

  1. Jhoan Durán stays healthy

He hasn’t had a long track record of health and he is THE bullpen. The good news is that Durán got stronger as the year went on last year, but any young pitcher throwing 103 with a history of arm injuries can be a ticking time bomb.

  1. Ryan Jeffers is an All-star

 This may seem like a shocker but it wouldn’t take a lot for Jeffers to suddenly seem like a building block again. Maybe he gets a little hot streak and gets shielded from enough righties to be at .270/.320/450 at the break (Ends up at .255/.310/.410 or so). Jose Trevino started the All-star game in 2022 and ended up with a .671 OPS, for comparison- if the Twins are in contention in July, Jefers gets extra credit for “leading the staff.” The hitting lends legitimacy to that claim. Further, a homegrown catcher is the truest expression of how a team wants to run its on-field operations. They come up in the system learning a certain style of play that is background noise to the talents of the other positions. Jeffers is gritty, emotive and solid defensively, which, in theory, validates their organizational philosophy. But this ephemeral stuff works a lot better if the player in question can punish pitchers from the bottom of the lineup. In related news, there is a reason Cleveland isn’t interested in bringing Austin Hedges back. Long story short, if Jeffers hits to the point where the opposing pitcher has to think about how to attack him, that’s a major win for the Twins.

Like the two New York teams, the Twins making a big splash in free agency just gets them back to where they were (which maybe isn’t the worst thing). Signing Correa and leaving the Giants and Cubs to fight over the average-ish hitting Dansby Swanson would be a coup, but as we saw last year, it guarantees nothing.

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I doubt the Astros take a step back. I could see the starting pitching taking a step forward. Certainly better than last year. Considering we don’t know if Kiriloff will ever play again and Larnach’s history of injuries and not really having shown he belongs, this seems highly unlikely. Miranda could also sophomore slump. ( that’s probably more likely)  I think Duran staying healthy is 50/50  

Jeffers being an all star or even a legit MLB catcher is VERY unlikely  

 

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14 hours ago, Hans Birkleberry said:

The AL goes through the Astros, so if you aren't trying to build a team that can match up with them, what are you even doing?

Your article is titled mentioning contending, not winning the AL pennant. Our contention for the AL Central or wild card spot has very little to do with the Astros.

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Let Lewis play as long as he needs in St. Paul, but choose a position and run him out there as a regular. I would rathr see Lewis get built-up and push someone out of the outfield than bring him back waaaaay too soon.

 

Decide, too, what to do with Austin Martin. Suddenly the Twins could have a wealth of disposable redundant outfield talent. I like Martin on the bases. Put him in a lineup with a running Julien, Arraez somewhere, Lewis, Buxton and someone like Corea.......phew!

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8 hours ago, MGM4706 said:

Some people just must not have been watching games. Jeffers will NOT be an All-star. The league figured him out. He cannot hit a breaking ball. He is destined to be another Sano. An automatic out!!

Breaking balls aren't the issue, based on linear weights for pitch types. Also the eye test. All I'm saying is he could put up a .720 OPS, which is even more likely with Vázquez in the fold, and if he did, that could make the Twins a factor in the AL. I didn't even pose it as a prediction.

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So, has anyone offered to be your Huckleberry Mr Birkleberry? ? (Val Kilmer reference)

That said, aside from communicating better about what you meant by contend, should have been Win the AL since it does go through Houston, but not only Houston.  Seattle took a step forward.  Yankees are always the Yankees.  And you can never count out Tampa.

But I want to see what our guys can do.  I think there is some excitement in line with these younger players.

I want to see AK with a full HEALTHY season.  

I want to see RL with a full Healthy season.

I want to see BB with a full HEALTHY SEASON.  (If this happens, MVP votes will follow)

I want to see if Ryan takes the next step.

I want to see if Lopez regains his form.

I want to see if Pagan can live up to 80% of the HyperDrool people have had over his skill set.

I want to see Maeda pitch again like he did in 2020.

There is a LOT to like.

I do think this teams needs a Hrbek/Cuddyer type character...a guy who keeps everyone loose.

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