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Struggles Have Highlighted Twins Correct Deadline Decision


Ted Schwerzler

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The calendar has flipped to August, the Minnesota Twins are now 51-51 just three games above .500, and the problems are mounting. Every indication suggests that the Twins did absolutely the right thing at the trade deadline. As they slip out of sole possession of a wild card spot, Terry Ryan has a new period of evaluation coming.

For much of the season, the Twins were a team playing well above water. With an extremely impressive home record, while staving off regression, Minnesota distanced themselves from the pack. As it generally does, baseball has begun to shift back towards a statistical normalcy and the Twins have felt the squeeze.

 

Since the All Star Break, Minnesota is just 5-11. In those 16 games, the Twins offense has scored an average of 3.4 runs per game while surrendering 5.2 runs per game. Their bullpen has all but imploded, most obviously on the back end (Glen Perkins owns an 11.12 ERA since the break). The Twins offense has gone in the tank, and the winning has hit the skids. In their last three losses, Minnesota has scored just one run in each contest.

To say this was predictable is probably not unfair. Minnesota has a plethora of pitchers with inflated FIP (fielding independent pitching) marks and strong ERA's (in fact, acquired reliever Kevin Jepsen is among them). They have also seen a boost in the offense from unlikely sources such as Aaron Hicks (who has been incredibly hot), Eddie Rosario (who's been consistent), and Miguel Sano (who surprisingly has hit for average). At the root of the struggles though is that the Twins have watched it all come crashing down at the same time.

 

Blaine Boyer (3.02 ERA 4.28 FIP, still some regression to come) and Casey Fien (4.19 ERA 4.14 FIP) have started to even out, J.R. Graham has been knocked around (9.00 ERA in his last 8.0 IP), and we already touched on Perkins struggles. Joe Mauer (.255/.317/.327), Torii Hunter (.204/.246/.370), and Brian Dozier (.217/.299/.450) have all slumped since the break. Starting pitching hasn't been great, and Tommy Milone (7.98 ERA in 142. IP since ASG) is now headed to the DL.

Terry Ryan is watching as each of the potential problem areas for the Twins rears it's head at once. In that, he can find solace in knowing he absolutely did the right thing at the trade deadline. Fixing the bullpen, offense, and need positions all at once without jumping the gun wasn't a realistic possibility. In a difficult test of patience, that is now paying dividends.

 

Staying put for the most part (aside from dealing for Jepsen who provides team control going forward), allows the Twins to continue along a realistic path. Despite being in position to grab a Wild Card spot, the heat of the summer was sure to sort things out. Regardless of the big moves by the Blue Jays (both David Price and Troy Tulowitzki count as just that), the Twins were going to have to continue to defy their own odds. In not sacrificing the blueprint that has been laid out, the next few years remain incredibly bright for the Twins.

As the 2015 Major League Baseball season rolls on, the Twins still have plenty to gain. Nowhere near out of the playoff race, call ups and seasoning can be provided to young and integral players in the midst of meaningful games. With Tyler Duffey paving the way and Jose Berrios likely soon to follow, Minnesota affords young arms a cup of coffee in the middle of real action. Miguel Sano, Hicks, Rosario, and even Byron Buxton can begin to settle into the highest level while competing for something on a nightly basis. In the end, it's the best outcome for everyone.

Going forward, the Twins already had plenty of reason to be realistic playoff contenders immediately in 2016 and onward. Thanks to the decision to hold onto the farm, the Twins should take plenty of valuable lessons and developmental instances away from 2015 even if they don't end up in the playoffs. As 2016 rolls around, they should enter as one of the two best teams in the Central, and the final two months of 2015 baseball will serve as the launching pad for that growth.

 

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

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I absolutely concur!

 

While I love this team, am enjoying this season, and have absolutely NOT given up on this team or season by any means, I didn't feel it was the time to slide any major chips to the center of the table.

 

I have said repeatedly, before the season began even, that I felt the 2015-2016 offseason would be the time to visit a move or two. By then, guys like Buxton, Sano and others would be healthy again, on their way up or arriving. Guys such as Dozier and Plouffe would have further established themselves, proven themselves, and overall, the Twins would have a more complete picture as to what they truly do and do not have in a ballclub moving forward.

 

I think, even with the recent stuggles and a possible fade, his club has a better identity now. I think there are legitimate, full functioning and talented parts of a whole to work with. By early next season, if not the start, we very well could and should see Buxton, Kepler and Berrios all part of the equation. 

 

You find help a catcher, a quality bullpen arm or two to go along with that, and what is already there, and this could be a real, legitimate playoff team in 2016.

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Getting on base is very important (OBP), but getting to home plate is more important in the game of baseball.  The team that scores more always wins.  We need run producers.  

 

Our team is designed for .300+ hitters and high OBP players across the lineup.  Everybody driving in everybody because everybody is finding a way to get on base.  That only works when you string hits together or hits with walks.  If you have a team full of high OBP players with .240 to 260 batting averages - GAME OVER!!

 

WE NEED GAME CHANGING THREATS - RUN PRODUCERS

Not just Sano.

 

Hell - ABW II has 24 Doubles and 26 Home Runs to go along with 86 RBI.  He has a #$@& load of strike outs, but even with those type of numbers he has consistently been a GAME CHANGER.  If you're taking chances on OBP players, why not take a chance with one of the only 2 (Sano) GAME CHANGERS in the system.  A spark is a spark.  I'm tired of not scoring.

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The pain is that if the Twins slip down the standings, although the chances of slipping below Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit are slim, attendance will flounder. If the Twins can stay around .500 and hold onto second place, people will still come and we won't have $5 tickets in September. But who knows how the win-win public will feel if the Twins just stay in the mix, not the hunt. They've been averaging 30,000+ for while now and everyone in he front office issalivating as those are many many full price tickets sold that the Twins control...no season ticket discounts or Stub-Hub throwaways.

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  On 8/5/2015 at 3:30 AM, BoomBoom said:

 

Hell - ABW II has 24 Doubles and 26 Home Runs to go along with 86 RBI.  He has a #$@& load of strike outs, but even with those type of numbers he has consistently been a GAME CHANGER.  If you're taking chances on OBP players, why not take a chance with one of the only 2 (Sano) GAME CHANGERS in the system.  A spark is a spark.  I'm tired of not scoring.

 

ABW has not done anything at Double-A for over a month. He has a better chance of beating Mike Hessman's MiLB career HR record than he does of being a good MLB level talent.

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Yup, agree with this article completely. Thanks for hitting the nail on the head.

 

  On 8/5/2015 at 3:30 AM, BoomBoom said:

Getting on base is very important (OBP), but getting to home plate is more important in the game of baseball.  The team that scores more always wins.  We need run producers.  

 

Our team is designed for .300+ hitters and high OBP players across the lineup.  Everybody driving in everybody because everybody is finding a way to get on base.  That only works when you string hits together or hits with walks.  If you have a team full of high OBP players with .240 to 260 batting averages - GAME OVER!!

 

WE NEED GAME CHANGING THREATS - RUN PRODUCERS

Not just Sano.

 

Hell - ABW II has 24 Doubles and 26 Home Runs to go along with 86 RBI.  He has a #$@& load of strike outs, but even with those type of numbers he has consistently been a GAME CHANGER.  If you're taking chances on OBP players, why not take a chance with one of the only 2 (Sano) GAME CHANGERS in the system.  A spark is a spark.  I'm tired of not scoring.

Is this satire?

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So this is a defense of staying put with an inadequate bullpen (and adding yet another inadequate middle reliever while trading away young talent) and not adding--in some way--one legitimate bat. K.

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  On 8/5/2015 at 3:07 PM, Shane Wahl said:

So this is a defense of staying put with an inadequate bullpen (and adding yet another inadequate middle reliever while trading away young talent) and not adding--in some way--one legitimate bat. K.

No, it's not. To clarify your confusion, it's an understanding that while a bad bullpen is an issue, there are far more areas of concern than could have been addressed. Jepsen was acquired for relatively little and provides team control, or value going forward.

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  On 8/5/2015 at 8:14 AM, Off The Baggy said:

ABW has not done anything at Double-A for over a month. He has a better chance of beating Mike Hessman's MiLB career HR record than he does of being a good MLB level talent.

 

Huh, well then the Twins should just give up on him then. They should trade him then for another setup guy. Who needs homers? Let the Astros and Blue Jays take all of them and see how they end up.

 

Meanwhile the Twins can keep running out a #3 hitter with a .375 SLG. Sounds like a solid plan to me.

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  On 8/5/2015 at 4:11 PM, JaleelWhite FanClub said:

Huh, well then the Twins should just give up on him then. They should trade him then for another setup guy. Who needs homers? Let the Astros and Blue Jays take all of them and see how they end up.

 

Meanwhile the Twins can keep running out a #3 hitter with a .375 SLG. Sounds like a solid plan to me.

While both are extremes, you're talking about a guy who's hitting sub .200 for well over the last month with 2 HR in that span at DOUBLE A. He's striking out at record MLB paces at DOUBLE A. Again, he's fun, but he's not close to MLB caliber right now.

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