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The Twins 2015: Diamond Treasure


Ted Schwerzler

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I've been a Minnesotan for the entirety of my 25 year life. While having spent only the most recent years in the heart of Twins Territory, growing up in southern Minnesota, the Minneapolis journalism scene has only recently become my go to. In reading Patrick Reusse's Turkey of the Year for 2015 however, it dawned on me that the Twins could use a similar designation.

 

Unlike Reusse's Turkey of the Year, the Diamond Treasure as I'll dub it, is not designed to point a finger in jest. On the contrary actually, the purpose of the Diamond Treasure is to shed light on someone or something within the Twins organization that provides excitement for the future, while displaying deep roots in the past. Not meant to be an MVP award of sorts, the Diamond Treasure should carry more weight in encompassing much more than statistical output between the lines.

 

For the year that was, there's plenty of candidates to kick off the first annual Diamond Treasure. Starting at the top, the 2015 version of the Twins can't be spoken of without discussing Paul Molitor. The first year skipper stepped into some big shoes, and succeeded beyond all expectations.

 

Molitor, though familiar with the organization, had gone from a relative bystander to the man in charge. Instead of being simply involved at spring training, he was now running the show. Given a cast of characters that had done nothing but lose in recent memory, it was the former Twins great that turned the tide. By bringing in some fresh ideas, and expecting a higher level of performance, Molitor brought meaningful baseball back to Target Field. Although the club fell short of the playoffs, it was because of Molitor's efforts that the club appears to be poised for a strong future. For all he did though, Molitor isn't this year's Diamond Treasure.

 

If we're looking for someone who exemplifies leadership both on the field and in the clubhouse, it's hard to stray far from Torii Hunter. Brought back on a one-year deal that seemed to throw baseball sense to the wind, it worked. It didn't work because Hunter made the contract make sense on the field (ultimately, he was more liability there than he wasn't). It worked because Hunter was the leader the Twins needed, even though they might not have known it. The limited offensive production was a bonus at times, but pushing the youth for more, and forcing the clubhouse to let loose no doubt led to a September filled with disco balls and smoke machines. Torii, as he always does, provided more memories. All said and done though, Hunter isn't this year's Diamond Treasure.

 

Stepping even further away from the field of play, there's Terry Ryan. Often chastised for questionable front office decisions, it was his role in building the 2015 squad that ultimately gave the Twins hope. A key 2014 trade for Tommy Milone helped to provide depth. Dealing for Kevin Jepsen during the 2015 deadline proved substantial for an ugly bullpen. It was Ryan who looked his doubters in the eye and gave this team hope. The Twins competed before they were supposed to, and thanks to Ryan's efforts, should do so well into the future. It's a great thing, but it isn't quite Diamond Treasure worthy.

 

There's only one man worth of the Diamond Treasure distinction in 2015, and it's a young man with the personality to completely embody the distinction. Having been known to Twins Territorians since the age of 16, the realization of his talents and persona were finally shared with us in the year that was. Miguel Sano had arrived.

 

After living up to every bit of the hype throughout his minor league tenure, Twins fans were forced to wait a season ago. Coming off of Tommy John surgery, the young Sano would need to battle back, and battle he did. Sano turned early season success under Doug Mientkiewicz at Double-A Chattanooga, into big league reality for Molitor and the Twins. He provided moonshots and lasers, he hit homers and long balls, in summary, Target Field became his playground. For all Sano did with the bat though, he did more with the smile.

 

Throughout the 2015 season, it became apparent that Miguel Sano in fact loves this game. Constantly producing with the big grin on his face, Sano's mannerisms were the complete embodiment of what Twins fans everywhere expected him to be. No longer the lanky teenager, this was a filled out young man that loved coming to the park every day, and he happened to be better than most at it. Sano is every bit as integral to the Twins going forward, as he was expected the day he signed from the Dominican Republic.

 

For what he is on the field, who he is on the field, the belief of what he can be to the Twins franchise, and the significance of it all off of it, Miguel Sano is your 2015 Diamond Treasure.

 

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

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The comments about TR are highly questionable:  

 

-Milone adds depth in the sense that he's a warm body that can prop himself up on a pitching mound.  Not really in the sense that he's an additional quality rotation piece of a quality team.

 

-Ryan should be, and has been, chastised about his handling of the bullpen last year.  Its certainly not a positive, even considering the late addition of Jepsen.

 

-Its Ryans role that gave the Twins hope in '15?  Not sure about that, other than a figure head to hand out the paychecks (figuratively speaking).  I think, on the other hand, it was his role that snatched said hope away, after it was created by the likes of Molitor and Dozier.  

 

I'm of the opinion that Ryan should get the first ever Turkey Lifetime Achievement Award (let alone Turkey of the Year....even letter alone the Diamond Treasure).  Although, he may lose Norm Green by a slim margin for moving the North Stars (after multiple recounts).

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Couldn't disagree with you more. Ryan has done plenty disappointing things in his Twins tenure, but Milone and Jepsen were nowhere near them.

 

Milone was acquired for Fuld, who the A's DFA'd and then traded a starting caliber MLB pitcher for. Jepsen is a very good pen arm with team control on his side that the Twins gave up a lottery ticket for.

 

The Twins did themselves no favors entering 2015 with the pen as it was. If you're questioning the two moves pointed to however, you couldn't be more wrong.

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I also disagree with the comments made on Ryan. Now, it IS true he played a bluff hand in regard to CF and the bullpen at times over the past 2 seasons, apparently believing/hoping prospects would be ready quicker than they turned out to be.

 

But he did bring in Milone, and while nothing special, he did pitch solidly. He also brought in Hughes and Santana. And the mentioned Jepsen. And Hunter, who many have helped as much off the field or more than he did on it. 

 

Oh, he also hired Molitor.

 

Should he have addressed the bullpen sooner? Yes. Should he have made a move for a second quality arm? Yes. But I think he did way more correct than wrong.

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It took 4 FOUR YEARS of losing 90 games to bring in a fresh face! FOUR YEARS! Two years to straighten out CF. One year with a SS out there, and the rest of the time a series of 4th OF. And if I remember right, it was an injury that forced him to retrieve Hicks from Rochester the last time. Jepsen himself was an upgrade, but that BP is a long way from being a plus part of the team. We had two Hughes pitching for us, one in '14 and one in '15, which seems to be standard for the "Hughes Boys". As for E. Santana, one could almost say he had the same effect on the Twins in the first half of the year, as the last. Finally Hunter. while there may be some validity to the pros of his clubhouse presence, I think they should be balanced against the lost playing time that other younger outfielders got. I am waiting for the first time someone mentions "it's going to take Billy Bob awhile to get acclimated to ML pitching!

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