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Starting Pitching Bodes Well For Twins


Ted Schwerzler

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More often than any other area needing to be addressed by the Twins, it's starting pitching I have seen noted by national types. While Minnesota no doubt had a catching issue, and the bullpen remains largely unchanged from the ineffectiveness it showed a year ago, the belief is that the Twins need an ace. There's truth in the though, Minnesota is no doubt void of a frontline starter, but they probably don't need one either.

 

This offseason, a lot has been made about how the Twins will round out their starting rotation. I've talked about it plenty here at Off The Baggy, and it would appear the Twins rotation is all but set. A Santana, Hughes, Gibson, Duffey, Milone starting five doesn't have a headliner, but it also lacks glaring weaknesses as well. Looking around the AL Central, that actually may play to the benefit of the home nine.

 

Not long ago, I took my annual look into what the AL Central will look like when the dust settles come September. While the Twins are likely headed for a minor step back, the argument could easily be made that they are the most likely squad to have the highest potential to swing within the division. If everything breaks right, the Twins could find themselves hanging a pennant, and conversely, could end up at the bottom significantly out of it if only a few key things go wrong.

 

As things stand currently, the Twins look like a middle of the road AL Central team. Most realistically finishing third in the division, it's an interesting concept when comparing that to starting pitching. Of the AL Central opponents, there's only two starting rotations that would seem far and away better than Molitor's group.

 

First, it's easy to call the Indians rotation the cream of the crop in the Central. While I'm nowhere near as high on them as many are, the talent is more than evident. Corey Kluber remains an ace, and even in a down year a season ago, he was lights out far more often than not. Carlos Carrasco remains a very strong second option, and has plenty of ace ability on his own. Eventually, the Indians are still hoping that Danny Salazar can click, and should he, the division would be worse off for it. Regardless whether it's Zach McAllister, Trevor Bauer, or TJ House Rounding out the final spots, Cleveland has strong pieces one through five.

 

Then there's the Chicago White Sox, who are actually trending towards overtaking the Indians rotation in my opinion. Chris Sale is one of baseball's five or six best pitchers. Jose Quintana would be an ace for many other teams, and Carlos Rodon flashed plenty of excitement during his debut season. Robin Ventura's final two starters leave something to be desired, but there's little doubt the top three can go out and get you a win on any given day.

 

When taking a look at the Royals rotation, it's more than clean to see why the Twins are in a better place. Now without Johnny Cueto, who actually was a negative outside of the playoffs, Kansas City looks putrid as a whole. Headlined by Yordano Ventura, who should rebound in the year ahead, a number two starter is either Edinson Volquez or Ian Kennedy. Recently signed for $70 million over the next five years, Kennedy is a far cry from the Cy Young competitor he was back in 2011.

 

Likely worse than the likes of unsigned free agent Yovani Gallardo, and maybe more closely compared to former Twin Mike Pelfrey, Kennedy in the top three is quite the gamble. With the Royals rounding out the group relying upon the aging Chris Young and the likes of Jason Vargas or some other warm body, there's little reason to question why their bullpen has to be so good.

 

For the Tigers, it's more patchwork than anything. Of course Jordan Zimmerman provides a very nice piece, but he hides what's a bigger issue. Justin Verlander hasn't been good for quite some time, and Anibal Sanchez hasn't been healthy for even longer. Relying on youth for the back end will be an interesting strategy as well. Detroit hasn't had an in house piece work for a while, and although their exciting youngsters aren't home grown, development will be worth watching.

 

At the end of the day, if pitching is the most important aspect when it comes to winning, the Twins are in what can be considered far from a bad place. The Opening Day rotation won't bring fireworks, but having Jose Berrios waiting in the wings with some depth options at the top of the organization, Minnesota can feel comfortable going forward. For all the games Minnesota pitching may not win them, there should be plenty more often than not that the day's hurler gives the lineup a chance.

 

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

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With all due respect to Milone, the Twins rotation rates even stronger with Berrios...and May, to be frank. Yes it's nice to have a lefty. And Milone was very solid in 2015, and indeed has been solid most of his career, save his first go round with the Twins in '14.

 

I get a little frustrated at times when opinions, pro and fan, blast Hughes and Santana. Hughes may not be as good as 2014 again, but he very easily could be. He might even be a little better. While he lacked consistency in his career, and really hasn't quite lived up to his talent, he has shown flashes besides '14. He's not some journeyman who is a 1 season wonder. Ando Santana has had a very nice and consistent career to this point while being occasionally dominant.

 

Gibson is talent, stillmk,proving, and I don't believe we've seen the best of him yet. Composure, decent fastball and an amazing curve, a little more experience and polish from Duffy could make him really tough. You can claim SSS, and you'd have an arguement. But then agaim, his milb track record is good, seemed to get better yearly as he advanced, and his SSS in '14 was a full third of the season.

 

Now mix in Berrios and you have a very nice group, especially if the bullpen can support them. Something that is still a question mark. There is no ONE WAY to win. Teams do/have/will win via rorations, bullpens, defense and offense, and various combinations. A strong 1-5 rotation with bullpen to back them up is arguably as successful...if not moreso...than a really strong 1-3 with bad back end and average-mediocre bullpen. Just look at the Tigers from the past few seasons for example.

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I think, maybe inadvertently, you just made my point even stronger. Whether with Milone or some other younger talent, the Twins are in a far better place than trying to add band-aids and warm bodies to fill out five

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I think, maybe inadvertently, you just made my point even stronger. Whether with Milone or some other younger talent, the Twins are in a far better place than trying to add band-aids and warm bodies to fill out five

Actually, I was trying to help make your point. Lol

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I think, maybe inadvertently, you just made my point even stronger. Whether with Milone or some other younger talent, the Twins are in a far better place than trying to add band-aids and warm bodies to fill out five
Spoiler alert! This will be intentional, not inadvertent! :) :). This will be a better rotation than in the past. But the danger in that thought is using the past as a comparison. No one wants to use the recent Twins SP as a baseline for success. One other thought. Teams spend millions and millions in an attempt to win? Or in some intstances placate the fan base. Yet the Twins won't spend the money it costs to clear a blocking contract from the roster. There are numerous better SP combinations with Nolasco out of the picture, but he is going to end up tipping the entire pitching roster on its ear! No one wants to admit a mistake, but he is eating up too big a spot on the roster.
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To be fair, I think the ideal situation is that Nolasco figures it out, stays healthy and works out of the pen. If he does not, and the Twins don't cut bait (which they may), that's an issue.

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To be fair, I think the ideal situation is that Nolasco figures it out, stays healthy and works out of the pen. If he does not, and the Twins don't cut bait (which they may), that's an issue.

 

Ideally, IMO, is to move him any way possible. Cash, prospect, whatever to get something of at least some value back, move on, live and let live...peace out.

 

But if he does stick around, the Nolasco we saw last season looked as though he was still effective on a limited basis, including some SO ability. He would be overpaid for the role, but he may be able to re-invent himself.

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