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It's Time Twins Stop Passing The Buck


Ted Schwerzler

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There's a saying that goes something like, "No one knows you're clueless until you open your mouth and remove all doubt." On July 18, 2016 the Minnesota Twins fired long time General Manager Terry Ryan. It was a much needed move, and one that could have been made a long time ago. But then Jim Pohlad spoke, and so did Dave St. Peter.

 

Pohlad is the owner of the Minnesota Twins. He's one of the most disconnected, at least based on appearances, in the world of sports. On May 6, 2016. he was featured in the Star Tribune by columnist Chip Scoggins for calling the entirety of the organization a "Total System Failure." The problem is, he wasn't wrong, but he still appears to not have much of an idea what that actually means.

 

That whole opening your mouth and removing doubt bit, it couldn't have been more on display than when Pohlad explained his baseball understanding of other front offices around the big leagues. When asked if he had studied or looked at what other teams are doing in setting up their organization structures and the success of them, he muttered, "Yes I have. I’ve gone through all the media guides and looked at titles and structures and the emerging trends of president of baseball operations or whatever. Yes, I’ve studied that.” Sorry Jim, but you'll probably want to do a bit better than perusing some media guides to have any clue about the effectiveness of organization you currently oversee.

 

In his press conference following the firing of Terry Ryan, Pohlad didn't offer just one head scratching comment though. He talked of his desire to promote from within, how that's something he and the Twins have always felt good about doing. It's a direct contradiction to the "Total System Failure" comments, and it's tone deaf to the reality that Rob Antony, St. Peter, and even Pohlad himself are all part of the problem that has the Twins where they are.

 

At this point, the Twins have taken a massive baby step. While that's seemingly an oxymoron, it adequately describes what's currently going on. Firing a GM that has long underperformed is indicative of Minnesota coming to grips with a change that was long overdue. Ryan wasn't allowed to simply bow out (even though he was given a month to craft his exit), but instead was fired. A message was sent that the Twins do have a slight shred of accountability left within the organization.

 

That's where the other part of the narrative comes into play however, the change can't end there. Simply hiring from within, rather than using the opportunity to make sweeping changes, would be a catastrophic missuse of the massive part of this equation. If making the initial move was the baby step, it is in the follow up that the future direction and turnaround of the Twins lies.

 

Following the push forward, the Twins may have already slipped up once, and they simply can't afford to do it again.

 

With both Pohlad and St. Peter handcuffing their future GM to current manager Paul Molitor, the Twins have failed to get out of their own way from the start. It may not hamper the quality of the final candidate, but it sure stacks the deck against them from the onset. Molitor doesn't have the equity in the managerial game to be given the safety net that he has now, and his 2016 season has all but wiped away any semblance of in game acumen that was displayed a year ago.

 

Right now, the organizational structure for the Twins is headlined by an out-of-touch owner and a haughty President. Both Pohlad and St. Peter are more a part of the problem than they will ever signify the solution. As they work to right the ship, owning that, and ceasing a trickle down effect is going to need to be part of the process.

 

For the first time since the early 90's, Minnesota has a chance to make an organizational shift that leverages a strong system begging to win. A missed opportunity could be catastrophic, and as we've seen before, there's no telling how long the organization may need to wait to get it right.

 

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

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This is a one shot deal! It took 4 yrs of 90 loss seasons for them to change managers. It took a myriad of strange extensions, DH acquisitions, and one of the oddest roster constructions in history to change the GM. If the Twins promote from within, it will be another 20 years for a correction to be made. The standard for mediocrity has been set, and it isn't that hard to match. Thankfully I don't think JP will go within, he needs a marketing move badly. Every other sport in this town is on the upswing, and his team teeters on the brink of irrelevance. A fate far worse than losing. The only good that could come from Pohlad listening to his comments to the press is the realization he needs insulation, i.e. a baseball operations Pres. Heaven help us if it's Dave St. Peter.

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Yes, you need a director of baseball operations. A Super GM and a solid secondary GM. You can still have all your assistants, scouting direction, player personenl, etc. etc. etc. But someone has to look at the overall on-field product, not just adding a bar in the centerfield area. 

 

You also have to have a plan. Go beyond "The Twins Way" popularized how far back by Tom Kelly and Co? you have to go beyond being competitive in your division, or actually do look at your division and the moves they make. Or you rebuild until you are ready to go head-to-head, and not just the division, but the whole of major league baseball as you do play teams in the other league now.

 

You continue to craft a team that plays in your stadium and plays well together. Maybe the whole mistake can fall on the shoulders of one guy: Dare I say Joe Mauer?

 

Hometown kid. Amazing hitter. Outstanding catcher. The Face of a Franchise. The guy who makes us remember fondly of Killebrew, Puckett.

 

But how many faces do you have/need in a franchise? We have had many and they were all tradable...from Bert and Frankie to Aggie and Pascual. We have Gagne and Carew. Gary Gaetta, and the walking Hunter. Battey and Allison. All solid players. None a franchise king, but they did their turns with worthiness.

 

Does it all boil down to us giving joltin' Joe that super contract, and not realizing that there would be concussion issues (probably not...no one cared about performance enhancing rugs for years). We allowed the franchise to be built around him, and his Kemp's ads and brother Billy's car dealership and the goodness of the Mauer family and the ties to Cretin-Derham Hall and St. Paul. Great stuff, great story. 

 

But it is something they can't get out from under, even when we sympathize with the eyesight but cringe at the singles, a year with more K's than walks, no more talk of the "super batting machine for teaching hitters." 

 

When he came up for contract, the powers-that-be cringed that they had to keep him at any price...something the Twins didn't do with Killebrew or Carew, passed on with Kaat and Blyleven, parted ways with Viola and Santana...all loved and adored and the face of the franchise for a moment, and then instantly "okay, a member of another team."

 

My wife cringes that Justin Morneau is now a White Sox. It didn't phase her too much when he was a Pirate or a Rockie, for some reason. She misses him, but he wasn't contributing, was an albatross hat we all liked, but there really was no place in the inn for his glove and bat. We parted company.

 

Did people stop coming to games because we traded Zoilo, we dumped Aggie on the Red Sox (but shrewdly got him back). Shane Mack and Jack Jones moved on. Hunter took $90m. Santana demanded $120m. Knoblauch was applauded for leaving. No one really cried when Hrbek hung up his spikes. Smalley and Gladden still stir nice thoughts, but left for longer careers. 

 

Like the notorious franchise of franchises, the Yankees. Do people care when the Mantle era ends, or the JoeD? Maybe in New York they do, and try hard to make those franchise players "gods" of sorts.

 

Happily, Minnesota is not New York. We don't need a franchise god. We don't need to elevate someone above the pinnacle of baseball's finest. Heck, Griffith couldn't keep Killebrew as a a lifer with Harmon ending his career as a Royal. Maybe we don't need Joe around anymore.

 

If the Twins suffer or eat a loss, then let Joe go somewhere, anywhere. Be content that he had many fine seasons in Minnesota and is a Hall-of-Fame catcher who might not get in the Hall of Fame because he couldn't go beyond the backstop in the end.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Maybe the whole mistake can fall on the shoulders of one guy: Dare I say Joe Mauer?

 

 

 

I think it is very unfortunate the both Mauer and Morneau had their careers severely impacted by concussions.  We could also add Corie Koskie to this list.  How many other teams in MLB have had their 2 best players impacted in this manner.  The Twins, their fans, and all baseball were robbed of two very good players in their prime.  This is just plain unlucky and it not necessary to blame anyone.  Morneau was was one of my favorite players.  I am saddened by what happened.  I will root for him wherever he plays. 

 

We can not do anything about the unlucky part.  However, there is a substantial failure to plan.  "Total system failure" is correct.  They include:  Trading away Wilson Ramos for 1 good year of Capps without have an alternative MLB capable catcher in the system.  Failure to draft a develop any good starting pitchers since Brad Radke.  Failure to draft/trade/sign as FA a decent shortstop since Christian Guzman.  Trading away Denard Span for someone they have not been able to develop.  And the number of prospects who spend time on the 25 man roster but don't know the fundamentals of baseball.  Hopefully, these are what Terry Ryan is being held accountable for and there should also be plenty of coaches and scouts in the system being asked about their contributions to to "total system failure."

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