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Ted Schwerzler

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Twins Video

Over the weekend, news broke that the Twins checked in on the availability of Cincinnati Reds closer Raisel Iglesias. While he's undoubtedly not the only player Minnesota has looked at on the trade market, his name has filtered into the media cycle at this point. No matter how much substance there is to the situation moving forward, it's worth looking at Iglesias as a player, and whether or not he fits for the Twins.

 

First and foremost, Minnesota needs to shore up the bullpen heading into 2018. While Brandon Kintzler and Matt Belisle did an admirable job in the closer role for Paul Molitor a season ago, it's hard to imagine either in that scenario during game seven of the ALCS. As the Twins look to follow up a postseason berth this year, they'll no doubt have sights set on a deeper venture towards the World Series. While relief pitching has become the sexy topic in the playoffs, the reality is a complete team still trumps everything. The Astros won a World Series with a bullpen that was virtually on par with Minnesota in 2017, and that's worth keeping in mind.

 

Getting to Iglesias in a vacuum, the Reds current closer is a soon-to-be 28 year old from Cuba. He is not a free agent until 2022, and is currently signed on a team friendly contract through 2020. Across 76.0 IP in 2017, Iglesias picked up 28 saves and posted a career best 2.49 ERA. His 2.70 FIP was also a career best and he cracked 10.0 K/9 for the first time in his big league career. As a starter during the 2015 season, Iglesias sat around 93 mph with his fastball. In relief last season, he was pushing 96 mph on average and dropped down to 85 mph on his slider.

 

Despite being a bit of an older player, Iglesias quickly ascended to the big leagues. After signing out of Cuba, he pitched just 29 innings at Triple-A prior to his 2015 debut. Raisel only threw three seasons in Cuba before taking his age 23 year off to go through the process of getting stateside. Even at 28, you'd like to believe his body is a bit better for the wear.

 

Should Minnesota choose to pursue him, the asking price would probably be substantial. Wade Davis was just a one year rental at 31 years old for the Chicago Cubs, and he required the Royals receiving Jorge Soler in return. Still under team control, and with age on his side, I'd imagine the Reds would ask the Twins for at least one top six prospect. If I'm Minnesota, it's a hesitant place to start, but something I'd be interested in hearing out.

 

As a general philosophy, I believe it makes sense for teams close to winning to parlay either picks or prospects into immediately usable assets. Obviously this isn't a practice you can repeatedly employ or you run the risk of depleting your long term viability. Tracking guys with qualifying offers or dealing top prospects will eventually leave you in a barren place on the farm. That being said, Minnesota finds themselves in unique territory given the current organizational landscape.

 

Following a strong season, most of the club's top prospects from the past few seasons have reached the big leagues. They won't hold an enviable draft pick having finished as one of the final teams playing as well. If the Twins can entice Cincinnati with someone like Nick Gordon or Alex Kirilloff, they could get a solid return for someone that may be an expendable piece.

 

Closers are a fickle beast, and I'd hate to see the Twins acquire Iglesias only to use him in the 9th inning of games they lead. Ideally, bringing him in would involve him being relied upon to get high leverage outs regardless of where in the game that is. Also, if Gordon or Kirilloff generate that much interest, I'd probably see what other starting pitching they may be able to net as an alternative. If this is the only level of return that seems viable though, it's tough to pass up.

 

The reality is that the Minnesota Twins aren't too far away, and raising the water level of the big league roster is a must. There's some really strong impact prospects in the farm system, but some of them are representative of the next wave. While you'd love to see everyone you draft come through your system, sometimes the best tradeoff is matching them elsewhere and turning a prospect into an immediately usable player.

 

With the GM meetings ready to kick off, and the Hot Stove warming up, we'll get plenty more exciting nuggets in the weeks and months ahead. Derek Falvey and Thad Levine seem to know they have something exciting on their hands, and I feel comfortable with the direction the seem to be running in.

 

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

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The Twins have some interesting questions to answer.

 

What is the status of Joe Mauer beyond 2018.

Will they sign Brian Dozier to a longterm contract.

Is Polanco the short-term answer at short, thus making Gordon a Tradechip, or even a Javier.

How set are the Twins with an outfield of Rosario, Kepler and Buxton. Is ANY replaceable by, say, Granite, and how soon Rooker or Alex K.

 

The Twins have prospects to trade. And just can't keep adding them to the 40-man. Or having players that other teams know you will have to waive to create roster spots for other players. 

 

Since the season wound down, the Twins have jettisoned Nik Turley, Chris Gimenez, Ryan O'Rourke, Niko Goodrum, Daniel Palka, Randy Rosario, Glen Perkins, Bartolo Colon, Matt Belisle, Dillon Gee, Hector Santiago, Drew Rucinski, Alex Wimmers, Anthony Recker and Michael Tonkin. Total return...lots of roster space and $500,000 in cash. That's a lot of giving away or walking away.

 

Not to mention the guys who have left the minor league system willingly: Centeno, Heston, Mickolio, Pino, Dereck Rodriguez, Hurlbut, Tracy, Paulino, Perezz, Pimentel, Wilkins, Johnny Rodriguez, Hague, Reginatto, Shuck and Strausborger. Yes, hopefully Dereck rodriguez might still be added to the 40-man, or a couple return as free agents. But.....

 

There's at least a dozen guys worthy of the 40-man roster, and still 3-4 names worthy of NOT being kept on the 40-man, but a contending team CAN'T have a 40-man roster full of players who may/may not participate in a major league game in 2018.

 

Can you trade prospects for a closer, a starter? You can always buy relief. Hell, youc an always buy a starting pitcher, too. but the opportunity to get a guy cheaper for a longer time has to sometimes outweigh laying out millions and millions on a contract that more than likely won't pay out in the end.

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