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Article: Changing Timeline: Is It Time To Start Worrying About Santana?


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Ervin Santana was supposed to be the rock at the top of the Twins rotation this season. Two months ago, the Twins found out their All-Star pitcher would be forced to have surgery on the middle finger of his throwing hand. Santana had calcium deposits in his right middle finger removed in early February. At the time of the surgery, the team estimated he would miss the season’s first 4-6 weeks.

 

There is still a lot of unknown circling Santana and his injury. Is it time for fans to start worrying about his return to the mound?Doctor, Doctor, Gimme The News

Last week when the Twins returned home, Derek Falvey told media members that the team was considering sending Santana to New York City. Dr. Charles Melone, the man who operated on Santana, could perform a follow-up examination to make sure the pitcher was progressing appropriately.

 

“I think having the surgeon review (his recovery) is critical to assessing where he is in that timeline,” Falvey told the Pinoeer Press. “No setbacks. He’s in a good place. He feels good. We just want to make sure the timeline is right.”

 

The Twins have shifted course over the weekend and Santana will head to the Twin Cities to be examined by the team’s doctors. He is scheduled to be in Minneapolis on Tuesday before returning to Fort Myers to continue his rehab.

 

Changing Timeline

A few weeks ago, fans were worried on hearing that Santana was unable to grip a baseball. Since then, he has been able to grip a baseball and do some very light throwing. A return in May seems more likely with him now being able to play some light catch. Minnesota’s rotation got off to a good start during the season’s opening week and the team won’t need to fill Santana’s rotation spot until later this week.

 

When Jake Odorizzi was announced as the starter, I projected the starters out through the middle of April. With Minnesota missing a game on Sunday, the projected rotation got pushed back. Friday will be the first time Minnesota will need to utilize a fifth starter. Phil Hughes is working his way back to the mound so the club could use him on April 13th against Chicago. If Hughes isn’t ready to go, another pitcher might have to fill in as the fifth starter.

 

Eye To The Future

Santana has some money on the line as well this season. If he pitched over 200 innings, his $14 million option would vest for 2019. He’s only pitched 200 innings once over the last four seasons and that was last year when he tossed 211.1 innings. He likely won’t make enough starts the rest of 2018 to reach the 200 inning mark.

 

Minnesota could still pick up Santana’s option for $14 million or the club would be forced to pay a $1 million buy-out. It’s hard to know what Minnesota’s rotation could look like next season. Jose Berrios, Jake Odorizzi and Kyle Gibson are all under team control. Other top prospects like Fernando Romero and Stephen Gonsalves should be knocking on the door. There might not be room for Santana.

 

Is it time to start worrying about Santana? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion.

 

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Twins Daily Contributor

"Santana has some money on the line as well this season. If he pitched over 200 innings, his $14 million option would vest for 2019. He’s only pitched 200 innings once over the last four seasons and that was last year when he tossed 211.1 innings. He likely won’t make enough starts the rest of 2018 to reach the 200 inning mark."

 

Not that it really matters at this point, but Santana only needed 188 and 2/3 IP this season for his vesting option to be picked up. His contract states either 200 IP in 2018, or 400 IP in 2017 and 2018 combined for the option. 

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Let's just say it was wonderful that the Twins did get Odorizzi AND Lynn. If they had just gotten one, I would be more worried. I would hope a patch of Hughes/Enns/Slegers/Mejia can carry us thru however long Santana is out. And I would be willing to call up Rmero/Goncalves/Jorge/Littell once ALL have 3-4-5 decent starts under their belt, if push came to shove.

 

Will warm weather change things up some (Morrison, Buxton). Is the Twins bullpen solid? Those are the bigger questions right now.

 

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I was worried about Santana the second that I heard that he was having surgery and would miss the start of the season. That sounded like a typical final season for an older pitcher that ends with a really ugly ERA.

But luckily the Twins have depth in both veterans and prospects. Hopefully we see Gonsalves or possibly even Romero up with the Twins by midseason. Or do Pineda or May make an early comeback?

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I was worried about Santana the second that I heard that he was having surgery and would miss the start of the season. That sounded like a typical final season for an older pitcher that ends with a really ugly ERA.

But luckily the Twins have depth in both veterans and prospects. Hopefully we see Gonsalves or possibly even Romero up with the Twins by midseason. Or do Pineda or May make an early comeback?

From what has been reported, May is currently ramping up and I think he is on track to return in June. I think they want him back as a starting pitcher (Falvey/Levine had a quote about that in Spring Training) but we'll see about that. Pineda is expected to possibly be able to throw in the bullpen in September. I don't think there will be time for him to throw enough innings to be a starter in 2018.

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"Santana has some money on the line as well this season. If he pitched over 200 innings, his $14 million option would vest for 2019. He’s only pitched 200 innings once over the last four seasons and that was last year when he tossed 211.1 innings. He likely won’t make enough starts the rest of 2018 to reach the 200 inning mark."

 

Not that it really matters at this point, but Santana only needed 188 and 2/3 IP this season for his vesting option to be picked up. His contract states either 200 IP in 2018, or 400 IP in 2017 and 2018 combined for the option.

Nope. It's 200 IP in 2018 AND 400 combined IP in 17-18, not OR.

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Not particularly.  When careers come crashing down for 'older' pitchers, it's arm problems, not finger problems.  Not that it couldn't happen with a finger, I guess.  But until I hear something definitive that points to the finger somehow being 'done'...I'm relatively optimistic that he will be back and pitching decent-to-good by the end of May.

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Yeah, I'm not worried about this. This is a finger injury and it seems like the setbacks are a matter of weeks and not months. If it was an arm issue, I'd be circling the wagons.

 

As is, the Twins will get a nice boost when Santana comes back. And I don't mind getting a look at Hughes, even if I don't expect it to go well. I think they'll have a quick hook with him, especially if May/Santana are ready beginning of June or Gonsalves/Romero looks ready for a few starts until Santana/May are back.

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Per Spotrac:

 

Contract Notes:

2019 Option includes a $1M buyout

Option Vests with 200 IP in 2018 or 400 IP from 2017+2018

2015: Suspended 80 Games, forfeiting $5.9M

Well, I'm 99.99% sure that SpoTrac is wrong.

MLBTraderumors, Cot's Contracts, and Twinkie Town all report that it's AND 200 IP in 2018.

The writers on this site have also previously confirmed that it's AND 200 IP in 2018.

 

With a Google search of Ervin Santana contract, SpoTrac is the only place reporting it as OR 200 IP in 2018, so I don't know where they are sourcing that from.

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Twins Daily Contributor

 

Well, I'm 99.99% sure that SpoTrac is wrong.
MLBTraderumors, Cot's Contracts, and Twinkie Town all report that it's AND 200 IP in 2018.
The writers on this site have also previously confirmed that it's AND 200 IP in 2018.

With a Google search of Ervin Santana contract, SpoTrac is the only place reporting it as OR 200 IP in 2018, so I don't know where they are sourcing that from.

Well if Spotrac has it wrong then I guess I do too

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Talked with May a few days ago and he said he'd be ready in May.

 

That would be superb if it happened.  He's been throwing off the mound for weeks now including offspeed stuff. By the end of may it will have been 14 months since his surgery.

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Well if Spotrac has it wrong then I guess I do too

 

Pioneer Press reporter Mike Beradino reported it as an "OR" in his article in December of 2014 covering the signing:

 

Santana’s deal includes a fifth-year vesting option based on innings pitched — either 200 in 2018 or a combined 400 in 2017-18 — but it does not include a no-trade provision.

 

https://www.twincities.com/2014/12/12/twins-signing-ervin-santana-about-more-than-the-arm/

 

 

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Any injury is a cause for worry.  I imagine that when people heard that Dizzy Dean hurt his toe there was nothing to worry about, but then it ended his career. https://www.fangraphs.com/tht/tht-live/the-dizzy-dean-injury-cascade/

"Most importantly, it shows the cascade potential of any injury to a pitcher. He broke his toe, leading to shoulder and arm issues and quieting a great career. For pitchers, any injury can lead to other injuries. Altered mechanics or additional stress can cause issues up the pitching motion’s kinetic chain. Fixing one link in the chain could cause the next weakest link to break. Sometimes a weak link can cause another weak link to break. It can be a vicious cycle."

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Worrying?   Why?  There are two pitchers in the organization, one available now (Fernando Romero) and one available later (Trevor May) who are likely better than Santana, with a third (Michael Pineda) who will be ready to come during the final sprint of the season.

 

Wasted money this season and he should had been traded when he had some value after last season that was an aberration.

 

Santana was going to be irrelevant for the 2018 Twins anyways, with Lance Lynn's addition...

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It's one thing to have him back, and another to be effective. He will be back. Effective becomes the big concern. Hopefully, the amazing free agents signed will be so good that it will be onward and upward, regardless.

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