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Article: March Madness: A Look Back at the Collegiate Careers of Current Twins


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March Madness is upon us. I’m nothing close to a college basketball specialist, but it seems to me that not even the most optimistic Minnesotan believes the Golden Gophers will go far in the Big Ten Tournament -- but, who knows? Either way, with or without the presence of the Gophers, many people will hop on the Bracketology train and go crazy during the month of March.

 

Motivated by the school spirit brought by this event, I decided to look at how some Minnesota Twins did while they were playing in college.I came across a lot of interesting facts and numbers from the time that these now major leaguers were just a bunch of hopeful kids attending classes everyday. Here’s a list that I’ve put together, with a personal experience shared at the end.

 

Kyle Gibson was a vital part of the Twins rotation last year, after struggling for some years in the majors. That story is a bit similar to how his college career went down. He was off to a slow start, coming out of the bullpen during his freshman year for the Missouri Tigers, in 2007. But then, when he started being used as a starter in 2008, he turned the corner and pitched at a good level in the following two seasons. In his last year in college, when he posted a 3.21 ERA and 11.05 K/9. Gibby and the Tigers played the NCAA Regionals in all of the three years he was there.

 

Kyle Gibson (Missouri, 2007-09)

3.66 ERA

63 games (29 starts)

259.0 IP

304 K (10.48 K/9)

0 HR

61 BB (2.10 BB/9)

1.16 WHIP

9 SV

 

Tyler Duffey was drafted by the Twins in 2012 out of his hometown college, Rice University, in Houston. He spent three full seasons playing for the Owls between 2010 and 2012, helping the school claim its fourth conference championship in 2011. Curiously enough, do you know who was elected the conference MVP that year? That’s right...Duffey. He helped the Owls to finish the regular season in first place (16-8 conference record), with the highest number of wins (42-21 overall record) and to be the No. 24 program in the nation. He shared closing duties with former Twin J.T. Chargois.

 

Tyler Duffey (Rice, 2010-2012)

3.06 ERA

92 games (1 start)

13 SV

152.1 IP

189 K (11.12 K/9)

14 HR (0.82 HR/9)

55 BB (3.24 BB/9)

1.21 WHIP

 

Trevor Hildenberger also spent three seasons in college ball, but his overall numbers weren’t nearly as impressive as Duffey’s nor his stellar minor league totals. Coming out of high school, he pitched for the University of California, Berkeley starting in 2010, but he was redshirted during the 2011 season. His best season was his senior year, in which he posted a 2.83 ERA and tied the school record of 10 single-season saves. On May 10, 2014 he pitched three innings to earn a save, striking out six batters, his career high.

 

Trevor Hildenberger (California, 2010-2014)

4.28 ERA

56 games (5 starts)

11 SV

106.0 IP

95 K (7.97 K/9)

3 HR (0.25 HR/9)

33 BB (2.77 BB/9)

1.34 WHIP

 

Veteran relief pitcher Blake Parker wasn’t always a pitcher. During his three seasons playing for the Arkansas Razorbacks, from 2004 to 2006, Parker played third base. Drafted in 2006, forgoing his senior year, he had a very slow start as a position player on rookie and A-ball and started his transition to the mound in 2007, to never turn back. As a batter in college, his best season was during his sophomore year when he had an .865 OPS and was an extra-base maniac, with a 54.55 XBH%. After maintaining a 2.85 ERA in ten years pitching in the minors, he knew he made the right call for his career.

 

Blake Parker (Arkansas, 2004-06)

.266/.344/.417 (.761 OPS)

129 games

504 AB

15 HR

79 RBI

16 SB

51 BB (8.79 BB%)

118 K (20.34 K%)

 

Taylor Rogers is a superstar in the making right now, but his college career was nowhere near an indication of that. After being drafted by the Baltimore Orioles out of high school in 2009, he decided not to sign with them and to attend the University of Kentucky. He was a starting pitcher for the Wildcats for three seasons and his performance comes as a shock for those of us who have been seeing him thriving at the major league level nowadays. Look at what his Wikipedia page has to say about his college career: “In 2010, he tied for the Southeastern Conference lead in losses (7) and runs allowed (68), as he went 4-7 with a 6.40 ERA. In 2011, he tied for second in the Southeastern Conference in losses (7), and was third-highest in runs allowed (56). In 2012, he was fourth in the Southeastern Conference in runs allowed (45)”. Can you believe this?

 

Taylor Rogers (Kentucky, 2010-12)

5.34 ERA

45 games (42 starts)

249.0 IP

172 K (6.21 K/9)

25 HR (0.90 HR/9)

55 BB (1.99 BB/9)

1.46 WHIP

 

Addison Reed's MLB career is pretty respectable. His college career? It was monstrous. In three seasons pitching for the Aztecs, Reed was one of the best pitchers in the country. During his sophomore year, in 2009, he led the nation with 20 saves in 20 save opportunities, striking out 38 batters in 27.2 IP (12.36 K/9) and finishing with a 0.65 ERA. He was named the 2009 National Stopper of the Year by the NCBWA.

 

Addison Reed (San Diego State, 2008-10)

2.16 ERA

60 games (11 starts)

24 SV

132.0 IP

154 K (10.40 K/9)

10 HR (0.68 HR/9)

31 BB (2.09 BB/9)

1.05 WHIP

 

Another player who had an astonishing college career was C.J. Cron. In three years playing for the Utah Utes, between 2009 and 2011, Cron was acknowledged as one of the best first basemen in the nation. Not only did he have extraordinary individual numbers, but he also helped the Utes reach the regional finals in 2009, his freshman year. During his junior year, he was named a first-team All-American by Baseball America, NCBWA, ABCA, Perfect Game, ESPN and the Collegiate Baseball newspaper (Louisville Slugger). He slashed .434/.517/.803 (1.320 OPS) that season.

 

C.J. Cron (Utah, 2009-11)

.396/.459/.713 (1.172 OPS)

157 games

641 AB

46 HR

198 RBI

62 BB (8.46 BB%)

75 K (10.23 K%)

 

When the Twins signed Jason Castro to a three-year, $24,5 million contract in 2017, they did it for his defensive skills. As a major leaguer he hasn’t lived up to his minor league numbers and certainly not for his college numbers. Castro played very well offensively for Stanford, especially during his junior year. Not only did he lead the Cardinal in batting average (.376), hits (105), doubles (18) and RBI (73), he also earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors, second-team All-America accolades from Rivals.com and third-team All-America recognition by Baseball America, ABCA/Rawlings and Ping!Baseball. He was also a finalist for the Johnny Bench award honoring college baseball's top catcher. With Stanford reaching the College World Series that year, Castro was named to the All-College World Series team after hitting 6-for-18 (.333) during the event.

 

Jason Castro (Stanford, 2006-08)

.309/.381/.476 (.857 OPS)

162 games

540 AB

18 HR

106 RBI

62 BB (9.94 BB%)

83 K (13.30 K%)

11 SB

 

Last, but not least (especially not for me, but I’ll get to that in a minute), there’s Mitch Garver, who played for four years for the University of New Mexico, in his hometown of Albuquerque. Garver was one of the best catchers in the nation. In his senior year, he slashed .390/.458/.589 (1.047 OPS) and led the team in multiple stats. But not only did he succeed individually, but he’s also led UNM to two of its three Mountain West Conference titles (2011 and 2012), including the very first in school history, making him one of the best Lobos of all time. Garver also takes much pride in his state’s roots. I don’t know if may of you will remember, but during Players Weekend last year, the catcher used a New Mexico flag bat.

 

Mitch Garver (New Mexico, 2010-13)

.351/.421/.527 (.948 OPS)

211 games

809 AB

18 HR

167 RBI

88 BB (9.51 BB%)

104 K (11.24 K%)

21 SB

.384 BABIP

 

What makes Garver’s college career so special to me? In 2013 I was granted a scholarship from my university in Brazil and I managed to spend six months in the U.S., studying at UNM. At the time, basketball was my main passion and I took every opportunity I had to go watch the Lobos basketball team, which was pretty good at that year (until a tragedy at March Madness…). But I took one chance to go to the Isotopes' park, home field of the Albuquerque Isotopes, the Triple-A affiliate of the Colorado Rockies, and attend the very first (and only) baseball game of my life.

 

Download attachment: MitchGarverLobos.jpg

Back then, I didn’t follow baseball nearly as much as I do today. So I had no idea who any of those players were. It only occurred to me last year, when Garver started to get his first Major League chances, that he was very likely there, behind the plate, during that particular game. I checked, and, yes. He was at that game (check the picture above, which I took on that day). The Lobos trailed 4-2 on that February evening, the ballpark was empty before the game was finished and the pitcher I actually went there to watch, because we took one class together, didn’t even play (I think). But, in retrospect, I can see how meaningful that day was to me, and Garver was a part of that.

 

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I didn't realize Blake Parker was a converted hitter. After that solid college career it's not like he fell on his face in the minors. He split time between third and first his draft year and hit .224/.325/.367 in the Cubs' system. Not great, but not a disaster. He appears to have been a quick learner, as he posted a 2.39 ERA over 26 1/3 innings in his first season as a pitcher (2007).

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  • 6 months later...

I'm confused by the construction of these threads. This was posted 7 months ago and because one person responded it comes up as something to look at. Just bringing it up, not mad about it.

I suppose some kind of fancy artificial intelligence robot could curate the discussion threads of most interest to you. :) As it is, the default is to show you the threads with the most recent comments, but there is a black bar near the top of each forum that lets you sort by other criteria ("Start Date", "Most Replies", "Most Viewed," or even "Custom") if that fits your needs better than "Recently Updated."

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I suppose some kind of fancy artificial intelligence robot could curate the discussion threads of most interest to you. :) As it is, the default is to show you the threads with the most recent comments, but there is a black bar near the top of each forum that lets you sort by other criteria ("Start Date", "Most Replies", "Most Viewed," or even "Custom") if that fits your needs better than "Recently Updated."

I did not know about the black bar, and I will avail myself of its benefits. I thank you kindly and have a happy postseason.

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