Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

Article: Week in Review: Opening Salvos


Recommended Posts

Our inclination to inflate the importance of Opening Day is only natural. After a long winter, that date becomes the singular focus of baseball fans everywhere.

 

Opening Day roster, Opening Day lineup, Opening Day outcome. The perceived significance of each is overblown. We all know it. But still, impressions from Minnesota's impressive performance during the season's first weekend, and especially Opening Day, are hard to shake.

Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 3/25 through Sun, 3/31

***

Record Last Week: 2-1 (Overall: 2-1)

Run Differential Last Week: +7 (Overall: +7)

Standing: Tied for 1st Place in AL Central

HIGHLIGHTS

 

The powered-up Twins pitching staff is already on display, setting a new franchise record with 39 strikeouts through their first three games.

 

On Thursday and Saturday, Jose Berrios and Jake Odorizzi became the second starting duo in history to open a season with back-to-back double-digit strikeout totals. The feat was only previously accomplished by Arizona's Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling in 2001 – arguably the greatest SP tandem in major-league history. No biggie.

 

On Sunday, Michael Pineda and Martin Perez piggybacked for 11 strikeouts over 7 2/3 combined innings, continuing the run of rotation dominance against a diminished Cleveland lineup (sans Francisco Lindor).

 

You can knock the quality of the opposition, but I would respond with two points:

 

1) There's nothing misleading about the results this group achieved. Everyone looked fantastic. Berrios unleashed a barrage of filthy breaking balls and mixed in an upgraded changeup. Odorizzi was changing speeds and eye levels expertly. Pineda pounded the zone with heavy stuff. Perez constantly worked inside with the same 95-97 MPH heat he was flashing in spring training. There was no smoke-and-mirrors behind this magic.

 

And, 2) The Indians aren't THAT beat-up. They're missing their best hitter in Lindor, yes, but fellow absentee Jason Kipnis hasn't been a factor in recent years. I mean, the fact that Tyler Naquin and Jake Bauers were Cleveland's #3 hitters in this series is really quite stunning. The qualitative difference between these two offenses was starkly apparent.

 

One of the most interesting aspects of this Twins team coming into the season, from my view, was the legitimately high-powered starting corps, which has come along so far since five years ago. In total, the four starters combined for 47 swinging strikes on 310 pitches, a remarkable 15.1% whiff rate. For context, only three qualified MLB starters induced swinging strikes at a higher percentage in 2018: Max Scherzer, Patrick Corbin, and Carlos Carrasco (who the Twins knocked around in Sunday's series finale).

 

Meanwhile, the bullpen was effective for the most part. Rocco Baldelli rotated through all six of his relievers and got scoreless appearances from five of them, with Taylor Rogers going twice and looking particularly crisp.

 

So, early returns on new pitching coach Wes Johnson and his staff are resoundingly positive.

 

The offense was mostly quiet in the opening series, facing the unenviable assignments of Corey Kluber and Trevor Bauer in the season's first two games. Both enter this campaign as Cy Young frontrunners, and each looked the part in helping hold Minnesota's potent lineup to three runs on six hits through 18 innings.

 

But Nelson Cruz made an impact in all three games as the Twins' new #3 hitter. He set up Marwin Gonzalez' game-winning hit on Thursday with a leadoff single in the seventh against Kluber. He drove in Minnesota's lone run on Saturday with some impressive bat-handling against Bauer. And he keyed the offense's breakout on Sunday by going 3-for-5 with the club's first home run of the year.

 

The other most noteworthy performer was Byron Buxton. Fears of a post-spring drought quickly disappeared as he went 4-for-10 with three doubles and only two strikeouts in his first series. Last year, his third double came on May 12th. In 2017, he didn't get his fourth hit until almost two weeks into the season.

 

It's certainly a modest benchmark but this is easily the best start of Buxton's career. Seeing him fired up and pumping his fists at second on Sunday after delivering a key two-run double – with two outs, on an 0-2 count – was the most invigorating sight for me on a weekend that offered plenty to choose from in that regard.

 

LOWLIGHTS

 

There wasn't a whole lot to dislike in these first three games. The Twins won two of them in fairly convincing fashion, and fell short by one run in the other. The final inning of that loss provides the only real fodder for grievances.

 

Blake Parker was the only Twins pitcher to struggle in the entire series, and it wasn't because he got hit hard. The Arkansas native simply could not find any semblance of control in the chilly weather on Saturday. Carlos Santana singled, then moved from first to third on a pair of wild pitches. Parker walked Hanley Ramirez and fell behind Greg Allen 2-0 before allowing a sacrifice fly to deep center.

 

The outing was uglier to watch than it looks on paper: 1 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 1 BB. All things considered, if that's your most disastrous pitching performance in a series you can feel pretty good.

 

And the Twins were well positioned to get that run back in the bottom half. Buxton led off against Cleveland closer Brad Hand with a wind-aided "double" to the shallow outfield. Baldelli then curiously elected not to use a pinch-hitter for Max Kepler, despite Hand's record of pure dominance against lefty swingers.

 

 

Kepler struck out, and the rally went on to fall short. Presumably, Baldelli is just trying to show confidence in his core guys, but turning to a contact machine like Willians Astudillo in that spot – speedy runner on second, no outs, deepest bench the Twins will have all year – seemed like such an obvious call that it was surprising not to see it from the ostensibly analytical thinker. Will loyalty outweigh logic in the future? Something to watch.

 

In general, Kepler is off to a slow start, as is fellow corner outfielder Eddie Rosario (combined 1-for-22), but there's no reason to worry about either.

 

TRENDING STORYLINE

 

There's only one active Twins pitcher we haven't seen yet. It's kind of crazy that the rotation showed such incredible swing-and-miss proficiency in the opening series without its reigning whiff leader.

 

Kyle Gibson spent his spring trying to regain strength and weight following a nasty winter bout with E. coli. He admitted after his last exhibition start – an ugly clunker against the Red Sox – that he still wasn't quite back to where he ideally wanted to be. So it's not surprising to see the Twins giving him as much time as they possibly can; Gibson's first start will come after Berrios takes his second turn on Tuesday in Kansas City.

 

How will he look? Gibson's success last year was fueled by career-high velocity, so any sapped voltage might have a material impact. But if he's mostly back to form, this rotation has a chance to start generating some real enthusiasm in short order.

 

DOWN ON THE FARM

 

Minor-league games haven't started yet, and in fact official rosters for the affiliates haven't even been announced yet. But that will all come this week, with Minor League Opening Day on Thursday.

 

Make sure you stay tuned into Twins Daily for unparalleled coverage of the team's system and prospects. I'll be recapping the most noteworthy developments in this space each Sunday night, but the day-to-day minor-league coverage on this site is beyond robust and comprehensive. Thanks in advance to all of the people who work hard to make it possible: Seth, Cody, Tom, Steve, Ted, Matt... can't wait to read all of your reports this summer.

 

LOOKING AHEAD

 

Following a successful home kickoff, the Twins embark on a seven-game road trip with four off days sprinkled in. Baldelli will have a deep bench and rested bullpen as he tours through two National League parks, starting with Philadelphia next weekend.

 

TUESDAY, 4/2: TWINS @ ROYALS – RHP Jose Berrios v. RHP Brad Keller

WEDNESDAY, 4/3: TWINS @ ROYALS – RHP Kyle Gibson v. RHP Homer Bailey

FRIDAY, 4/5: TWINS @ PHILLIES – RHP Jake Odorizzi v. RHP Nick Pivetta

SATURDAY, 4/6: TWINS @ PHILLIES – RHP Michael Pineda v. RHP Jake Arrieta

SUNDAY, 4/7: TWINS @ PHILLIES – RHP Jose Berrios v. RHP Zach Eflin

 

Catch Up On Twins Daily Game Recaps

 

Click here to view the article

Link to comment
Share on other sites

From ESPN

Astudillo was 2 for 2, raising his career batting average to .368 in 100 plate appearances. That's the highest average in major league history among players with at least 100 plate appearances, just ahead of Ty Cobb (.366).

These numbers are fun enough for another thread!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Say what you want, but I don't believe the #of K's is remotely sustainable.  Cleveland came out of spring training with a team slash of .265/.336/.453 which was middle of the pack.  However, a number of their active roster batted below that slash (5) and 8 of them K'd at a high rate.  I don't make the point to contradict the writer as much as to point out that Cleveland is very thin and will need a healthy line up and have a very strong pitching staff to to take the Central.  I live in Ohio and Indians fans are far more nervous about the Indians today than they were last week!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Maybe I'm alone, but I personally have faith in this bullpen. I think it's got a good mix of arms that aren't all dependent on being flame throwers and most seem capable of going multiple innings. It would look a whole lot better with Romero in it but it's pretty understandable after the wretched spring he had.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's a long season, and any week finishing over .500 should make us feel good. The starting staff did their jobs very well.

 

It's a fair question to ask why Baldelli didn't utilize his larger than normal bench in the 7th and 9th inning during the 2nd game. That's the only quibble I have so far in the season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I listened to Baldelli talk about the game.  And then I listened to Franconia.  There's no doubt who I'd rather play for.  Maybe the new guys know what they're doing, but listening to these egghead quant guys talk is downright nauseating.  I miss the plain speak of guys like Gardy, and Franconia and Earl Weaver.  At least they were funny.  I haven't laughed since listening to Gardy talk about "Loose Canon #1 and Loose Canon #2.  I guess winning is better than laughing.  We'll see what the new guys can do.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I listened to Baldelli talk about the game. ... but listening to these egghead quant guys talk is downright nauseating.

Yeah, Rocco ought to grab a ball and bat sometime, and go out on the field to try out his theories. It's not so easy out there, compared to just sitting in the recliner chair in the dugout and pushing some buttons.

 

 

/ edit - April Fool?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the health and performance of the back of the rotation is going to be key. If we get through the season without having to use 9-10 starters (main rotation inning eaters?) and getting enough quality from positions 3-5 in that group we could win a lot of series.

 

Nice to see the offense break out in game 3! 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don’t mind not pinch hitting for Kepler against Hand.

 

But down one run in the 9th with a speedster on second with no one out is an automatic bunt situation. The only way it isn’t is if your batter is Mike Trout because he would get IBB anyway. If the opponent is pitching to your hitter, your hitter needs to bunt. If Kepler isn’t good at bunting, pinch hit someone who is. Adrianza is probably the best of the bench players. Castro didn’t start that game. He’s probably a good bunter. Berrios maybe or maybe some other pitcher with bunting experience. Not sure who that would be on this staff.

 

 

Bottom line: Buxton needs to be on third base when that PA is over.

Edited by yarnivek1972
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I listened to Baldelli talk about the game.  And then I listened to Franconia.  There's no doubt who I'd rather play for.  Maybe the new guys know what they're doing, but listening to these egghead quant guys talk is downright nauseating.  I miss the plain speak of guys like Gardy, and Franconia and Earl Weaver.  At least they were funny.  I haven't laughed since listening to Gardy talk about "Loose Canon #1 and Loose Canon #2.  I guess winning is better than laughing.  We'll see what the new guys can do.

Franconia

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I don’t mind not pinch hitting for Kepler against Hand.

But down one run in the 9th with a speedster on second with no one out is an automatic bunt situation. The only way it isn’t is if your batter is Mike Trout because he would get IBB anyway. If the opponent is pitching to your hitter, your hitter needs to bunt. If Kepler isn’t good at bunting, pinch hit someone who is. Adrianza is probably the best of the bench players. Castro didn’t start that game. He’s probably a good bunter. Berrios maybe or maybe some other pitcher with bunting experience. Not sure who that would be on this staff.


Bottom line: Buxton needs to be on third base when that PA is over.

I'm not sure that's true. If you believe in Run Expectancy (which you may not), there's a lower probability of scoring from 3rd with 1 out than there is from 2nd with 0 outs. In fact, one could make a claim that an outfield single with Buxton on 2nd scores him easily. Similar to having a Trout at abat, you have an elite baserunner on 2nd.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure that's true. If you believe in Run Expectancy (which you may not), there's a lower probability of scoring from 3rd with 1 out than there is from 2nd with 0 outs. In fact, one could make a claim that an outfield single with Buxton on 2nd scores him easily. Similar to having a Trout at abat, you have an elite baserunner on 2nd.

Yeah, I'm with Parker Hageman on Team #NoBunt so I agree with you. They needed someone who could put the ball in play, find a hole, and Buxton scores easily from 2nd base.

 

I was disappointed Baldelli left Kepler in and swing away when he's not seeing the ball well. Plus, Brad Hand is elite against LH batters.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The guy can hit! I was so happy to see him get a chance. I can only imagine how hard it was for him to make it to the Majors. They're always looking for the prefect player and I think they over look a lot of guys that should be in the majors but aren't because they may be a bit on the heavy side. He's one of these guys that motivates others. otherwise known as a

Spark Plug.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

All these days of are a real drag especially when you're wining. After the first 3 games it looks like the biggest question is our bull pen. I like our line up knock on wood and our starters have looked really good. Bull pen on the other hand has a couple guys that may not be with the team at the end of the year. The game we lost had more to do with not being able to throw strikes. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure that's true. If you believe in Run Expectancy (which you may not), there's a lower probability of scoring from 3rd with 1 out than there is from 2nd with 0 outs. In fact, one could make a claim that an outfield single with Buxton on 2nd scores him easily. Similar to having a Trout at abat, you have an elite baserunner on 2nd.

My understanding of run expectancy is that it is a formula based equation, not an analysis of real life data. That is to say, you input factors and get a number. I think knowing what has actually happened over the course of hundreds of thousands of actual games would be more useful. Run expectancy is a tool, but that’s all IMO.

 

Polanco was the batter after Kepler. Other than Astudillo (SSS), there is no one on the Twins who puts the ball in play with more regularity than Polanco. With Buxton at third, that’s all you need. IMO having a contact hitter changes the likely outcome in a way that as far as I understand the run expectancy formula can’t fully account.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

My understanding of run expectancy is that it is a formula based equation, not an analysis of real life data. That is to say, you input factors and get a number. I think knowing what has actually happened over the course of hundreds of thousands of actual games would be more useful. Run expectancy is a tool, but that’s all IMO.

Polanco was the batter after Kepler. Other than Astudillo (SSS), there is no one on the Twins who puts the ball in play with more regularity than Polanco. With Buxton at third, that’s all you need. IMO having a contact hitter changes the likely outcome in a way that as far as I understand the run expectancy formula can’t fully account.

Well, along those lines,  Having a guy on 2nd that has a perfect steal rate over the last two seasons changes odds as well.   What are his chances of stealing 3rd?   That should be compared to the odds of getting a bunt down successfully as well.  In any case, I believe the Turtle pinch hitting would have been a good move there.   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My understanding of run expectancy is that it is a formula based equation, not an analysis of real life data. That is to say, you input factors and get a number.

I don't think "formula" or "equation" is an accurate representation of run expectancy. In its basic form, it's historical data, sorted (and averaged) into 24 spots in a matrix that comes from there being 3 numbers of outs (0,1 and 2) and each of the three bases might either be occupied or not (2x2x2=8 configurations). Here is an example compilation from game data 1950-2015:

http://www.tangotiger.net/re24.html

 

Now, I think FanGraphs goes to another level, and has some proprietary formulas that they use to adjust the real-world data for various purposes, such as to speculate on an era where offense is higher across the board. But those aren't formulas that people like us need, when putting the RE table to use.

 

I guess you can say there is a "formula", of sorts, on how to use the table. When a plate appearance is finished, take the RA value of the new situation, subtract the RA value before the play started, and of course add any actual runs that were scored. That's the result, from either the batter's or the pitcher's perspective.

 

Also, there are two main variations of the table: expected number of runs to score the rest of the inning, or the probability of scoring at least one run. In late innings, particularly the bottom of the ninth (which was the discussion point), the latter may be more important.

 

But the numbers you crank, through this process, are at heart real life data, even if sliced and diced a few ways.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, along those lines, Having a guy on 2nd that has a perfect steal rate over the last two seasons changes odds as well. What are his chances of stealing 3rd? That should be compared to the odds of getting a bunt down successfully as well. In any case, I believe the Turtle pinch hitting would have been a good move there.

That would have been an option too. With a LHP, it’s generally considered easier to steal third. I have no idea how good a thrower the Indians’ catcher is, however. The biggest risk is leaving too early. I remember watching a game where Eric Milton picked a guy off who was trying to steal third.

 

Regardless, Buxton absolutely needed to be at third when Kepler’s at bat was over.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yarnivek has an interesting observation. And I feel a valid one. Things like run expectations are an average of what will happen with non identified players in a certain situation. I think Mauer led the team in RISP last year? I doubt Andrianza did. So I can easily see a Mauer swinging away with someone on second, no outs. But having a lesser light in that position and having him swing away likely will not have the same result. For the sake of this post I will stick with the first batter. A Mauer AB likely raises the run expectancy level above the norm. An Andrianza AB lowers it. That's why MLB managers get paid lots of money, to make those decisions. If you simply manage by the spread sheet, you could probably get some 30 something guy to manage who has never managed a baseball game in his life, and stick him in the dugout?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Twins community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...